About the Adaptive Sports Association
The Adaptive Sports Association helps to enrich and transform the
lives of people with disabilities through sports. By working with
students to overcome physical and cognitive challenges in a supportive
environment, ASA helps students to give disability a possibility.

Through sports and recreation, participants
meet positive role models, increase
socialization skills, improve body image
and combat
depression. Personalities blossom and
self-esteem soars as our students challenge
themselves physically and emotionally
and experience success.
Through the use of state-of-the-art
equipment, ASA is able to offer its services
to individuals with every type of disability.
Over 50 ASA ski and snowboard instructors
are nationally certified
through Professional Ski Instructors
of America (PSIA) and the American Association
of Snowboard Instructors (AASI).
ASA is also a member of
Disabled Sports USA. Quality instruction
and safety are primary concerns of ASA.
The
Adaptive Sports Association (ASA) was founded in 1983 by Dave
Spencer, a young man who had lost a leg to cancer. Dave was
a ski instructor and irrepressible visionary who believed that skiing
could challenge and increase the self-esteem of all individuals
with disabilities. Although Dave lost his battle with cancer in
1986, his dream of an organization dedicated to teaching people
with disabilities to ski has continued to thrive and expand. ASA's
winter home at Durango Mountain Resort is called the Dave Spencer
Center.
The organization was originally
called Durango/Purgatory Handicapped
Sports Association. The name has changed
but the original
goal of providing ski instruction to
individuals with physical and cognitive
disabilities in an environment that diminishes
social
and economic barriers holds true today.

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