Team Nunavut wrestles big challenges on its way to the Canada Summer Games - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 01:38 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Team Nunavut wrestles big challenges on its way to the Canada Summer Games

The Games in Winnipeg feature 16 sports, but Nunavut is only sending a wrestling team. The small team of eight athletes has been building their skills in Rankin Inlet for the past few days.

Games feature 16 sports, but Nunavut is only sending a wrestling team

Team Nunavut's wrestlers and coaches. Holding the flag is Manuel Netser and Sylvia Kablutsiak. From left to right is Quintin Netser, Coach Chris Crooks, Mahalia Adams, Tanya Tugak, Andrew Tucker, Robert Doig , Coach Paula Cziranka, Kennedy Napayok, Elliot Adams, Troy Makpah, Paul Lucas Ungalaq, Christopher Mutch and Brittany Masson. (Submitted by Christopher Mutch)

Nunavut's wrestling team is headed to Winnipeg Saturdayto compete at the Canada Summer Games.

The Games, which are taking place from July 28 to August 13, feature 16 sports, but Nunavut is only sending a wrestling team.

"You can bring athletesfurther along in an individual sport,"said wrestling team coach Chris Crooks.

"Nunavut can be most competitive in individual sports, it is more difficult to get a team together, just due to numbers."

Team Nunavut members Troy Makpah and Elliot Adams face off. (Submitted by Christopher Mutch)

The small team of eight athletes has been building their skillsin Rankin Inlet for the past few days in preparation for the games. It will continue with their last-minute training in Winnipeg in the days leading up to the competition.

The wrestlers will compete from Aug.9 to 11.Youth ambassadors fromNunavutare also volunteering at theGames.

The wrestling team's youngest member, Manuel Netser, is 15 years old and looking forward to all aspects of the competition. He says he's excited to meet new people,testhis skills, and buy some toys and food to bring home to Rankin Inlet.

"I found out that my dad used to wrestle, so I told myself I am going to try my best at this sport and see if it improves me physically and mentally, because it's better to challenge yourself," Netser said.

Small team, big hurdles

Coach Crooks says most of the team's athletes come from Rankin Inlet, which is one of the few Nunavut communities with a wrestling mat to practise on.Mats cost about $10,000 and another$5,000 to ship north, Crooks says.

He says coaches are often only in a community for a few years, so unless there are athletes who've learned enough to pick up the baton, interest in the sport waxes and wanes.

Last month, Crooks took the team to a wrestling training camp in Jasper, Alta.,to help them prepare for the Games.
Team Nunavut coaches board a plane to Rankin Inlet to meet up with their athletes. (Submitted by Christopher Mutch)

"There were athletes from Alberta that had been to more wrestling camps in the last six months, than our athletes had been to practices, so it's quite a discrepancy," Crooks said.

Despite that, other coaches noticed Netser, who'd been to a half dozen practices in his life, and he was given an award for his dedication to training.

The team's captain, 18-year-old Andrew Tucker from Iqaluit, recognizes the challenges he's up against. With a small number of competitors and high travel costs,Nunavut only hosts one wrestling tournament a year the territorials that qualified Tucker for the team.

But he's not letting it phase him.

"I'm looking forward to some good competition and some fun hard matches with different people from across Canada," he said.

With files from Michelle Pucci