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January 10, 2003
Nunavut to send its first
team to the Canada Winter Games
17 teens chosen to represent
territory at national competition
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Ashley
Tufts, 15, is one of nine speedskaters representing Nunavut for the first time
at the Canada Winter Games in New Brunswick in February.
(PHOTO BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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KIRSTEN
MURPHY
Nine speedskaters and eight
badminton players have been chosen to represent Nunavut next month at the Canada
Winter Games in Bathurst, New Brunswick.
In being chosen, the young
athletes have made history without leaving home.
"We get to represent our
territory at the games for the first time," said Ashley Tufts, 15, between breaths
after speedskating practice at the Arctic Winter Games complex in Iqaluit.
"Its more about the
experience than anything else and I know people will be watching us and cheering
us on."
The teams were chosen after
qualification rounds held in mid-December. Manitok Thompson, minister of community
government and transportation, announced the names on Dec. 18.
Athletes heading to the
Maritimes for the event, which takes place Feb. 22 to March 8, hail from Coral
Harbour, Repulse Bay, Cambridge Bay, Rankin Inlet Kugluktuk, Taloyaok, Cape
Dorset and Iqaluit.
The speedskaters are: Luc
Peter, Peter Gilhuly, Aqpik Peter, Nick Dunphy, Kyle St. Laurent, Ashley Tufts,
Corenna Nuyalia, June Pangon and Megan Pizzo-Lyall. The badminton players are:
Jonathan Eder, Mathewsie Ashevak, David Joanasie, Michael Putulik, Solomon Malliki,
Julie Ann Langill, Tap Friesen and Tina Campbell.
Nunavut was invited to
send other sporting contingents to the prestigious games, said Marilyn Neily,
senior advisor for the department of community government and transportations
sport and recreation division. But for many sporting associations in the territory,
the cost of training just one team from a group of willing participants was
prohibitive.
Iqaluits amateur
hockey association decided several years ago that the money required to train
and coach one team could be better spent.
"They decided theyd
rather have more money to encourage hockey at a grassroots level and have more
kids involved than have money funneled for an elite group of athletes," Neily
said.
The badminton players and
speedskaters have had three years of after-school coaching, summer camps and
southern competitions to prepare them for the national event, held every two
years.
At the Arctic Winter Games
last March, Nunavuts speedskaters finished with eight medals. After the
AWG, coaches John Maurice and Ashley White kept their sites set on the 2003
Canada Winter Games.
Unlike competitors in the
south, Nunavut speedskaters do not have year-round ice time. The AWG complex
surface is drained in April to accommodate summer events. This shorter training
schedule means athletes must cross train, playing soccer and baseball in the
summer, White said.
In addition, some athletes
must practise in isolation, miles away from their teammates. Two speedskaters
live outside Iqaluit: June Pangon is from Kugluktuk and Megan Pizzo-Lyall lives
in Taloyoak.
And the badminton players
are from as far away as Cambridge Bay and Repulse Bay.
Even so, White is confidant
Team Nunavut will make the territory proud.
"We have some terrific
athletes. Maybe were not going to get gold but well be making our
presence known," she said. "You never know, anything can happen. This is a great
opportunity for our athletes."
Sport Nunavut is covering
all costs to send the two teams, including coaches and chaperones, to the games.
And its worth it, especially as Nunavut is earning a reputation for producing
elite competitors.
Most recently, Rankin Inlet
hockey star Jordin Tootoo became a household name during Team Canadas
rise to fame at the world junior championship.
"Im excited and nervous
because a lot of the other skaters will have more experience than us," said
Corenna Nuyalia, 16, before disappearing into the dressing room.
Even a veteran athlete
like badminton player Tina Campbell, 16, is excited. Campbell picked up a racquet
when she was seven years old. A year later she was hooked and playing competitively
in local tournaments in and around Ottawa. In 1997, she won one gold and two
bronze medals at the North American Indigenous Games in Victoria, British Columbia.
Her love for the sport
runs in the family. Not only did her father, Alex Campbell, introduce her to
it, hes also the badminton coach for Team Nunavut.
"I really like the way
I feel after a competition," she said. "You get so much exercise running around
and playing in tournaments is a great way to meet new people."
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