Waterloo Region Record

Moguls siblings lose one: Maxime is retiring

- DONNA SPENCER

The three Dufour-Lapointe sisters who have been inseparabl­e in freestyle skiing will be down to two.

Maxime Dufour-Lapointe, the eldest at age 29, announced her retirement Wednesday after a decade on the Canadian women’s moguls team.

While she didn’t reach the Olympic and world championsh­ip podiums as sisters Justine, 24, and Chloe, 26, have done, Maxime was a consistent top-10 finisher and won four World Cup medals during her career.

The Montreal siblings consider each other integral to their individual successes.

“I know for a fact that my moguls career wouldn’t be the same without my sisters and I think they feel the same way,” said Maxime.

“I’m not sure I would have lasted for so long because my sisters pushed me outside of my comfort zone every day.”

Justine and Chloe won gold and silver respective­ly while Maxime placed 12th at the 2014 Olympic Games.

They became just the third trio of sisters to compete in the same individual event at a Winter Games, according to the Canadian Olympic Committee.

“I think it wouldn’t be the same experience if didn’t have my sisters behind me and with me during the Olympic Games,” Justine said last year.

“Just going to the Olympic Games is a really difficult and intense thing to do. Because I was going through this really intense moment of my life, I had my two sisters with me ... I felt so good. I knew I was going to be OK.”

Maxime competed in three world championsh­ips placing fourth in 2015, as well as in 104 World Cups winning four bronze medals.

She was among the first women to execute a full-twisting backflip in competitio­n.

Moguls is an individual sport, but the Dufour-Lapointes considered themselves a team.

Branding themselves “3SDL”, the siblings made freestyle skiing history by sweeping the moguls podium at a World Cup in Val Saint-Come, Que., in 2016.

Justine, Chloe and Maxime won gold, silver and bronze respective­ly.

When the trio travelled to internatio­nal competitio­ns, if one had a physiother­apy treatment, another bought groceries and the other cooked dinner.

Justine and Chloe competed in February’s Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, where Justine took silver.

Maxime’s retirement will be an adjustment for all three of them.

“Maxime has been my inspiratio­n,” Chloe said. “She started in freestyle, I watched her doing it and wanted to be like her. Now it’s like there’s a piece missing in the equation.

“Of the three of us, she was always the most level-headed, so we’re going to miss that at World Cup events.”

Maxime was the first sister to ski moguls at age 11 and thus paved the way for her sisters to follow.

She is now the one to show them how to transition into a post-competitiv­e career.

Maxime has been accepted into the University of Montreal’s medical school. “Change is a part of life and it’s going to happen sooner or later,” Maxime said.

“We had a blast being together. We’re still sisters.”

 ??  ?? Maxime Dufour-Lapointe
Maxime Dufour-Lapointe

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