"I'm trying to be the person who I kind of wish I had when I was younger"

Strength doesn’t always begin on equal ground.


For Tyler Saunders, being born with one leg meant sport was never straightforward. Many doors felt closed early on. Limitations were obvious. Expectations were low. But rather than defining what he couldn’t do, those circumstances sharpened his focus on what remained within his control.


Training became that constant.


It wasn’t until Tyler discovered wheelchair basketball that his relationship with sport truly shifted. For the first time, competition felt accessible. Demanding. Legitimate. He committed fully to the process, training with intent and discipline, eventually reaching the highest level and representing Team GB.

That experience reshaped his understanding of ability. Progress wasn’t dictated by circumstance, but by consistency. By effort applied day after day. By a willingness to push beyond perceived limits.

"A lot of the things I'm doing, it's to challenge a limiting belief, that I've always had from young."

From there, training took on a broader purpose. No longer just personal, it became something Tyler wanted to share. A way to challenge the idea of who fitness is for. One of his guiding principles became simple. Make training possible for all abilities.

As a coach, Tyler’s approach is grounded in realism. He doesn’t wait for perfect conditions or peak motivation. He believes in showing up. In doing what’s possible on the day, even when energy is low or confidence wavers. Because momentum is built through action, not intention. Strength, in Tyler’s world, isn’t about comparison. It isn’t about aesthetics or performance alone. It’s about ownership. Taking responsibility for what you can do, and committing to it fully.

Training didn’t remove his limitations. It reframed them.

Strength didn’t arrive overnight. It was built, rep by rep.

Hybrid training equipment