At the 2024 Paralympic Games this month, wheelchair basketball player Courtney Ryan is competing on the US women's national team for a shot at gold. But prior to her Paralympic run, the California native played for the Sydney Metro Blues in Australia. That's because despite boasting some of the best wheelchair basketball athletes in the world, and both men's and women's teams bringing home medals in the last two Paralympics games, the US has no professional wheelchair basketball league.

That means that elite US players, who represent the country in matches across the world , don't have the opportunity to receive full-time income from playing their sport in their home country. While the pay disparities between men's and women's sports have been getting increasing attention as of late, the gap in opportunities for para athletes is less widely reported on. Here, Ryan talks to PS about what it's like to try to play on Team USA for a sport that doesn't have a national professional league.

What It's Like to Play Wheelchair Basketball Overseas After she was injured playing soccer during her junior year of college, Ryan adapted to life as a full-time wheelchair user. Sports had always been a huge part of her life, but during her early rehabilitation journey she lost her connection to them. So when she was introduced to wheelchair basketball two years after being injured, "it felt like I was home," she tells PS.

Ryan eventually received a scholarship to play wheelchair basketball at t.