March 05, 2004
Winning is great when
rivalry is friendly
Winter games bring out
great performance, good sportsmanship
Nunatsiaq News
For Iqaluit's Susie Pearce,
even without her silver ulu from this year's Arctic Winter Games, her week in
northern Alberta will be a memorable one.
As Pearce, a 24-year-old
nursing student, was trying to lunge as high as possible in the two-foot high
kick event, she heard words of encouragement - from the competition.
"It's completely different
compared to other sports," Pearce said of the Inuit high-kick game. "We
give each other advice and help each other out.
"That sharing of knowledge
among each other, that kept me playing."
Pearce will be among more
than 1,000 young athletes from around the circumpolar world returning home this
weekend from a heady but friendly week of competition in northern Alberta.
By press time, Team Nunavut
and Team Nunavik had each collected seven medals in Arctic sports and Dene games.
The traditional powerhouses of the Arctic Winter Games muscled ahead with the
Yukon in the lead, followed by Alberta North, Alaska and the Northwest Territories.
Athletes from Magadan (eastern Russian) and Yamal (Siberia) edged ahead of the
eastern Arctic with 14, and nine medals, respectfully.
The Saami and Greenlandic
teams were trailing behind with six and five medals each.
The 2004 Games kicked off
with less fanfare than normal when a dog team brought in the torch for the opening
ceremonies in Fort McMurray, the larger of the two events sites in the Wood
Buffalo region.
Team Alaska, top medalist
in the last games, paraded into the auditorium first in a stream of blue and
yellow followed by Greenland, in blue and white, and Magadan with athletes in
no official uniforms, from the Russian Far East.
Nunavimmiut wore bright
blue and white parkas, beside the Saami in traditional outfits from their home
communities, and an army of athletes from Nunavut, wrapped in flags and dressed
in bright red parkas. For the first time, a team from the Yamal region in Siberia
came to the games, and stood beside large veteran teams from Yukon and Alberta
and Alaska.
An elder prayed for all
the competitors to have the strength "to do their best," as athletes
and referees promised to uphold the game's traditions of fair play and cultural
exchange.
"It makes for a celebration
of our winter, our snow and ice and our relationships to each other in the North
we all share, whether we're from Canada, Greenland, Norway, Sweden, Finland,
Russia or the United States," said Governor-General Adrienne Clarkson,
who was also in Fort McMurray for the opening.
"The excitement is
palpable. You're all feeling it as athletes, as coaches, as spectators."
Full results from the 2004
Arctic Winter Games will appear in the next issue of Nunatsiaq News.
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