November 1, 2002
Speed demons
Nunavuts speed
skaters want to be first across the finish-line at the Canada Winter Games
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Nunavut speed skaters
meet Olympic hero Catriona Le May Doan at a speed skating camp in Calgary. From
left: June Pangon of Kugluktuk, Nick Dunphy of Iqaluit, Catriona Le May Doan,
Kyle St-Laurent of Iqaluit, Matthew Angootealuk of Coral Harbour, and Megan
Pizzolyal.
(PHOTO COURTESY OF
JOHN MAURICE)
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MIRIAM
HILL
"Im going to
wear a girls helmet today so dont anyone laugh at me."
John Maurice is getting
geared up for the first speed skating practice of the season at Iqaluits
new arena. At well over six feet tall, he strikes an imposing figure
even in a girls helmet.
About 20 young people,
ranging in age from five years to their late teens, mill about the dressing
room, listening to coach Maurice and pulling on their skates.
Dressed in Lycra suits,
complete with kneepads, some of the skaters wear sweatshirts over their outfits
and some of the older kids wear gloves and sunglasses.
All the equipment has been
supplied to the skaters, Maurice explains, except the gloves and glasses, thanks
to donations from corporate sponsors.
As the group moves out
onto the ice and Maurice catches a glimpse of the local hockey emblem painted
in the centre, he voices his concern about the lack of start lines and markers
for speed skaters.
Kyle St-Laurent adjusts
his skates.
(PHOTOS BY MIRIAM
HILL)
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"Were a national
association thats going to the Canada Winter Games," he says. "Its
time to understand speed skating is of a higher dimension than local hockey."
Maurice is hoping for great
things from some of his speed skaters this year and he has reason to
be optimistic. A number of them did extremely well at the Arctic Winter Games
in March, even without a full team.
"We did well enough
at the Arctic Winter Games to show we could perform at the national level,"
he says. Members of the team collected eight medals, including two from relays.
He was even told by at
least one observer that the Nunavut team could beat other territorial and provincial
teams at the Canada Winter Games.
The Canada Winter Games
are being held at the end of February 2003, in Campbelton, New Brunswick. In
preparation, Maurice recruited two women hockey players, one from Kugluktuk
and another from Taloyoak, to join the team.
He is hoping for a 10th
or 11th place finish with the five men and five women he brings to New Brunswick,
and to gain as much attention as the Nunavut wrestling team did with its 10th
place team finish at the 2001 Canada Summer Games in London, Ontario.
Luc Peter displays
an autograph from Olympic speed skater Matthew Turcotte.
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"If we manage to get
five girls [on the team] well do as well as PEI, or maybe Newfoundland,"
he says.
Maurice retrieves a bucket
full off black blobs, about the size of squashed rubber balls, and places them
strategically at either end of the ice surface to help create the shape of a
111-metre oval for the skaters.
"The ice is a bit
rutty for us," he says, sliding his skate edge in front of him. "It
doesnt take much with these sharp edges, just one catch and youre
down."
Big blue mats are set up
on the boards at the spots where skaters will turn at high speeds.
"Theyre out
for protection because you really get going," he explains. Many of the
younger children fall regularly, even when standing still, and Maurice, the
lone coach, is careful to make sure that when the youngest skaters are circling
the oval, the more experienced ones are busy doing drills in the centre of the
ice, and vice-versa.
Fifteen-year old Ashley
Tufts has been speed skating for five years. Last year, she and eight others
from Nunavut went to a speed skating camp in Calgary and she proudly shows off
Olympic athlete Jeremy Witherspoons autograph on the arm of her suit.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Luc Peter, left,
and Ashley Tufts show their form during a break in practice.
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"I like the speed
of [the sport]" she says, explaining why she has committed to speed skating.
"Every time you come on the ice you learn something new."
Tufts is thrilled with
the prospect of competing with 12- to 21-year-olds at the Canada Winter Games
next year.
"Its something
I dont think any of us could do if we lived in another province,"
she says.
Luc Peter, the unofficial
captain of the team, skates 500 metres in a respectable 49.27 seconds. He too
sports an Olympic athletes signature on his suit Matthew Turcottes
scrawl is on the middle of Peters back.
Peter says hes been
skating for five years and hasnt fallen in three years.
"I skate the way Im
supposed to," he says, and its the speed that keeps him participating.
He hasnt got his drivers licence yet, so for now, its the
oval that gives him an adrenaline rush.
"Everyone sees hockey
and they think thats the way to skate, but its a waste of energy,"
he says, leaning on the boards, watching the younger skaters through his wrap-around
sunglasses. "The corners are where you pick up the most speed."
Back amid the throng of
youngsters, some kids are still falling spontaneously and others are suffering
from blisters caused by their first skate in new equipment. The older kids,
including Peter and Tufts are skating behind some of the younger ones, shouting
words of encouragement and offering tips for staying upright.
The drills continue and
before long the hour and a half practice draws to a close.
Maurice groups the older
kids together for a final pep talk on the dangers of diabetes and smoking.
"I promise you, if
youre a good athlete Ill do everything I can to support your development,"
he says. The kids smile and wait anxiously for their chance to skate the oval
again before they have to remove the protective mats.
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