
Women | Men |
Amanda Ammar | Drew Goldsack |
Chandra Crawford | George Grey |
Sara Renner | Chris Jeffries |
Beckie Scott | Devon Kershaw |
Milaine Theriault | Dan Roycroft |
Sean Crooks | |
Philip Widmer |
Canada headed into the 2006 Olympics and Paralympics in Torino with a full team and high hopes.
On the Olympic side, Beckie Scott and Sara Renner headline a talented
team of nominated Canadian athletes. Beckie, a defending Olympic
champion in the pursuit, has show that she will be hot to trot when the
Olympics roll around by absolutely dominating the December World Cup
events in Vernon and Canmore, Canada. Beckie finished no worse than
2nd in these events. Sara Renner, 2005 World Ski Championships bronze
medallist (sprint), is also looking to have best-ever results at the
Olympic games. Her sprint form remains top-notch and her distance
fitness makes her ready to challenge everybody in all of the events.
Milaine Theriault, attending her third Olympic Games, rounds out the
veteran side of the women’s team in top shape for 2006. Chandra
Crawford and Amanda Ammar fill the final two spots on the women’s side –
both young talents attending their first Olympic Games. Chandra has
already had 2 top-30 finishes this year in World Cup action, so watch
for her to shine.
Although young and all Olympic rookies, the Canadian men’s team has a
lot of of potential, particularly in the sprinting events. Last year
Devon Kershaw and George Grey shocked the world, finishing 6th in the
team sprint event at the World Ski Championships. Philip Widmer
blasted to 4th place in the sprint qualifier in his first ever World
Cup, in December 2005 in Vernon, BC. There’s a lot of potential in
these gentlemen, all of whom will be considering Torino as a stepping
stone to the Vancouver Olympics in 2010.
Olympic Results:
For the second Olympics in a row there were medals for Canadian
cross-country skiers, as Chandra Crawford “came from nowhere”, capturing
gold in the women’s sprint. It was the sprint track, again where medal
#2 came from, as Sara Renner and Beckie Scott won silver in the Team
Sprint event.
The Olympics started with Beckie Scott 6th behind Kristina Smigun of
Estonia in the woman’s pursuit, with Sara Renner finishing 16th. In the
men’s pursuit Ivan Babikov finished 13th, but he was skiing for Russia
as his Canadian citizenship papers hadn’t yet been completed. The top
Canadian was George Grey in 25th and Russia’s Demetiev was the victor.
The team sprints were the next events and Sara Renner and Beckie Scott
teamed up for a silver medal in the classic event. Canada may have been
in a position to capture gold but Sara Renner broke a pole near the
end of the race, and Sweden were victorious. As per ski etiquette a
Norwegian coach handed Sara a new pole, shortly after hers broke, so
minimal time was lost. In the men’s team sprint George Grey and Devon
Kershaw finished 11th, just missing qualifying for the final that was
won by Sweden.
The 10 and 15k classic events were won by Estonian’s Kristina Smigun
and Andres Veerpalu, with the top Canadians Sara Renner in 8th and
George Grey in 31st. Canada had respectable relay results with
theMilaine Theriault, Sara Renner, Amanda Ammar and Beckie Scott
finishing 10th behind the Russians and the men’s team of Devon Kershaw,
Sean Crooks, Chris Jeffries and George Grey finishing 11th behind
Italy.
The Canadian women had an excellent individual free technique sprint
day, as Beckie Scott qualified 1st, Chandra Crawford 8th and Sara
Renner 9th. In the final Chandra dominated the race to capture Olympic
gold, with Beckie narrowly missing bronze in 4th. Sara managed another
16th place result. On the men’s side Drew Goldsack finished 31st, .2
seconds off qualifying for the knockout rounds. The men’s sprint was
won by Sweden’s Bjoern Lind.
The final events were the 30 and 50k mass starts. The 30k was won by
Katerina Neumanova from the Czech republic with a tired woman’s team
unable to start a competitor. In the men’s 50k, Russian/Canadian, Ivan
Babikov finished 38th as a member of teh Russian team and George Grey
was 44th.
Paralympic Team
The 2006 Canadian Paralympic Team will be led by Brian McKeever and
guide Robin McKeever, who together were multiple gold medalists in the
visually impaired class at the 2002 Paralympics in Salt Lake City.
Shauna Maria Whyte and Collette Bourgonje, both of whom have multiple
Paralympic experiences and who have many international medals on their
trophy shelves, will be strong contenders in the women’s sit ski
class. Jean-Thomas Boily, 5th in the overall World Cup results in 2004,
is ready to break out in the men’s sit ski class as well. Joining him
will be rookie sit skier Jimmy Pelletier, who, in only his second season
of international competition, has shown that he has great potential.
Brian and Shauna will compete in both biathlon and cross country events,
while the rest of the team will compete in the cross country events
only.
Paralympic Results
There were medals in Paralympic cross-country as Brian McKeever
captured 2 gold and a silver in the Visually Impaired events, led by
his guide Robin McKeever a Nagano Olympian. Brian also captured bronze
in the Biathlon. Colette Bourgonje captured bronze in the 10 and 5k
sitski events and finished 6th in the 2.5, just in front of Shauna-
Maria Whyte who finished 7th and had earlier finished 4th in biathlon.
Jean-Thomas Boily was the top Canadian in men’s sitski, finishing with a
best result of 24th in the 10k.
Congratulations to the Canadian Disabled Ski Team for a very successful 2006 Paralympics!
Team Canada finished with 13 medals yesterday with the closing of the
Winter Paralympics to position Canada as #6 on the medal count list.
Nordic Skiing took home almost half of Canada’s medals with Brian and
Robin McKeever winning 2 golds, 1 silver and 1 bronze in various
visually impaired biathlon and cross-country events and
Colette Bourgonje took home 2 bronze medals in sit-ski cross-country
events. Great efforts were put in by the rest of the team and we now
look forward to their performance’s in the coming years in preparation
for the 2010 Vancouver Olympics.
Olympic Team – Support Team:
Dave Wood | Head Coach |
Thomas Holland | Team Leader |
Mike Cavaliere | Coach |
Yves Bilodeau | Head Technician |
Graham Maclean | Technician |
Laurent Roux | Technician |
Joel Knopff | Technician |
Alain Masson | Technician |
Pål Fredrik Andersen | Technician |
Rob Grey | Technician |
David Cox | Sport Psychologist |
Stephen Watterreus | Massage Therapist |
Josee Zimanyi | Cook |
Annick Blouin | Cook |
Paralympic Team – Support Team:
Kaspar Wirz | Head Coach |
Bjorn Taylor | Team Leader |
Daniel Poirier | Coach |
Ian Daffern | Head Technician |
Maggie Kayes | Massage |
Elizabeth Wirz | Cook/Assistant |