Winter - Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame

Transcription

Winter - Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame
Nova Scotia Sport Hall
of
Fame
on the go
Volume 4, Issue 2
Newsletter
Winter 2011
Nova Scotia Strikes Gold
at Past Canada Winter Games
A
s the 12th Canada Winter Games gets underway
February 12 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, athletes have some
lofty goals to achieve.
In the first 11 Games – one of which was held on Nova
Scotia soil in Cape Breton in 1987 – provincial athletes
won 21 gold medals, 32 silver and 43 bronze.
In 2007 in Whitehorse, Yukon, only one gold was won
– by half-pipe snowboarder Alexandra Duckworth in a
demonstration sport. There were three silvers and four
bronze medals won in those games.
Obviously, the bar has been set to exceed that total and,
maybe, to match or better the 14 total medals won in
1979 in Brandon, Manitoba, or in 1995 in Grand Prairie,
Alberta.
Research on the Canada Games websites from 1967’s first
Winter Games in Quebec City to the most recent four years
ago, as complete as possible, lists the following as Nova
Scotia gold medallists, a lofty achievement in a variety
of sports, many against long odds and almost all against
provinces with larger numbers of competitors chosen from
a huge population pool.
Gold medalists:
1967 – Quebec City
-G. Jones, wrestling, 160 lb
1975 – Lethbridge
-Chris Clarke, boxing, 125 lb
-Graham Eldridge, weightlifting, middle
heavyweight
1979 – Brandon
-Robert Macdonald, weightlifting, 110 kg
-Mike Nickel, boxing, 54 kg
-James Jones, boxing, 63.5 kg
1983 – Saguenay-Lac St. Jean
-Graham Mauger, weightlifting, 110 kg +
-Derek Logan, judo, 54 kg
Chris Clarke, Halifax, proudly displays his 1975 Canada
Games boxing gold medal won in the 125 class. Chris, a 2006
inductee to the Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame, later won a
gold medal in the lightweight division at the Pan-American
Games and fought for Canada in the 1976 Olympics in
Montreal. In 1979, he won the British Commonwealth
welterweight title over Clyde Gray before 10,000 fans at
Halifax Metro Centre.
1987 – Cape Breton
-Men’s Basketball
-Angela Coady / Glenn Maccara, figure skating,
novice dance
-Elizabeth Rutt, table tennis, U-13
1991 – Charlottetown
-Jason Peebles, boxing, 54 kg
-Jim Dan Corbett, weightlifting, snatch, 7582.5 kg
-Jim Dan Corbett, weightlifting, clean and
jerk, 75-82.5 kg
-Jim Dan Corbett, weightlifting, total, 75-82.5
kg
1995 – Grand Prairie
-Jennifer Hanna, artistic gymnastics, balance
beam
Past Games Athletes
Star on World Stage
✒ SIDNEY CROSBY, a
Canada Games athlete in 2003,
has been a hockey superstar
since he was a youth player in
Cole Harbour. He has starred
in the Quebec Major Junior
league, was chosen first in
the NHL draft by Pittsburgh,
was the youngest captain ever
named by the team, led them to the Stanley Cup in 2009,
and has won many individual awards including the NHL
scoring championship, NHL MVP and Canada’s Male
Athlete of the Year.
✒ JOE DIPENTA played in Canada
Games in 1993. Growing up in Cole
Harbour, he was drafted 61st overall by the
Florida Panthers. He played with Halifax
Mooseheads and Boston University and
eventually was a Stanley Cup champion
defenseman with the 2007 Anaheim
Ducks.
✒ DAVID KIKUCHI, a gymnast in the 1995 Canada
Games and a coach of the gymnastics team in 2007,
competed in every discipline in the 2004 Athens and 2008
Beijing Summer Olympics. His best finish was 9th in the
team all-around
competition
in
2008. His top
individual showing
was a 23rd in rings
in 2008.
1999 – Corner Brook, NL
-Amanda Berry / Kate MacDonald, target
shooting, team air pistol
-John Mattatall / Christa Wilson, figure
skating, novice pairs
2003 – Bathhurst/Campbellton, NB
-James Blood, figure skating, men’s Special
Olympics level 2
-Curtis White, boxing, 67 kg to 71 kg class
2007 – Whitehorse, Yukon
-Alexandra Duckworth, snowboarding half
pipe (demo sport)
Jones Named to Games
Hall of Honour
O
ne of Canada’s great
curlers, a two-time
world champion and sixtime national champion (A
Canadian record), as well as
a multi-winner of the Nova
Scotia championship, Colleen
Jones has been named to
the Canada Games Hall of
Honour.
Induction into the Canada
Games Hall of Honour occurs every two years during every
Canada Games. The Hall of Honour recognizes, honours
and celebrates exceptional Canada Games alumni who
have distinguished themselves as athletes, coaches, officials
or administrators, or who have made an outstanding
contribution to the development and advancement of the
Canada Games Movement.
At the 1979 Canada Winter Games in Brandon, Manitoba,
Jones helped Team Nova Scotia capture a silver medal. She
played an important role to help secure the 2011 Canada
Games in Halifax. Jones won four consecutive Scott
Tournaments of Hearts between 2001 and 2004 and,
besides her world wins in 2001 and 2004, was runner up
in 2003. She is a member of the Canadian Curling Hall
of Fame.
Colleen will be recognized at a ceremony February10 at
the Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame at which time speed
skater Catriona LeMay Doan, and builders Jim Morell
of Fredericton and Guy Rousseau of Quebec will also be
celebrated.
Basketball Gold Still a Thrill 24 Years Later
K
evin Veinot looks back at the 1987 Canada Games
basketball gold medal win with pride.
Now principal at North East Kings Education Centre in
Canning, and an assistant coach of Acadia Axemen, for
whom he starred in the 1980s, Veinot says the championship
game win against Quebec was like “David and Goliath. We
did something (against a much larger province with a large
basketball base) that no one had ever accomplished, and
still hasn’t in winning the basketball gold medal.”
Inducted in 2005, the 1987 team went 6-0 in preliminary
rounds in the Cape Breton Games, then whipped British
Columbia 116-86 in the semi-final before taking on Quebec
in the final.
With 1,200 people packing a jammed gym, Nova Scotia
jumped to a 38-35 halftime lead before running away with
a 91-76 win.
“It had to be the biggest emotional win of all of our basketball
careers,” Veinot says. “We had all been on provincial teams
for the previous four to five years and hadn’t really won
much, but this was the ultimate victory. While coaching
today, I stress to our players that it doesn’t matter the size
of the community you come from, it’s the size of the fight
you have in you to achieve. I certainly use that win as a
motivator.”
Wade Smith, vice principal at Sir John A. Macdonald High
School in Tantallon, reflects that the longer he’s away from
that win, the more significant he feels it is in the history of
Nova Scotia sport “as a member of the first and only Nova
Scotia gold medal basketball team at the Games.”
He said many people made sacrifices to be part of that
team... the players, of course, but the coaching staff, and
the coaches and teams for whom the Canada Games team
members played who gave up their players for that oneweek period (and practice time, too).
“Everyone made a commitment,” says Smith. “Today
(teammate) Augie Jones is head coach of the 2013 Canada
Games men’s basketball team and I’m his assistant. We stress
to the players they can’t take anything for granted and stress
how difficult it is, and will be, to attain our goals. We were
21 and under in 1987. Now the Games team will be 17 and
under so there is a different dynamic with our players.”
He says they impress on their players that the “game owes
you nothing. You owe it the sweat and tears and sacrifice.
You have to play hard, with no excuses. These are things I
took away from my 1987 experience.”
Many members of the 1987 team have made their mark
on society in the 24 years since. While Smith and Veinot
are in school administration, Jones teaches at Dartmouth
High, Scott Borden is a probation officer, Jason Wilson a
corrections officer, Keith Donovan and Charles Ikejiani
are medical doctors. Grant MacDonald is an engineer and
James McQuaid runs a music studio and promotes young
artists. Others are still working and living in the province.
Many are still involved in basketball. Borden, Smith and
Wilson all coach minor basketball with the latter also assisting
at Dartmouth High. Manager Mark Parker, who works at
the QEII Health Sciences Centre, is a coach at Citadel
High. Jones is an assistant with Saint Mary’s University
men’s team. Games team
coach Bev Greenlaw is head
coach of Acadia University
women’s team.
“It’s great to be able to
give back,” says Smith.
“As get older we realize the
accomplishment we made
and the sacrifices people
made for us to do that.”
Back Row: Mark Parker
(manager), unknown, David
Brown, Stephen Woodman,
Grant MacDonald, Kevin Veinot,
Scott Gordon, Jason Wilson, Bev
Greenlaw (coach)
Front Row: Wade Smith, Charles
Ikejiani, Keith Donovan, Peter
Leppard, James McQuaig, Augie
Jones
Hall of Fame Inductees Who Have Been
Canada Games Participants – Winter & Summer
(Listed by Induction Year)
ATHLETES:
Name
Richie Spears
Lyle Carter
Susan Mason MacLeod
Nancy Garapick
Rob McCall
Andrew Cole
Anne Dodge
Karin Maessen
Karen Fraser Moore
Bob Piers
Mike Henderson
Cecilia Branch
Barry Shakespeare
Ricky Anderson
Chris Clarke
Ken Reardon
Carroll Morgan
Don Brien
Cindy Montgomerie Tye
Janice Cossar
Robyn Meagher
Ross Webb
TEAMS:
Sport
Softball
Basketball
Sport
Basketball
Softball
Swimming
Swimming
Figure Skating
Swimming
Canoe/Kayak
Volleyball
Volleyball
Tennis
Hockey
Athletics
Tennis
Boxing
Boxing
Tennis (coach)
Boxing
Canoe/Kayak
Soccer
Field Hockey
Athletics
Soccer
Canada Games Year
1981
1987
Canada Games Year
1969
1969
1973, 1977
1973
1975
1981, 1985
1973
1975, 1989
1979
1969
1975
1973
1969
1975
1975
1981, 1985
1971
1977
1993
1985
1985
1977
Year Inducted
1980
1984
1985
1986
1993
1993
1994
1994
1996
1997
1999
2001
2003
2003
2006
2006
2008
2008
2010
2010
2010
2010
Year Inducted
2001
2005
Builders (includes coaches and managers, as known, not referees, umpires or officials):
Name
Sport
Canada Games Year
Eddie Gillis
Baseball
1977
Freda Wales
Ski (athlete)
1971
Owen Sawler
Rowing
1973, 1985
George Kehoe
Hockey
1967
Nigel Kemp
Swimming
1977
Keith MacKenzie
Basketball
1975, 1979
Joyce Myers
Badminton (athlete)
1967, 1971
George Athanasiou
Soccer
1993
Al Yarr
Basketball
1967
Terry Henderson
Softball
1977
Bernie Chisholm
Athletics (athlete)
1969
Hugh Matheson
Hockey
1971, 1975, 1979
Steve Konchalski
Basketball
2001
Don Koharski
Lacrosse (athlete)
1969
Wayne Finck
Lacrosse (athlete)
1969
Gus Fahey
Hockey (athlete)
1967
Kevin Heisler
Athletics
1981, 1985, 1989
Carl Buchanan
Games President
1987
Year Inducted
1980
1981
1987
1988
1989
1991
1996
1997
2000
2002
2004
2004
2007
2007
2008
2009
2010
2010
Members of Inducted Teams Who Participated
in Canada Games (as known)
Joan Selig Langley, Merle Richardson, Judy Rice, Nancy Dunbrack Tokaryk, Helen Castonguay, Kathy Mullane – 1975
Canada Games Field Hockey team - inducted with Canadian championship team in 1995
Judy Lugar – Sailing - athlete 1985, manager 1993 - inducted in 2006
Andreas Josenhans – Sailing manager, 1981 - inducted in 1983
Glen Dexter – Sailing athlete 1969 - inducted in 1983
David Brown, Scott Borden, Keith Donovan, Charles Ikejiani, Augie Jones, Peter Leppard, Grant MacDonald, James
McQuaid, Wade Smith, Kevin Veniot, Jason Wilson, Stephen Woodman, Mark Parker (Manager), Bev Greenlaw (Coach)
– 1987 Men’s Basketball - inducted in 2005
Karin Maessen, Karen Fraser Moore – Dalhousie University Women’s Volleyball 1982 - inducted in 2002
Paul Long, John Butts, Greg Patton, Carl Smith, Scott Billard, Darrell Hadley, Harold Lowe, Mike Hart, Craig Cavicchi,
Jeff Whitman, Jim Fitzpatrick, Paul Blackmore, Dave Fraser, Danny Ryan, Jim Hoffman (Asst. Coach), Ron Clarke
(Coach) – 1981 Canada Games Junior Softball - inducted in 2001
Terry Henderson (Coach), Hughie Matheson, Robert Putnam, Mike Henderson – 1980 Brookfield Elks Softball - inducted
in 1988
1905 Pitcher now on Display at Hall
With Love: On the Back of a Harley Davidson
A
t 5 o’clock on June 7, 1905, the room
was decorated in purple and white – the
colours of the Amherst Ramblers hockey
team. With three cheers and the Ramblers
chorus, the Ramblers Club greeted Lorne
Simpson and his bride, Miss Annie Higgins.
The wedding was underway.
by her father, she played for the Stewiacke
Ladies, before moving to Massachusetts.
One of the greatest hockey players in the
Maritimes, Lorne was also a member of
Ramblers Club. He was dedicated to sports.
When the ice had melted for the season, he
worked to keep baseball and football clean
and respectful.
Earlene and her husband cared for the
pitcher until 2010. They realized it belonged
in Nova Scotia, so they got on their Harley
Davidsons and drove about 1000km from
their home in Massachusetts to the Nova
Scotia Sport Hall of Fame.
It was not just a wedding, though. Lorne
had taken a job in Edmonton, so this was
also a goodbye. The Ramblers Hockey
Team presented the young newlyweds with
a beautifully engraved silver water pitcher,
“From RHT 1905”. Then off went the
pitcher and the happy couple to Edmonton. Soon, however,
the Simpson family returned permanently to Nova Scotia,
setting up a home in Stewiacke.
Lorne’s daughter, Lorna, was also a hockey player. Coached
Lorne gave his daughter the silver pitcher,
shortly before he passed away in 1951.
She kept it until she passed away when the
pitcher went to Earlene, Lorna’s daughter
(Lorne’s granddaughter).
Now, the pitcher is back in Nova Scotia and
the Hall of Fame will keep it and its story
for all to enjoy, because it is not just a silver
pitcher, is it? It is over 100 years of history,
born from the Nova Scotian love of hockey
and the love shared between two people. So,
grab someone you love and bring them to the Hall of Fame,
because even hockey can be romantic.
Hall of Fame intern, Tinisha Stilling, prepared this story.
BlackBerry Sponsors Hall of Fame Theatre
B
lackBerry has signed a three-
year sponsorship agreement
obtaining naming rights to the
BlackBerry Theatre in the Hall of
Fame. The theatre area is a marquee
location hosting schools, groups,
media
conferences,
corporate
meetings, receptions and thousands
of visitors to the Hall. Executive
Director Bill Robinson stated
“BlackBerry is a great international
Canadian company with which we
are proud to be associated with.
The new Hall of Fame has attracted
over 80,000 visitors annually in its
first four years of operation.
Chris Flynn First Non-Pro Named to Canadian
Football Hall of Fame Since 1963
T
he Canadian Football
Hall of Fame is about to
slightly alter its all-professional
player focus to include amateur
athletes.
Chris Flynn, former star
quarterback with Saint Mary’s
Huskies in the 1980s, a threetime Hec Crighton Award
winner as the outstanding
player in Canadian University
football, was recently elected
into the Canadian Football
Hall of Fame.
He was a Canadian college quarterback who could do it all
mechanically, yet through an intuitive art of improvisation
had an uncanny ability to call the right play in any given
situation. The vision of Chris Flynn scrambling in the
backfield, warding off defenders, and controlling the play
until he uncovered his receiver, was a sight that fans will
forever cherish in the career of an exceptional athlete.
His individual distinctions were awesome; four-time AUS
All-Star QB; three time CIS All-Canadian QB; CIS records
for most TD passes in a season and career; leading rusher
QB in CIS history; and the ultimate mark of greatness, his
unprecedented three times as national MVP Hec Crighton
Trophy winner. From 1987 to 1990, Chris led Saint Mary’s
to a 27-2 regular season record, both losses coming on the
road in 1987; four AUAA championships; a 2-2 record in
four Atlantic Bowls; and two Vanier Cup appearances. In
1988, ’89 and ’90, Flynn and the Huskies lost only three
games, one each season and all to the eventual national
champions.
On The Go
Winter 2011 – Volume 4, Issue 2
Publisher – Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame
Editor – Joel Jacobson
Layout & Desktop – Paula Yochoff
Research – Shane Mailman, Tinisha Stilling
Contact – Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame
Tel: 902.421.1266
Website: www.nsshf.com
Email: [email protected]
Nova Scotia Teams Win
Major Hockey Championships
N
ova Scotia hockey teams, in several categories, have
experienced considerable success at the national level.
The list below ranges from professional to senior men’s,
junior men’s and university men’s.
Alexander Cup – Tier Two senior men’s championship
✒ 1952-53 Halifax Atlantics *
✒ 1953-54 Halifax Atlantics *
Calder Cup – playoff champions of the American Hockey
League
✒ 1971-72 Nova Scotia Voyageurs *
✒ 1975-76 Nova Scotia Voyageurs
✒ 1976-77 Nova Scotia Voyageurs
✒ 1992-93 Cape Breton Oilers
Royal Bank Cup – Junior A championship
✒ 2001-02 Halifax Oland Exports
Allan Cup – senior men’s championship
✒ 1934-35 Halifax Wolverines *
✒ 1997-98 Truro Bearcats
Hardy Cup – Tier Two senior men’s championship
✒ 1989-90 Dartmouth Moosehead Mounties
Canadian Interuniversity Sport University Cup
✒ 1993Acadia University
✒ 1996 Acadia University
✒ 2004 Francis Xavier University
✒ 2010 Saint Mary’s University
* inducted in the Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame
Nova Scotia National Champion Basketball Teams
Canadian Interuniversity Sport
✒ 1964-65 – Acadia University *
✒ 1970-71 – Acadia University *
✒ 1972-73 – Saint Mary’s University *
✒ 1976-77 – Acadia University *
✒ 1977-78 – Saint Mary’s University
✒ 1978-79 – Saint Mary’s University
✒ 1992-93 – St. Francis Xavier University
✒ 1998-99 – Saint Mary’s University
✒ 1999-200 – St. Francis Xavier University
✒ 2000-2001 – St. Francis Xavier
Canadian Juvenile Boys
✒ 1932 – New Waterford St. Agnes *
✒ 1950 – Queen Elizabeth High School Lions *
✒ 1956 – Queen Elizabeth High School Lions
✒ 1961 – New Waterford Central High School
✒ 1964 – Queen Elizabeth High School Lions
Canadian Men’s Senior
✒ 1972-73 – Halifax Wandlyn Inn
✒ 1977-78 – Halifax Budget Rent-A-Car
✒ 1980-81 – Halifax Budget Rent-A-Car
Fred Perry Jr. celebrates St. F.X. national championship in 2001.
Canadian Men’s Intermediate
✒ 1946-47 – New Waterford Strands
✒ 1947-48 – New Waterford Strands
* inducted in the Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame
Stars Shine on Induction Night 2010
A
gala November night brought together six athletes
and three builders as the newest inductees to the Nova
Scotia Sport Hall of Fame.
Pictures tell the proverbial 1,000 words. The joy on the
faces of the new entrants to the provincial Hall of Fame
shows the excitement of being recognized among the
elite in provincial sport history – as athletes and builders.
Memories created on induction night will live forever in the
hearts and minds of the nine new Hall of Fame members
and their families and friends.
The 2010 Induction Class of the Nova Scotia Sport Hall
of Fame was recognized
November 6th. Inductees
were Carl ‘Bucky’ Buchanan,
builder; Janice Cossar,
multi-sport; Mike Forgeron,
rowing; Kevin Heisler,
builder; Robyn Meagher,
athletics; Rick Rivers,
builder; Gary Sabean, Hall of Fame inductee Gary
karate; Cindy Tye, soccer; Sabean is interviewed on stage by
emcee Bruce Rainnie.
and Ross Webb, soccer.
Pat Daly Named 2010 Volunteer of the Year
L
ong-time volunteer, Pat Daly, was presented the
Volunteer of the Year award at Induction Night last
November.
The president and CEO of Marcap Realtor Managers, a
property management company, is a former member of the
Hall’s board, chaired the Hall of Fame Golf Tournament
for the last 14 years through he helped raise over $300,000,
and was a major player in the capital campaign to develop
the current Hall of Fame site.
Pat, an original Gold Club member, is a former national
women’s ski team coach.
Bill Robinson (right) and John Randles (left), a long-time friend of
Pat, making the presentation last November.
“He’s a doer,” says Hall of Fame executive director Bill
Robinson. “With his passion for the Hall, he has been one
of our most consistent, long-time volunteers.”
Updated Graphics Excite Simulator Users
T
he Tim Hortons Sports Simulator is more
realistic than ever as men and women, boys
and girls, test their skills against the computergenerated athletes on screen.
A new software package has been added
which shows better graphics as hockey, soccer,
basketball, football and baseball enthusiasts
—people of all ages—live their dreams of
outsmarting the computer athletes. The
response time of the computer is quicker which
adds to the enjoyment of the participants.
Did You Know…
✒ Sydney-native PAUL BOUTILIER was a member
of Canada’s 1980 World Junior Championship Team and
was voted the best defenceman in the tournament. He was
drafted 21st overall by the New York Islanders in 1981. In
1983, his first year as a pro, he played 29 regular season
games and two playoff games with the Islanders and earned
a Stanley Cup ring. He was
inducted in 1994.
Paul’s Team Canada Sweater is in
the Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame.
Note the misspelling of his last name.
He was BEST DEFENSEMAN in
the tournament and they STILL got
it wrong.
✒ Three basketball inductees had tryouts with National
Basketball Association teams and one played a season in the
world’s top basketball league. BRIAN HEANEY (inducted
2009) played with Baltimore Bullets after a superb career
at Acadia University. RICHIE SPEARS
(1980), New Waterford, started with the
Axemen in the 1950s and 1960s, then
had a tryout with St. Louis Hawks but
chose to remain in Nova Scotia. MICKEY
FOX pictured right (2009), a many-time
All-Canadian with Saint Mary’s Huskies,
was drafted by Detroit and Portland
but remained in Nova Scotia to build a
teaching career.
✒ DOUGLAS “DUGGER” MACNEIL,
Halifax, has been inducted to the Hall
of Fame THREE times – as a member
of the 1948 Saint Mary’s hockey juniors
(inducted 2002), the 1952 through 1954
Halifax Atlantics (1980) with whom he
was a player-coach, and as an individual
athlete, a tough defenseman with every
team on which he played (1988).
✒ WILLIAM NJOKU, Halifax,
starred for the Saint Mary's Basketball
team. The 6'8 Centre was all-Canadian
and voted Canada's top CIS University
player in 1992-93. William was drafted
in the second round of the NBA draft by
the Indianna Pacers.
✒ Port Hood claims two Hall
of Famers. Hockey superstar AL
MACINNIS, with a Stanley Cup
ring, Olympic gold medal, the first
Nova Scotian to win a winter gold,
and multi-all-star recognitions,
and
football
icon
BRUCE
BEATON, a twotime Grey Cup champion and many-time
conference and league all star, both hail
from the small Cape Breton community.
MacInnis was inducted in 2008 and
Beaton in 2009.
✒ MIKE HENDERSON, Brookfield, played in the
1975 Canada Winter games as a hockey player but was
recognized by the Hall with induction as an individual
athlete in 1999 as an athlete for his stellar long-time
performances with Brookfield Elks fastball team. That club
was inducted in 1988 for winning the 1980 national senior
men’s championship.
✒ PAUL MACLEAN, Antigonish, made
a splash in the hockey world by playing
Major Junior hockey, CIS hockey with
Dalhousie Tigers, leading them to their
first AUS hockey title, was a member
of Canada’s national team, and had a
10-year career in the National Hockey
League. He scored more than 40 goals
three times, finished 11th in league scoring in 1984-85 with
101 points and scored 324 goals and 349 assists in a 719
game career, he’s now an assistant coach with Detroit Red
Wings. Paul was inducted in 1995.
In Memoriam
P
aul Mason, Bedford, N.S., a member of
Fisherman’s Market Midget Boys Fastball
national champions, passed away December 11,
2010 in Halifax. He was also an active hockey
player and coach, an avid runner and promoted
healthy living. The team was inducted to the
Hall in 2006.
NOVA SCOTIA SPORT
HALL OF FAME
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The Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame at Metro Centre • [email protected]
902 404 3321 • www.nsshf.com