Skate Canada clubs show off their skating talent through Mini Blades program

Georgi Reidl, 12-year-old figure skater, has a mean spiral with a pair of long legs that stretch forever. Austin Martell, 12-year-old intrepid hockey player, has the striped toque, a Christmas present that never seems to leave his head. And he’s game for anything.

Together, these small-town athletes from Stayner, Ont., are the Mini Blades champions of Canada. They are part of the bubbling up of an underground movement in Canadian skating clubs that has, with some tongue in cheek, copied the format of the television show Battle of the Blades, which pairs up hockey players with figure skaters, Canada’s two main winter passions.

“We are always looking for new ways to raise funds to keep the membership fees down,” said Stayner Skating Club president, Heather Trott. “One of our neighbouring clubs had one and it was quite successful, so we thought we’d give it a whirl.”

Over the past few seasons, Sandra Bezic, chief steward of the Battle of the Blades show, has become aware of this phenomenon. She could see in her google alerts that multiple communities across the country were staging their own version of the show to raise finances. On YouTube, she saw skaters of all sorts and ages, even hockey and figure skating coaches getting into the act.

“We were thrilled to hear about this,” Bezic said. The television show started a Mini Blades pilot project, restricting it to skaters between 3 and 13 and with the help of Skate Canada, approached seven clubs across the country to take up the challenge.

Bezic is also a five-time Canadian pair champion, world renowned choreographer and Skate Canada hall of Fame member.

Mathieu Dandenault, a three-time Stanley Cup champion who skated with Marie-France Dubreuil in Battle of the Blades, was touched by the Mini Blade thing. “I think it’s really nice and the fact that we’re sort of breaking down barriers, about big macho hockey players, and hockey parents, especially, to be open,” he said. “I have so much more respect for figure skaters and especially the men. They are better skaters. They are stronger in most elements. So if NHL guys do it, then it’s okay for younger kids to do it and that’s the important message. It’s for everyone, and you’re not being laughed at, because these figure skaters are better skaters than we are.”

The Stayner Club, one of the chosen ones, had to get busy, right away. They had already done three seasons of Mini Blades. Every year, they’d bring in Santa Claus as one of the judges, because the event was always held a week or two before Christmas. The interest in the show grew to the point that it became the club’s second biggest money-maker, next to the carnival at the end of March.

And this year, the Stayner show attracted more male hockey players than the club had girls to skate with them. “I think it’s something different, and they have a lot of fun with it,” Trott said.
But the Stayner Club wasn’t to get ice time until October 16, and their Mini Blades show was to take place on October 30. Santa Claus was voted off the show. Instead, they had a town councillor, a hockey player and a figure skating rep offer up their expertise on the judging panel.

The club made a presentation to town council, asking it to give them free ice time to decorate the rink for the October 30 show. Given that ice rental goes for $130 an hour, it was a $900 gift. Twice a week, the Minis skated before school to train – starting at 7 a.m. and again during an afternoon on another day. The club made at least $2,000 from the October 30 show, about $500 more than usual. The stands (maximum 500) filled up. There was a buzz in the town.

Meanwhile, Reidl and Martell teamed up to become a formidable duo. They had been best friends since kindergarten. “I needed a partner and he needed to show up his brother,” Reidl said. “So it was good.”

Martell’s older brother, Cody, had skated in the show last year. So had Reidl’s older sister, Kirsten.

But it wasn’t an easy job to move from concept to champion. “When they went out on the ice together, they were horrible,” said Raylene Martell, mother of the hockey player. “I thought: ‘Oh my god,’ this is not going to be good.’ Nothing gelled with them. I thought: ‘What did we do?’”

“He skated like an absolute hockey player and she skated like an absolute figure skater,” said Dorothy-Jo Reidl, mother of Georgie. “We had to bring it together.”

The mothers worked as choreographers, pulling out elements from the television show that they thought their kids could do.

“I did a Mohawk,” said Martell. “I don’t know the names of the other things.”

Reidl was more than happy to fill in. “We did spirals and a waltz jump,” she said.

Martell’s toque became an issue. Georgie and her mother nixed the idea of him wearing it. Then Georgie’s coach strode by one day and said: “Nice hat. You’re wearing it, right?”

Martell got to keep the hat. “You can’t say no to your skating coach,” Reidl conceded.

Martell did refuse to don skates with toe picks. It was non-negotiable. Next year, they’ll have three months to prepare, and Reidl maintains that next year, they will swap skates. Easy for her to say: she’s played hockey before.

Best of all, entire communities became involved with the Mini Blade miracle. Everybody weighed in on the national vote. The Martells actually live in Dundalk, a town about half an hour away, and they are originally from Cape Breton, so the Nova Scotians stepped up in the voting as well. Every single child in both schools in Dundalk got to vote. The principals made sure of it. Martell’s school held an “emergency assembly” to show the clips of the team’s skates and congratulate them on their win.

To top it off, eventual Battle of the Blades winners Amanda Evora and Scott Thornton (a native of nearby Collingwood, Ont.) showed up for the October 30 show in Stayner. Thornton – who Martell looks up to literally and figuratively – told them he was thrilled that skaters were going outside of their comfort zone and trying new things. “It’s really about fun,” he said.

Beverley Smith

Dr. Jane Moran continues to blaze trails for Canada

There she goes again, blazing trails. It’s Dr. Jane Moran, and this time, she’s just been appointed to the International Olympic Committee’s Medical Commission’s Games Group as its winter sport representative.

She’s already known as the chairperson of the International Skating Union’s Medical Commission, an emergency room physician, a sports medicine doctor, a former member of the board of directors for Skate Canada (1999 to 2009), and a veteran doctor of six Olympic Winter Games: Albertville, Lillehammer, Nagano, Salt Lake City, Turin, and Vancouver (and in another few months, Sochi, too). Not to mention that Dr. Jane was also the physician for the 2010 Torch Relay run across Canada where she was guarder of the flame, confidant to the masses, patcher and healer of lacerations and head bumps and all sorts of folk with tears in their eyes.

That’s Dr. Jane Moran in a nutshell. Who could have guessed that this woman from small-town Ontario could ascend to the highest annals of sport in her profession? Well yes, you could have.  As number 5 in a family of eight children (two girls, six boys), Moran frequented a rink right across the street from the family home in Walkerton, Ont. Her father, Joe, was a businessman there (Moran’s Farm Equipment), a mayor of the town for a time, and a lover of sport. In the midst of all this, Moran forged her own way.

Her father’s coaching philosophy centred on the idea, perhaps outrageous at the time, that good skaters made good hockey players. So all eight children took skating lessons at that little community rink. Moran’s sister, Mary Jo, the youngest of the eight, was an ice dancer at one point during the era of Tracy Wilson and Rob McCall. But Moran and all of her six brothers played hockey. “I was not at all graceful enough to be a figure skater,” said Moran on the eve of leaving for a WADA conference in Johannesburg, South Africa. “I was actually a much better hockey player.”

Consider that this was back in the early 1960s. There were no girls’ teams then. Moran played on a boys’ team until she was 10. She was set to go to a competition in Brampton, Ont., but held at home by mother Marie, who didn’t want her to go. Her oldest brother was coach of the team, and when he made it to Brampton with his Bruce County boys, he phoned home: “You’ve got to send her,” he told his mother. “They’ve all heard that she plays and everyone has been waiting to see this girl that plays hockey.”

So she did. Off she went, with her ponytail hanging out of her helmet, and mixed it up with players like Mark Howe, son of Gordie Howe. She was the only girl at the tournament amid “999 boys,” she said. This was well before the days of Justine Blainey, who won a spot on a boy’s team in the Metro Toronto Hockey League back in 1981 but was refused play because the league didn’t allow female players. Even the Ontario Human Rights Code at the time allowed sexual discrimination in sports.  Many years of court cases followed. Blainey was a cause celebre because of what was denied her. Moran was a curiosity, welcomed.

Years later, Moran played hockey at university, where she first studied physical education, then switched to physiotherapy, a profession that led her to the 1976 Montreal Olympics.

She was about to be interviewed to work as a physiotherapist for the Canadian ski team, when she switched gears, realizing that she wanted more. She went to medical school to become an emergency room physician, and then also did a sports medicine fellowship in the second year such a diploma was offered.

Then she found herself back in rinks, a place that feels like home to her. As chair of the ISU Medical Commission, she tracks injuries that are becoming more common in figure skating and the two branches of speed skating as rules change, new technology develops and in the case of figure skating, scoring changes that demand ever more of athletes. Moran said the ISU is trying to track injuries, so see how they are changing because of the scoring system.

Moran has had many remarkable experiences but her most memorable Olympic moments were off the playing field: the 106 days she spent as doctor for the Vancouver Olympic torch relay.  “It was an incredible journey,” she said. “One of the best things I’ve ever done in my life.”

She left her Victoria home October 28 and didn’t return until March 1. She left a suitcase in Vancouver with her sister, and then lived out of a duffle bag for the duration of the relay. She spent every night in a different hotel. She took care of 300 people who were sleep deprived and pushed to the max every day while moving across Canada in the middle of winter. None of them got sick.

She wasn’t just the doctor. She took care of the torches, the lanterns. She rode in the media car. She ran every day, wearing out three pairs of running shoes. She got by on three or four hours of sleep. She met the people that make up Canada, from coast to coast. “Every day was like Christmas,” she said. “I never felt tired. It was stimulating.”

She met a gentleman once who declared that the two most important things in his life were his service to his country in the war and carrying the torch. “Every day was like that,” she said.

She met a woman “bawling her eyes out” at 100 Mile House in British Columbia, who had only seen torch relays on television. “Nothing ever comes to this town,” she said. “Thank you for bringing the torch to us.”

While this magical travelling expedition took place, it seemed as if the rest of the world didn’t exist. Moran sang “O Canada” so many times, she’s lost count. She tried once, noting that she customarily sang it five times before noon.

But the experience left its mark on Moran, perhaps forever. She can no longer sing “O Canada’ without tears welling up in her eyes. And four years after the fact, just the telling of it leaves her misty.

This, she carries with her wherever she goes.

Beverley Smith

Canadian Figure Skaters Travel to Russia for Final Stop on ISU Grand Prix Circuit

OTTAWA, ON: Canada will send six athletes to Moscow, Russia, for the 2013 Rostelecom Cup. The event, which is the sixth and final stop on the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating circuit, will take place from November 22-24, 2013. Canada will have a total of three entries in two disciplines: one in pair, and two in ice dance.

Kirsten Moore-Towers, 21, St. Catharines, Ont., and Dylan Moscovitch, 29, Toronto, Ont., are the Canadian pair entry. This will be their first time competing at this event. Moore-Towers and Moscovitch won silver at their first ISU Grand Prix assignment this season, Skate America, and won gold at the 2013 U.S. International Figure Skating Classic. Last season, they placed fourth at the 2013 ISU World Figure Skating Championships. Moore-Towers and Moscovitch train with Kris Wirtz and Kristy Wirtz at the Kitchener-Waterloo Skating Club.

Kaitlyn Weaver, 24, Waterloo, Ont., and Andrew Poje, 26, Waterloo, Ont., will represent Canada in ice dance. This will be their second time competing at this event, having won silver in 2011. The dance duo representing Sault FSC and Kitchener-Waterloo SC won silver at both events they have competed at this season, Skate Canada International and the U.S. International Figure Skating Classic. Last season, Weaver and Poje placed fifth at the 2013 ISU World Figure Skating Championships. They are coached by Pasquale Camerlengo and Angelika Krylova in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.

Piper Gilles, 21, Toronto, Ont., and Paul Poirier, 22, Unionville, Ont., will also represent Canada in ice dance. This will be their first time competing at this event. Gilles and Poirier earned a fifth place finish at their first ISU Grand Prix assignment this season, NHK Trophy. Representing Scarboro FSC, the 2013 Canadian silver medallists placed fourth at Skate Canada International and sixth at Trophée Eric Bompard last season. Gilles and Poirier are coached by Carol Lane and Juris Razgulajevs at Ice Dance Elite in Scarborough, Ont.

Cynthia Ullmark of Canmore, Alta., will be the Canadian team leader at the event. Dr. Ed Pilat of Winnipeg, Man., and physiotherapist Shirley Kushner of Westmount, Que., will be the Canadian medical staff onsite. Leslie Keen of Vancouver, B.C., and Andrea Derby of Windsor, Ont., will be the Canadian officials at the event.

Skate Canada supports today’s launch of Active at School

TORONTO, November 18, 2013 – Canada’s most influential sport, wellness and health organizations today offered unprecedented support to Canada’s provincial and territorial governments in order to inject an hour of daily physical activity into Canada’s schools. The group of more than 60 private sector and not-for-profit organizations offered to share responsibility to get Canada’s kids active at school – representing a historical and unrivaled movement to solve the overwhelming problem of inactive youth in Canada.

The “ACTIVE AT SCHOOL” initiative announced today represents a multi-year movement by the organizations involved to work with governments and offer access to their considerable networks, resources, investments and marketing efforts to reverse the staggering trend of inactivity amongst millions of Canadian children and youth.

The group initiated meetings with governments over the past two months and will seek meetings with Premiers, Education and Health Ministers from all governments in the next 90 days to detail the breadth of what the group is offering to make an hour a day of activity in schools a reality.

The Problem

Canada’s children and youth are more inactive today than at any time in our country’s history – a fact articulated by numerous studiesi and clearly recognized by Canada’s concerned parents. A surveyii of more than 5,000 households has shown that 88 per cent of Canadian families know that being active is
the right thing to do but have difficulty doing it, citing a lack of time, safety and financial resources as barriers to greater activity. The same study showed that more than 85 per cent of Canadians agree that schools should have daily physical activity for all students.

Increasing levels of physical activity among young people has been shown in study after study to:

  • improve health outcomes
  • increase confidence and self-esteem
  • provide life lessons, help with goal setting and build teamwork; and
  • improve concentration and academic performance.

Schools represent a safe and structured environment where all students, regardless of background or means, have the opportunity to succeed. Canada’s school system, however, is facing extraordinary pressures and competing priorities.

Quotes from Leading Members of the Group and Supportive Voices

“We must help our children be more active at school but we must also help our schools and teachers who are doing great work with the resources they have,” said Stephen Wetmore, Chief Executive Officer of Canadian Tire Corporation. “We rely on our schools and teachers to do so much. Those companies and organizations that have the resources and tools to help our school system get our kids more active need to step forward and make a difference.”

“We’re going to reach out to sit down with every Premier and Minister of Education in the next 90 days to identify ways we can inject more activity into schools,” continued Wetmore. “We will learn about the barriers that are unique to each region – and we’re going to offer the resources of this incredibly powerful group to help overcome those barriers.”

“I always find it strange that we are looking for that secret sauce that makes our kids smarter, happier and gives them better self-esteem. Well, we’ve got it – it’s called exercise,” said Dr. Mike Evans, Staff Physician at St. Michael’s Hospital. “It is great when kids are active outside of school, and many are, but just like adults if we want to change behaviour we need to think about their daily habits and make it as easy as possible for new habits to be formed.”

“We’ve been focused on getting our young people access to daily physical education for over 80 years,” stated Chris Jones, Executive Director and CEO of Physical & Health Education Canada. “We are excited to be a part of ACTIVE AT SCHOOL– working with partners to help raise awareness on the need for quality daily physical education programming for all kids across Canada.”

“The passion for hockey, and the joy of playing it, has been passed through generations of Canadian youngsters,” said Gary Bettman, Commissioner of the National Hockey League. “To help build the next generation of hockey players, we need to ensure that Canadian students get ACTIVE AT SCHOOL and receive the amount of physical activity they require. We are proud to be part of this outstanding initiative.”

“We’ve made major strides in helping children enjoy healthier lifestyles, but we still have a long way to go to ensure that all kids are physically active,” said Pierre Lavoie, co-founder of the Le Grand défi Pierre Lavoie. “Bringing together private, public and not-for-profit partners is part of the solution and we are excited that ACTIVE AT SCHOOL is helping to focus attention on such a critical issue for our youth.”

More than 60 partners have rallied together to support an hour a day of activity at school. Inevitably more partners will join the movement in the coming months. Partners of the movement today include:

  • 60 Minute Kids’ Club
  • Active For Live
  • Active Healthy Kids Canada
  • Alpine Canada Alpin
  • Atmosphere
  • Bell Canada
  • Boys and Girls Clubs of Canada
  • Calgary Flames
  • Canada Games
  • Canada Snowboard
  • Canadian Association for the Advancement of Women and Sport and Physical Activity
  • Canadian Chamber of Commerce
  • Canadian Chiropractic Association
  • Canadian Football League (CFL)
  • Canadian Interuniversity Sport
  • Canadian Medical Association
  • Canadian Nurses Association
  • Canadian Olympic Committee
  • Canadian Paralympic Committee
  • Canadian Parks and Recreation Association
  • Canadian Public Health Association
  • Canadian Soccer Association
  • Canadian Sport for Life (CS4L)
  • Canadian Tire Corporation
  • Canadian Tire Dealers Association
  • Canadian Tire Jumpstart Charities
  • Canadian Tire Motorsport Park
  • CBC Sports
  • Clean Air Champions
  • Hockey Canada
  • Hockey Experts
  • Le Grand Défi Pierre Lavoie
  • Mark’s
  • Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment
  • Montreal Canadiens
  • Motivate Canada
  • National Association of Friendship Centres
  • National Hockey League (NHL)
  • National Hockey League Players’ Association (NHLPA)
  • Nike
  • Ontario Chamber of Commerce
  • Ontario Healthy Schools Coalition
  • Ophea
  • Own The Podium
  • Parachute Canada
  • ParticipACTION
  • Physical & Health Education Canada
  • Pro Hockey Life
  • RBC
  • Réseau Familles D’aujourd’hui
  • S3
  • Senators Sports & Entertainment
  • Skate Canada
  • Sportsnet
  • Sport Chek
  • Sport Matters Group
  • Sports Experts
  • The Sandbox Project
  • TSN
  • Coaching Association of Canada
  • Concerned Children’s Advertisers
  • Ever Active Schools
  • Edmonton Oilers Hockey Club
  • Winnipeg Jets
  • YMCA Canada
  • YWCA Canada

By working together, ACTIVE AT SCHOOL will raise awareness of the issue and the solution, as well as work with governments, school boards and industry partners to determine how best to achieve one hour a day of quality physical activity. ACTIVE AT SCHOOL partners expect to be making additional announcements in the days, weeks and months to come related to campaign successes and progress.

  • Visit activeatschool.ca or actifsalecole.ca
  • Join us on Facebook at Facebook.com/activeatschool
  • Follow the conversation on Twitter, #activeatschool

About ACTIVE AT SCHOOL
ACTIVE AT SCHOOL is a group of private, public and not-for-profit organizations committed to ensuring that one hour a day of quality physical activity and education is brought back to schools across Canada. With a goal of helping to reverse the trend of inactivity in Canadian kids and youth, the organization is focused on using its varied voices to keep the issue top of mind.

Patrick Chan wins gold, set world records at ISU Grand Prix

PARIS – World champion Patrick Chan capped a super weekend for Canadian figure skaters on Saturday with a gold medal and world record performances in men’s singles at the Eric-Bompard Trophy ISU Grand Prix figure skating competition.

Olympic champions Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir added ice dance gold and Meagan Duhamel of Lively, Ont., and Eric Radford of Balmertown, Ont., took silver in pairs.

Chan totalled 295.27 points to smash his previous world mark of 280.98 points set at the 2011 world championships in Moscow. He also bettered his free program world record score from Moscow to 196.75 from the 187.96. Friday’s short program total was also a world’s best.

‘’This is a special day,’’ said Chan. ‘’It’s the first time in a long time I`ve skated two strong programs at one competition. I felt in control of every moment and each element. I`m going to remember how I approached both programs.

The 22-year-old from Toronto nailed his opening quad toeloop-triple toeloop, his quad toeloop and his triple axel jumps. The French crowd gave him a rousing ovation for his performance which included music from Vivaldi’s Four Seasons.

‘’I know exactly why the way I skated. I paced myself properly to get through the whole program and through all the elements. That’s where I improved.’’

Yuzuru Hanyu of Japan was second at 263.59 and Jason Brown of the U.S., third at 243.09.

In ice dancing, Virtue and Moir were the victors with 180.96 ranking first in both the short dance and free dance. Elena Ilinykh and Nikita Katsalapov of Russia were second at 171.89 and Nathalie Pechalat and Fabian Bourzat of France third at 171.08.

‘’We felt like it was a strong skate,’’ said Moir. ‘’There were some great moments and it was a better skate than at Skate Canada especially the ending.  Still we left some points out there. Technically we can’t afford to do those little mistakes.’’

Nicole Orford of Burnaby, B.C., and Thomas Williams of Okotoks, Alta., were eighth.

In pairs, Olympic silver medallists Qing Pang and Jian Tong of China won the gold with 193.86 points edging Duhamel and Radford in second at 190.89. Caydee Denney and John Coughlin of the U.S., were third at 184.01.

The result also puts Duhamel and Radford in good position to make the Grand Prix Final.

“I was proud of that performance,” said Radford. “There’s a lot of pressure. It’s an Olympic season and we wanted to make the Grand Prix Final to keep our name out there heading into the second half of the season. That’s what was on the line today.”

After a wobbly Skate Canada three weeks ago, Duhamel said the couple put pressure on themselves to execute clean programs every day in training. The preparation eventually paid off even though they didn’t produced a clean skate Saturday.

“We weren’t able to deliver the program that we’ve been doing in training but we fought,” said Duhamel. “We knew we needed to come here and get at least second to advance to the Grand Prix Final. There was a lot of pressure and nothing was easy..”

Natasha Purich of Sherwood Park, Alta., and Mervin Tran of Regina were sixth.

In women’s competition, Amélie Lacoste of Delson, Que., was sixth.

Big scores for Chan, Virtue/Moir at ISU Grand Prix

PARIS – World champion Patrick Chan of Toronto broke his world record score in Friday’s short program to stand first in men’s competition at the Trophee Eric Bompard ISU Grand Prix figure skating competition.

Later on, Olympic champions Tessa Virtue of London, Ont., and Scott Moir of Ilderton, Ont., posted a personal best score for their short dance to grab an early lead as well.

Chan totalled 98.52 points which bettered his previous world best of 98.37 set at the world championships last March. He also improved his score by more than 10 points from last month’s Skate Canada.  The main difference was successfully landing his quad-triple toe jump on Friday.

“I wasn’t feeling completely at my best but I put in the work and the training,” said Chan. “When you do that it allows you to deliver a solid performance like this.  I didn’t expect that kind of score this early in the season but it doesn”t change my mentality or my approach for the rest of the year.”

Yazuru Hanyu of Japan is second at 95.37 and Jason Brown of the U.S., third at 84.77.

In ice dancing, Virtue and Moir earned 75.31 to eclipse their previous best of 75.12 set the Four Continents Championships last season.  Nathalie Pechalat and Fabian Bourzat of France are second at 70.59 and Elena Ilinykh and Nikita Katsalapov of Russia are third at 69.07.

At Skate Canada, Virtue and Moir had difficulty with their twizzles and have revamped the short program over the past three weeks in training.

“We moved the twizzles to earlier in the program,” said Virtue.  “It was a bit risky to put it at the end.  Overall the layout of the program is a whole lot better and we have a lot more speed at the end of the program.”

Moir said the changes were beneficial.

“It puts more pressure when you change things around but it has taken us one step higher,” he said.  “It’s normal to tinker with it especially in preparation for the Olympics.  The short program is all about execution and it’s those four required elements that we worry about the most.”

Nicole Orford of Burnaby, B.C.,  and Thomas Williams of Okotoks, Alta., are eighth.

In pairs, Qing Pang and Jian Tong of China lead with 67.69 points.  World championship bronze medallists Meagan Duhamel of Lively, Ont., and Eric Radford of Balmertown, Ont., stand second at 66.07 and Vera Bazarova and Yuri Larionov of Russia are third at 65.67.

Natasha Purich of Sherwood Park, Alta., and Mervin Tran of Regina are sixth at 55.89.

Amélie Lacoste of Delson, Que., is seventh after the women’s short program.

Skate Canada congratulates Dr. Jane Moran on IOC appointment

OTTAWA, ON: Dr. Jane Moran of Victoria, B.C. was recently appointed to the International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) Medical Commission’s Games Group.  The long-time chair of the International Skating Union’s (ISU) Medical Commission was chosen as the representative of the Association of International Olympic Winter Sports Federations.

“Dr. Moran is a true advocate for the well-being of athletes. She is an outstanding medical professional, whose advice and counsel has been instrumental in developing the ISU’s medical protocols to the highest standards,” said Leanna Caron, President, Skate Canada. “We are pleased to see her dedication to sport being recognized with this well-deserved appointment.”

Moran first became involved with figure skating, when she was assigned to the sport as a member of the Canadian medical team in 1992 for the Albertville Olympic Winter Games.  She was then appointed to the ISU Medical Commission as a member in 1993, and became its chair in 1999, a position she still holds. As an ISU official, she was a member of the Skate Canada board for several years.

“I’m honoured to be appointed by the Winter Sports Federations to this position, and to continue to be able to work on behalf of the athletes in this role,” said Dr. Moran.

An emergency room and sport medicine physician in Victoria, B.C., Dr. Moran is also an Associate Clinical Professor at the University of British Columbia’s Faculty of Medicine.  She also travels four times each year to provide medical services to remote clinics in Nunavut.

The Medical Commission’s Games Group role is a vital one to ensure excellence across a number of areas. Dr. Moran will help oversee the provision of medical care and anti- doping services approved for the Games. She will also be a resource to other medical personnel on site, through the International Federations, in the areas of education, prevention of injury and research.

 

Duhamel and Radford battle through fires for the perfect season

Canada’s world bronze pair medalists, Meagan Duhamel and Eric Radford, had every intention of setting the world on fire this season on the road to the Olympics. They had no intention of doing it literally.

Condo fires are following in their wake. Hopefully, these things don’t come in threes. Not only did their coach Richard Gauthier escape from a fire that gutted his condo late last summer, but Duhamel’s short program costume burned up in a house belonging to their dress designer, Marie Codeiro, in Montreal. This, only a couple of weeks before Skate Canada in Saint John, N.B. They skated in beautiful costumes at the event, and that in itself was a miracle.

Gauthier was entertaining a friend on a Sunday afternoon after the major summer competition in Quebec in August, when something just didn’t seem right. “What’s that noise?” he asked. When he walked onto his deck, he saw that it had caught fire.

He escaped before the condo burned to a crisp and the roof fell in. All 10 units in the building suffered fire damage. He’s currently living elsewhere until repairs are done, and he’s only just discovered that he may not get back into his home until March, well after the Olympics. For the moment, he’s a nomad, moving from place to place.

About three weeks ago, Duhamel and Radford headed to the home of Madame Codeiro for a costume fitting, but when they got close, they found the road blocked by fire trucks. “How are we going to get to Mme. Codeiro’s?” they thought. On foot, they walked past a truck and saw a woman sitting inside, her head swathed in bandages. It was their costume designer.

Mme. Codeiro had just stuck her head in the dryer, only to discover it was on fire, and the flames leapt onto her head. Duhamel’s pink short program dress was in her home. The designer had also started working on their new long program costumes, because Duhamel hadn’t been happy with the cartoonish one she’d worn for the team training camp in Mississauga in early September.

“I’m so sorry,” Mme. Codeiro told them. “I can’t do your costumes.”

“Your health is more important than the costume,” they told her.

But Mme. Codeiro was safely relocated to another abode, got her hands on a new sewing machine and with the speed of light, stitched up all necessary costumes, pink froth for the short and royal purple for the haunting Alice in Wonderland free skate. Duhamel and Radford got them only a couple of days before they left for Saint John. They did a local competition in Quebec two weeks before Skate Canada, and had to wear something else.

The time was too tight to do any adjustments on costumes for Skate Canada, but after getting feedback that Duhamel’s dress was a bit too stiff and wide – fine for a dancer, not for a pair skater – the dress has been altered for their next competition, Trophée Eric Bompard in Paris. They’ll be ready for this one, all things having calmed down.

Indeed, the preparation for Skate Canada was a bit of a scramble. Duhamel injured a shoulder about three weeks before the Grand Prix event, so they had to alter the entry into a difficult Axel lasso lift. That lift came back to haunt them in the free skate, when they had to abort it and Duhamel slid (safely) down Radford’s back. That miscue alone cost them about eight points. They lost the gold medal by 3.30.

Although the audience in Saint John gave them a standing ovation, other errors that weren’t readily apparent in the Alice in Wonderland routine proved costly. Even Eurosport announcers enthused over the routine, commenting on a “beautiful combination spin” (for which they received only a level one).

They felt they’d made a breakthrough by getting a level three for their triple twist in the short.

In the free, officials gave it only a level two. A death spiral got a level two. A final combination spin got a level two. Radford slightly under-rotated a triple Lutz, landing it on two feet.

Gauthier checked with the technical specialists after the event. Though there were some positives, this was a wakeup call to ensure that every move is clear. “The nice thing was that those specialists are the ones that are going to be at the Games,” Gauthier said. “We know what their standards are.”

“It’s kind of good at this time of year to learn that you have to be careful with some of these rotations on spins, or death spirals,” he said.

The two Olympic pair specialists are Troy Goldstein, a Los Angeles lawyer who used to skate pairs with his sister Dawn, also now a lawyer. They were part of the U.S. team from 1987 to 1994. He also once played the role of Hercules on Disney on Ice’s Happily Ever After ice show.

The other is Peter Cain, a former Australian pair skater with sister Elizabeth Cain. Together, they won the 1976 world junior bronze medal and were four-time Australian champions. They made it to the 1980 Olympics, coached by John Nicks and in the same stable as the iconic U.S. pair Tai Babilonia and Randy Gardner.

Still, Duhamel and Radford are intent on making their own history with routines that are spellbinding, memorable and Olympic.

Beverley Smith

Large Canadian Contingent Travels to France for Trophée Eric Bompard

OTTAWA, ON:  Skate Canada will send six entries, for a total of ten skaters, to the 2013 Trophée Eric Bompard, the fifth stop on the ISU Grand Prix circuit. The event will run from November 15-17, 2013, in Paris, France. Canada will have one entry each in men’s and ladies, and two entries each in pair and ice dance.

Three-time and reigning World Champion Patrick Chan, 22, Toronto, Ont., will be the Canadian entry in men’s. Chan, who represents the Granite Club, has won this event three times previously (2007, 2008, 2011) and placed fifth in 2006. In his first ISU Grand Prix assignment this season, he won gold at Skate Canada International. Chan is coached by Kathy Johnson and trains at the Detroit Skating Club.

In ladies, Amélie Lacoste, 24, Delson, Que., is the sole Canadian entry. Representing CPA du Roussillon, she is the 2012 Canadian Champion. This season, she placed fifth at the 2013 U.S. International Figure Skating Classic, and fifth at Skate Canada International. Lacoste is coached by Christy Krall in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

World bronze medalists and two-time defending Canadian champions Meagan Duhamel, 27, Lively, Ont., and Eric Radford, 28, Balmertown, Ont., are the first of two Canadian entries in pair. This will be their third time competing at this event, having won bronze in 2011 and silver in 2012. The representatives of Walden FSC and CPA Saint-Léonard won bronze at their first ISU Grand Prix assignment this season, Skate Canada International. They are coached by Richard Gauthier and Bruno Marcotte at CPA Saint-Léonard.

Natasha Purich, 18, Sherwood Park, Alta., and Mervin Tran, 23, Regina, Sask., will also represent Canada in pair. Earlier this season, the duo representing Ice Palace FSC and CPA Saint-Léonard placed sixth in their first international assignment together, at Nebelhorn Trophy. The pair train out of CPA Saint-Léonard and are coached by Richard Gauthier and Bruno Marcotte.

Tessa Virtue, 24, London, Ont., and Scott Moir, 26, Ilderton, Ont., will be Canada’s first entry in ice dance. Representing Ilderton SC, the 2010 Olympic Champions have previously competed at this event three times, winning gold in 2009 and 2011, and placing fourth in 2006. This will be their third event this season, having won gold at both Finlandia Trophy and Skate Canada International. Virtue and Moir are coached by Marina Zoueva, Johnny Johns, and Oleg Epstein at Artic Edge Ice Arena in Canton, Michigan.

Canadian bronze medalists Nicole Orford, 21, Burnaby, B.C., and Thomas Williams, 22, Okotoks, Alta, will also represent Canada in ice dance. This will be their first ISU Grand Prix assignment of the season. The dance duo representing Inlet SC and Calalta Community FSC won bronze at the 2013 U.S. International Figure Skating Classic earlier this season. They are coached by Megan Wing and Aaron Lowe at the B.C. Centre of Excellence.

Skate Canada Director High Performance, Mike Slipchuk, will be the Canadian team leader and Dr. John Philpott of Toronto, Ont., and physiotherapist Mike McMurray of Oak Bluff, Man., will be the Canadian medical staff onsite. Jodi Abbott of Edmonton, Alta, and Karen Howard of Regina, Sask., will be the Canadian officials at the event.

Single event tickets for the 2014 Canadian Tire National Skating Championships on Sale November 14

OTTAWA, ON: Single event tickets for the 2014 Canadian Tire National Skating Championships in Ottawa, Ont., will go on sale Thursday, November 14 at 10:00 (ET). The 100th anniversary of the event will take place from January 9-15, 2014 at the Canadian Tire Centre.

Senior competition prices range from $10-$60, plus applicable surcharges. Junior/novice competition tickets range from $5-$30 (general admission), plus applicable surcharges.

TICKET SPECIALS

  • Children 12 and under can attend practices on Thursday, January 9 for free and get 50 percent off tickets to the Saturday, January 11 sessions.
  • Fans attending both Friday, January 10 and/or both Saturday, January 11 sessions receive 25% off the regular priced tickets (must be purchased at the same time and for the same day).
  • The junior and novice Sunday, January 12 practices are $5 for everyone.
  • Children 12 and under receive 50 percent off general admission from January 13-15.

The event will host approximately 250 of Canada’s best figure skaters in senior, junior and novice as they vie for spots on the national team, international assignments and will act as the final step in the 2014 Olympic qualification process. At the conclusion of the senior events, Skate Canada will nominate the 17 member Olympic figure skating team on Sunday, January 12 to the Canadian Olympic Committee for selection to represent Canada at the 2014 Olympic Winter Games in Sochi, Russia.

Fans can buy their tickets online at www.capitaltickets.ca, by phone at 1.877.788.FANS (3267) or 613.599.FANS (3267), or in person at the Canadian Tire Centre box office.

All-event ticket packages (senior & junior/novice) are also still available for purchase.

The schedule has been structured this year to have the senior events first, beginning with official practices on Thursday, January 9.  The junior and novice events will begin on Sunday, January 12 with their official practices taking place at the Bell Sensplex.

 

Kaetlyn Osmond withdrawn from figure skating’s Grand Prix in Russia

OTTAWA, ON:  Although she is back training, Kaetlyn Osmond, 17, Sherwood Park, Alta., has withdrawn from her second ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating series assignment.  She had been scheduled to compete at the Rostelecom Cup which takes place November 21-24, 2013, in Moscow, Russia.

In October, the native of Marystown, Nfld., withdrew from Skate Canada International after the short program with a hamstring injury, and then missed several weeks of training.  “It was a difficult decision, but Kaetlyn and her coach felt it was important to get back to a full training regimen to be prepared for the next events in the season,” said Mike Slipchuk, Skate Canada’s Director, High Performance.

Osmond is the reigning Canadian women’s champion, who represents the Ice Palace Figure Skating Club.

Veteran David Youle still lacing up his skates

David Youle still remembers the first time he put on skates – “those double runner skates you strap on, they were awful.” It was 1930 and Youle was skating at a downtown Ottawa arena, when an older skater grabbed hold of him and helped him glide along. As he felt the air pass him by, he knew immediately “This is for me.”

Youle was enthralled with the sport and became a member at the famed Minto Skating Club, at the time run out of the Rideau Rink on Waller Street in Ottawa (later destroyed by fire in 1949). He has many fond memories of the club, including watching a young Barbara Ann Scott learning to skate and honing her skills on the Minto ice. Youle progressed through testing, earning his silver figures.

Under the encouragement of coaches, Youle was teamed up with Mae Simpson. Simpson and Youle were fortunate to learn from legendary coaches Otto Gold (Barbara Ann Scott’s first coach), and Gustave Lussi (coach of many champions including Dick Button, Donald Jackson, Barbara Ann Scott, and Dorothy Hamill). Simpson and Youle competed in junior pair, reaching the Canadian championships in 1941 and 1942. The pair skated well, but unfortunately never medalled at the event.

Shortly after the 1942 Canadian championships, amidst the war in Europe, Youle enlisted in the military. His skating career had effectively ended. Youle wasn’t the only skater to have made the career move, noting friends Dennis Ross and Pierre Leduc had done the same.

Following training, Youle became a member of the advanced flying unit. His abilities earned him a promotion to the role of flying instructor. Under this role, he was dispatched to the UK, where he would spend the next three years (1942-1945) training Canadian air force pilots. Although he wasn’t on the front lines, he met and trained many Canadians that would never return.

A gentle, caring individual, Youle suited his role as a flying instructor. “In retrospect, I wasn’t that anxious to kill anybody, or to be killed.” Following the Second World War, he continued with the military from 1950-1966 in regular service, moving around to various locations.

Towards the end of his regular service, Youle realized that he once again wanted to become involved and give back to the sport he loved. He became an official at the age of 40, a role he would continue for 25 years. Youle was a free skate, dance, and figures judge, judging up to seventh level figures. He was even given the ability to conduct single panel judging, due there being a small number of available judges in the Maritime Provinces. This was a highly trusted role, as he was the lone official at many of the events he judged.

In 1984, one of his later years as an official, Youle was recognized with the President’s Volunteer Award for the countless hours he contributed to the sport as an official. Youle often reflects on the relationships he made through his involvement in skating: “I met a lot of great kids, great parents, and great friends.” Although he is no longer involved as an official, he continues to skate recreationally.

Youle hasn’t skated yet this season due to a cold, but he’s glad to have “all of my joints still working” and plans to get back on the ice shortly to enjoy his life-long passion. He skates at the St. Margaret’s Bay arena, home to the St. Margaret’s Bay Skating Club in Upper Tantallon, Nova Scotia. Youle is excited to get on the ice after his most recent award: “Just last year I was given a free pass at the age of 90, for being visibly the oldest skater out there.”

As for today, Youle will be attending what will likely be his fourth Remembrance Day ceremony of the year. As a veteran, he attends multiple Remembrance Day ceremonies each year, reminding us of the sacrifices made, which allow us to enjoy our beautiful country as we do today.

Lest we forget.