Maria Shriver Gears Up for Special Olympics World Games With ‘GMA’

Maria Shriver explains its remarkable nearly five decade evolution.

— -- The 2015 Special Olympics World Games, kicking off this weekend in Los Angeles, will be the largest sporting and humanitarian event on the planet this year, with 7,000 extraordinary athletes competing.

Robin Roberts, co-anchor of ABC's "Good Morning America,” is hosting the opening ceremony Saturday night. She sat down with Maria Shriver, her brother, Tim Shriver, and some of those incredible athletes to talk about the games’ humble beginnings and its remarkable, nearly five-decade evolution.

“I think she felt that if she showed that people with intellectual disabilities could compete against you on the playing field, they could run better than you, do gymnastics, you would have to adjust what you thought people with intellectual disabilities were capable of,” Maria Shriver, 59, said.

Tim Shriver said his later mother is never far away.

“Being around the athletes of Special Olympics, I feel like I get to see my mom in some ways every day,” he said. “I get to be reminded why she believed in them so much, why she fought so hard, why she trusted sports to be a revolutionary tool.”

It’s a tool for athletes like 31-year-old Chevi Peters, of Pittsburgh, Kansas. At just 114 pounds, he can deadlift two and a half times his body weight.

“This is where I belong,” said Peters.

It’s that incredible strength that defines these competitors, reminding everyone what it really means to be an athlete.