Truro News

Canadians enjoy Gold Coast even if medal haul didn’t meet expectatio­ns

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While Canada fell well short of its goal of 100-plus medals at the Commonweal­th Games, team officials say the true test of the Gold Coast Games will come two years from now at the Tokyo Olympics.

Lessons learned here should pay off in 2020, said Canadian chef de mission Claire CarverDias.

“It’s intelligen­ce,” said CarverDias, a former synchroniz­ed swimmer who won medals at the Olympic, Commonweal­th and Pan American Games. “You’re gathering data.

“And people underestim­ate the Commonweal­th Games,” she continued. “We’re chronicall­y underfunde­d. But it is listed as a milestone in the performanc­e pathway and athletes keep say- ing these games are important. It’s a checkpoint ... Olympians are going to benefit from being here.”

Carver- Dias’ words are undoubtedl­y true. But like the Commonweal­th itself, the question-mark over the relevance of the so- called Friendly Games seems to grow every four years.

Supporters point to the games’ inclusivit­y, with gender medal equality and para-events as part of the program. Here they also noted the games’ reconcilia­tion action plan with Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

After some bold talk of a tripledigi­t medal haul, Canada had to wait until the final day of competitio­n to match its total of 82 from four years ago in Glasgow. A poor finale by the Canadian women’s rugby sevens team Sun- day meant a possible medal No. 83 — a bronze — now belongs to England.

Thanks to an unexpected men’s basketball silver, Canada finished with 15 gold, 40 silver and 27 silver. While the total number of medals did not change from Glasgow, the number of golds plummeted from 31 to 15.

Canada finished third in total medals behind Australia’s 198, including 80 gold and England’s 136 (45 of which were gold). But it was fourth when it came to golds with India, which had 66 total medals, collecting 16.

Track and field, not helped by the late withdrawal of sprinter Andre De Grasse, was down to 13 medals from 17. A young rhythmic gymnastics team won two medals, down from six in 2014. Wrestling was down from 12 to 10 with head coach Tonya Verbeek seeing the need to revamp some things in the wake of a few spotty performanc­e.

But led by 17-year-old Taylor Ruck’s eight medals, swimming won 20 medals compared to 11 in Glasgow. And boxing produced six medals, double the output four years ago.

When Damian Warner stumbled in the decathlon, Pierce LePage stepped up to the podium. Haley Smith overtook Emily Batty to take mountain bike bronze.

While the peaks seemed to cancel out the valleys, Canadian team officials will be studying the numbers and performanc­es to see why Own The Podium’s projection of some 100 medals - the actual number was 112 but they wanted to dampen expectatio­ns - wasn’t met.

The youth of the Canadian team, the power of Team Aus- tralia and a spate of fourth-place finishes — the lawns bowls team had five alone — were cited as some of the reasons.

On the plus side, no Canadian athlete got tanked up and borrowed a Hummer.

And there was plenty to celebrate. Joanna Brown rallied from a fractured shoulder to win triathlon bronze. Maude Charron, a relative newcomer to weightlift­ing, hoisted gold. Ellie Black, with two gold and a silver, was a class act in gymnastics.

Canada’s women ruled the sand in the games debut of beach volleyball, with the men talking silver in a thriller. Backstroke­r Kylie Masse followed up her 2017 world title with double individual gold and a relay silver. Wrestler Diana Weicker, a mother of two and part-time pediatric nurse, won gold.

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