Team P.E.I. ready for 2017 North American Indigenous Games - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 08:37 AM | Calgary | -12.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Team P.E.I. ready for 2017 North American Indigenous Games

P.E.I. is sending 28 athletes to this years North American Indigenous Games in Toronto.

Island sending 28 athletes to the July 16-23 games in Toronto

P.E.I. is sending 28 youth athletes to Toronto for the 2017 North American Indigenous Games. The last time the games were held the province sent eight athletes. (Submitted by Craig MacDougall)

With 28 athletes heading to Toronto, the Islandis sending more than three times the number of athletes to this year's North American Indigenous Games than it did the last time the games were held in 2014.

And, this year's team is ready for the competition, according toCraig MacDougall, the team's chef de mission andsports development coordinator for the Mi'kmaq Confederacy.

'They have their swag'

"They have their swag now and I think that's one of those things you check off. You get adrenaline and you're focused," he said on Friday.

About 5,000 athletes ages 13-19 will be in the Toronto area competing in 14 sporting categories for the July 16-23 games.

MacDougall said the P.E.I. team'sathletesare competing in five events athletics, archery, badminton, swimming and rifle shooting.

About 5,000 athletes will be competing in the July 16-23 games. (CBC)

Besides the athletic component, MacDougall said cultural villages will be set up at McMaster University and York University for a week-long festival with entertainment as well as information sessions in areas such as financial management and life skills for the athletes.

Also highlighting the games in an initiative called Team (or hashtag) 88 to recognize recommendations from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada as well as serve as call on all level of governments to continue supporting the games.

Stepping stone

MacDougallsaidthat the games can be a stepping stone to larger events. That could be the case for two of the team's athletes Logen Lewis and MacKenzie Thomas who are also trying out for P.E.I.'s Canada Summer Games team.

This year's turnout of 28 athletesis a huge improvement compared to the eight athletes P.E.I. sent in 2014. When the games take place again in three years, MacDougall is hoping the numbers continue to climb.

"We're really excited. And, the idea is coming back and continuing that movement of sport and creating clubs. And, in three years in 2020, we could double our numbers again,"he said.

With files from Laura Chapin