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Everyday heroes in the spotlight

Amazing Race Canada showcases some relatable champions

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The Amazing Race Canada: Heroes Edition

Premières Tuesday, CTV

BILL BRIOUX

TORONTO What makes a hero?

They don’t all wear capes and tights or bend steel in their bare hands. On the new season of The Amazing Race Canada, the kind of heroes viewers will get to know are those who wear military or police uniforms; who work as teachers, nurses, or launch charities.

On The Amazing Race Canada: Heroes Edition, premièring Tuesday on CTV, there are also two re- tired air force pilots and Toronto Argonauts cheerleade­rs.

All 10 teams were nominated by friends, family and co-workers. Among those competing are twotime national barrel racing champion Nancy Csabay and three-time Olympian Mellisa Hollingswo­rth, both from Alberta.

Csabay, who received more than 30 nomination­s, has wanted to enter the Amazing Race for years. “I’m turning 50 this year, so why not?” she says.

Four years ago she was diagnosed with breast cancer. Just don’t call her a cancer survivor.

“I don’t want to give cancer any more energy than it deserves,” she says. Hollingswo­rth, 37, won a bronze medal in the women’s skeleton at the 2006 Winter Games in Turin, Italy.

Soaring into the field are two retired air force pilots from smalltown Ontario — Corey (Chewy) Liddle, 47, and Mark (Happy) Laverdiere, 48. Laverdiere was a lead solo pilot for the famed Snowbirds aerobatics team.

Among the younger teams are Argos cheerleade­rs Leanne Larsen, 25, and Marielle (Mar) Lyon, 26. They’ve thrown their energy behind cheering for healthy and safe learning environmen­ts in schools with the Toronto Argonauts’ Huddle-up anti-bullying program.

The other teams in this summer’s Heroes edition of the show:

■ Joseph Truong, 23, from Mississaug­a, Ont., and Akash Sidhu, 22, from Brampton, Ont., are the youngest team. Friends since high school and through their years at York University, they graduated together and created their own non-profit charity business.

■ Taylor Callens, 25, and Courtney Callens, 27, are proud to be part of a Canadian family policing legacy. The brother and sister from B.C., followed their father into the RCMP — the fourth generation of Callens to do so.

■ Courtney Berglind, 28, was a bartender and Adam Kovacs, 29, a firefighte­r being auctioned off at a fundraiser, when they had their first awkward encounter. The engaged couple from Calgary are both first responders, with Courtney being a nurse.

■ Martina Seo, 40, and Phil Seo, 37, are a brother-sister team from North Vancouver. The teacher and banker give to children in need,

volunteeri­ng over 10,000 hours in Canada, Kenya, South Africa, Korea, Fiji and the U.S.

■ Zainab Ansari, 32, and Monica Demian, 24, are both members of the Royal Canadian Navy. The Greater Toronto Area residents are proud to represent the amazing women who serve in the Canadian Armed Forces.

■ Dylan Elias, 28, and Kwame Osei, 34, are out to unite the youth of Fort Mcmurray, Alta., through athletics and football. The two, who met on rival football fields while studying in Nova Scotia, hope to have a positive impact on inner city kids as well as those struggling on First Nation reserves.

■ Childhood cancer survivor Todd Kirk and Anna Holtby, both 24 and engaged, have been friends since high school. Cancer left Kirk with noticeable facial difference­s but it didn’t stop him from becoming a high school quarterbac­k.

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