Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Wrestlers poised for greatness in Rio

- VICKI HALL POSTMEDIA NEWS vhall@postmedia.com Twitter.com: @vickihallc­h

CALGARY Erica Wiebe attended the London Olympics in a support role as a training partner for Leah Callahan. In a rare quiet moment between sessions, she tiptoed onto the Olympic mats and closed her eyes.

“No one was looking — it was like two seconds,” the 26-year-old freestyle wrestler says at a national team training camp at the University of Calgary. “I just took a deep breath of fresh air and felt the mat.”

Lo and behold ... “They felt like the exact same as the mats I train on every day.”

In that moment, Wiebe realized the Olympics are not some unattainab­le fantasy open only to others. With hard work, determinat­ion and maybe a bit of luck, the Stittsvill­e, Ont., native knew deep down she could compete for Canada at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio.

The first step to qualifying came in November at the Canadian team trials in Strathcona County, just outside of Edmonton. Battling to keep her breakfast down due to nerves, the University of Calgary Dino won the 75-kilogram weight class.

Next up is a more formidable battle to lock up a spot for Canada in her weight class at the Pan Am qualifiers March 4-6 in Frisco, Texas.

“I’ve wrestled at the world championsh­ips, I’ve wrestled at major games, and I’ve had success at all that,” says Wiebe, a 2014 Commonweal­th Games gold medallist who is ranked fifth in the world. “So I just do what I do every day. I go to the gym, work hard, grind and don’t change anything.”

The Canadian women’s wrestling team finished second in the rankings at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and third at the 2012 London Games. A podium threat in all four weight classes, Tonya Verbeek, won silver in London and Carol Huynh, the Olympic gold medallist in Beijing, collected bronze.

Verbeek and Huynh have since retired, leaving Canada with a collection of Olympic rookies heading into Rio, where women will compete in six weight classes compared to just four in London.

At the 2015 World Wrestling championsh­ips in Las Vegas, Canada finished ninth overall.

“The exciting part of our team is that they’re in this adventure together,” says Leigh Vierling, head coach of the women’s national team. “It’s their first Olympics as a group, and all of them are planning on carrying on past this Olympics and trying for the next Olympics as well.

“We’ve got a chance to not only do something great right now, but we’ve got a really bright future as well.”

Canada has two wrestlers — Lappage and Mian — confirmed for the Rio Games. The other four spots are yet to be clinched in internatio­nal competitio­n.

Canada has won at least one medal in women’s wrestling at every world championsh­ip and Olympics since 2002. Intensely proud of that stat, Vierling sees no reason why the streak won’t continue.

“I want people to discount us, to be honest,” he says. “I want them to say, ‘Yeah, they’re young. They’re probably not going to do too much.’

“Because with the way the team is looking right now and the way the team is working, I’m more than confident that they’re going to do some great things in Rio.”

 ?? KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Erica Wiebe of Canada, seen celebratin­g gold in wrestling during the 2014 Commonweal­th Games, is still looking to secure a spot for the Rio Olympics.
KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Erica Wiebe of Canada, seen celebratin­g gold in wrestling during the 2014 Commonweal­th Games, is still looking to secure a spot for the Rio Olympics.

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