Canada games 2009 team nb


















McKay resides in Bathurst where he remains heavily involved in community organizations and activities. Roy is a resident of Dalhousie where he is very involved in regional sport activities and organizations. He has been the assistant chef de mission for the Restigouche Region at six editions of les Jeux de l'Acadie and has served on several Jeux de l'Acadie committees.

Roy volunteered as an assistant vice-president for the Bathurst-Campbellton Games and also as the acting chairperson of the New Brunswick Youth Council. He is employed as a resource centre co-ordinator and will be a sport liaison at this, his first experience with a Team NB mission. Thomas has participated in four Canada Games when living in Newfoundland and Labrador, and will serve as a sport liaison on the mission for the first time with Team NB in Thomas has Commonwealth Games and World Championship experience in the sport of athletics.

Thomas resides in Quispamsis. Team NB is thrilled to have the services of mental training support at the Games for the first time by having Hamilton involved in this capacity as part of the mission staff. Hamilton has helped athletes achieve national and international excellence and looks forward to assisting Team NB in achieving outstanding results. Lunn has volunteered extensively with the sport of baseball, particularly as coach and general manager of the Fredericton Royals.

He enjoys competitive rowing. Smith is the executive director for Sport NB. This will be her fourth Canada Games. She was a member of the mission staff in and and a manager for alpine ski at the Games. She has been an athlete, coach and volunteer, particularly in the sports of soccer and volleyball, and is involved as a volunteer with several local events and committees. This will be her first Games as a member of the Team NB mission staff.

He served as the assistant director of the Societe des Jeux de l'Acadie for seven years, and as assistant volunteer vice-president of ceremonies, protocol and culture for the Canada Winter Games. Benoit was a member of the and Team NB mission staff. Kuhn was a member of the Team NB mission staff at the Games. LeBlanc is an experienced athlete and coach in the sport of basketball and has extensively volunteered with the Harvest Jazz and Blues Festival.

This will be his first Games as a member of the Team NB mission staff. The Canada Games are a national multi-sport and cultural event being held Aug. It was a brilliant effort and a great day of racing. While some of the New Brunswick men have raced on teams and abroad, the women's team is less experienced. For most, Games was a first taste of racing at this level.

The women suffered a bit of bad luck in the road race, losing contact with the peloton after an early crash. That's racing sometimes, and ignoring their road rash, they gamely got back on their bikes, regrouped, and worked together to finish the race. What they may lack in experience, they more than make up for in tenacity. Justin Theriault leads the breakaway. Team Quebec leads the peloton in the chase.

The women prepare to start. Emily Nickerson works hard to chase back onto the pack after crashing. Liz Russell holds onto her cables for an aero position.

A criterium is a road race run on a very short circuit - usually around 1 km. Excellent bike handling skills are key to success, as riders who can corner quickly conserve momentum and cover the course much more efficiently than others, who must burn energy sprinting to catch them hundreds of times in an hour. This particular crit was a points race, so riders' final placing would depend not on the order in which they crossed the finish line on the final lap but on points accumulated during the race.

The men's race was 50 laps and the women's The women's race ran first, and we were all very proud of the NB girls who were not the least bit put off racing by their crash the previous day. Again they rode well, worked hard, and learned a lot. Natalie Cormier, who had crashed so hard in the road race that she cracked her helmet in 3 places and had to withdraw, posted the women's top crit result, finishing the final sprint with the pack for a solid 19th. The men's race started fast. Apparently having thoroughly enjoyed his success in the previous day's breakaway, Jean-Richard Cormier attacked almost immediately and got a gap on the peloton.

He was reeled in, and as the pace eased up after the first sprint, Stuart Wight attacked. Soon enough, Stu was joined by a group of riders that included representatives from every province but Manitoba and PEI.

This break looked promising! They worked well together and built their lead up to almost a minute. But as the race went on, members of the breakaway group began to play "cat and mouse," looking to shirk their share of the work to drive the break and questioning whether its success was truly in their teams' interest.

Once cooperation deteriorated, the peloton closed in fast and caught the break with 8 km to go. Marc Kennedy. Catharine Pendrel. Laura Brown. Hugo Houle. Jennifer Abel. Alexandre Despatie. Meaghan Benfeito. Sandra Sassine.

Joseph Polossifakis. Philippe Beaudry. Brian Orser. Kaetlyn Osmond. Rob McCall. Meg Ohsada. Jack Fan. Chloe Dufour-Lapointe. Cassie Sharpe. Eugene Wong. Brigitte Thibault. Tiffany Kong. Kyle Shewfelt. Shallon Olsen. Rose Woo. Sidney Crosby. Marie-Philip Poulin. Steven Stamkos. Hayley Wickenheiser. Nicolas Gill. Antoine Valois-Fortier.

Catherine Beauchemin-Pinard. Dave Arsenault. Jamie Batley. Todd Caissie. Jennifer Botterill. Brea Beck. Dailyn Bell. Kyle Hamilton. Janine Hanson. Darren Barber. Megan Lukan. Temitope Ogunjimi. Patrick Parfrey. Richard Clarke. Ross MacDonald. Nikola Girke. Logan Campbell. Mark McMorris. Marianne Leeson. Karina Leblanc. Rhian Wilkinson. Ian Bridge. Diana Matheson.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000