Calgary Herald

Van Buskirk eager to compete before hometown crowd

Canadian track team thrilled to take on best in west at NACAC championsh­ips

- LORI EWING

TORONTO Kate Van Buskirk turned down a chance to race the 5,000 metres at the 2015 Pan American Games in her hometown. Instead, she flew to Europe to chase the Olympic standard in the 1,500 metres and came up just short.

Passing up that opportunit­y is one of Van Buskirk’s biggest regrets, so the 31-year-old from Toronto jumped at the chance to race in the NACAC Championsh­ips on Friday night at Varsity Stadium.

“I was seeing all the tweets and the photos of the medallists and the stands that were full in a sea of red and white (at the Toronto Pan Am Games),” Van Buskirk said. “You have to love the sport for the purity of the sport, but a close second to that is seeing a hometown crowd who’s out there to support you and your teammates.

“I feel like I missed out on something special and I wanted to make up for that.”

The three-day NACAC meet begins Friday and features some of the world’s best athletes from North America, Central America and the Caribbean. Among the headliners: teen long jumper Juan Miguel Echevarria of Cuba, who had social media buzzing in June when he almost cleared the entire pit to win the Stockholm Diamond League; women’s hurdles world recordhold­er Kendra Harrison of the U.S.; and Jamaica’s Shelly-Ann FraserPryc­e, the 2008 and 2012 Olympic gold medallist in the 100 metres.

Van Buskirk and race walker Evan Dunfee are co-captains of a Canadian team that is missing some of its biggest stars to injury.

Three-time Olympic medallist sprinter Andre De Grasse shut down his season after straining his hamstring last month. Olympic high jump champ Derek Drouin is out with a neck injury. Melissa Bishop, the world silver medallist in the 800 metres, took the season off to have a baby. And shot putter Brittany Crew broke her foot in training last week.

At Thursday’s press conference on Varsity Stadium’s new double blue Mondo track, De Grasse played moderator in a questionan­d-answer session with athletes. He had some fun with fellow sprinter Aaron Brown, who should challenge for NACAC gold in the 200m.

“Are we expecting to see a Canadian record?” De Grasse, who owns the Canadian 200m record, said with a grin.

“I feel great coming in with one of the top times, I have some big confidence based on what I’ve done this year,” Brown replied.

“I don’t know about the Canadian record, it’s pretty fast. That guy who ran it is pretty fast. I’m trying to just go out and win and that’s my main goal, try and win and put on a good show for the crowd.”

De Grasse took a playful shot at Justyn Knight, who’s racing the 5,000 metres.

“I have not watched anything from start to finish past the mile,” De Grasse said, to laughter from the crowd. “How are you going to get me excited to watch this race on Saturday?”

“You’re not alone,” Knight answered. “When I wasn’t a track star I was playing basketball just like you, and when the Olympics came on, I was watching the 100. I think just being involved in the 5K, you see how much work is being put into it.”

Knight, who recently turned pro, signing with Reebok, echoed Van Buskirk’s sentiments about the rare opportunit­y to race in front of a hometown crowd. For the past four years, Knight has done most of his racing in the U.S. for Syracuse.

“Just coming back to my home track, this is where I used to train in high school (St. Michael’s College), just being able to give my family and friends and fans from Toronto an opportunit­y to cheer me on, it’s very special and heartwarmi­ng,” Knight said.

Van Buskirk, who is racing on her 10th Canadian team, has enjoyed a bit of a breakout season, running a six-second personal best in the 5,000, and breaking Sheila Reid’s Canadian record in the indoor mile in January. It wasn’t until Van Buskirk was talking to her dad half an hour after the race that he informed her of the record.

“I found that for myself when I’m not chasing times, and I’m just focusing on executing the best race I can, that’s when I tend to run my fastest,” she said.

“I was just really fit and I had a great day, and I executed the way we had talked about, and so the thing I was most excited about when I crossed the line was that I had won and had run a (personal best), and had hit the world standard.

“But I had no idea what the record was because that wasn’t even in my viewpoint at that time.”

 ?? CLAUS ANDERSEN ?? This weekend’s NACAC Championsh­ips mark Kate Van Buskirk’s 10th time as part of a Canadian team, but competing at home in Toronto is what makes this one special, she says.
CLAUS ANDERSEN This weekend’s NACAC Championsh­ips mark Kate Van Buskirk’s 10th time as part of a Canadian team, but competing at home in Toronto is what makes this one special, she says.

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