Times Colonist

Maffia, Pemble named top Victoria athletes

- CLEVE DHEENSAW cdheensaw@timescolon­ist.com

Mel Pemble, on her her way to becoming a rare Summer and Winter Paralympia­n this year in Paris, was named Victoria female athlete of the year for her goldand silver-medal cycling performanc­es in the 2023 Para Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile.

Pemble, who was born with cerebral palsy and immigrated with her family to Victoria from Lancashire, England, in 2009, also skied on Mount Washington while growing up and made it to ski in the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Winter Paralympic­s. The all-rounder began cycling on the velodrome in Colwood and is on target to race on the velodrome track for Canada in the 2024 Paris Summer Paralympic­s.

The electrifyi­ng shooting-guard Diego Maffia, who lit up CARSA Gym and who followed up his 2023 Canada West MVP award by being named conference MVP again for this season, was named Victoria male athlete of the year.

The 2023 team of the year is the Victoria Curling Club Jacques Gauthier rink, which became the first Island rink to win the B.C. championsh­ip and play in the Brier since 2007. Much like Maffia, the VCC rink of third Sterling Middleton, second Jason Ginter and lead Alex Horvath was back just as strong this year and recaptured the B.C. title, this time with Catlin Schneider as skip, and open this week in the 2024 Brier in Regina.

The awards, decided upon by a selection committee struck by the Greater Victoria Sport Tourism Commission and sponsored by the Victoria Foundation, are for achievemen­t in 2023.

Dual rugby and basketball player Adia Pye was named female high school athlete of the year and lacrosse player Blake Swan the male high school top athlete. Maffia and weightlift­er Kathryn Lee were selected male and female top athlete attending university or college. Tennis player Robert Bettauer and runner Catrin Jones were named masters athletes of the year and national-team rugby player Shalaya Valenzuela and soccer player Maddox Moon the Alex Nelson Award winners as top female and male Indigenous athletes, respective­ly.

Krista Thompson, the long-term assistant coach to legend Lynne Beecroft, stepped up to the head coaching position last season and led the University of Victoria Vikes women’s field-hockey team to the national title in her first year as bench boss and was named coach of the year.

Keith Butler, the longtime track and field official and organizer, is the recipient of the Pat Hall Volunteer Award, while the Victoria Reign Capital Region Female Minor Hockey Associatio­n won the John and Marilyn Bate Award as the organizati­on of the year.

The winners will be honoured at the awards ceremony Thursday evening at Government House. Tickets are $75 and available until Wednesday at gvsa.ca. Last year’s winner of the female award was 2022 Winter Olympics gold-medallist hockey player Micah Zandee-Hart and the male award winner 2022 Birmingham Commonweal­th Games and pro cyclist Riley Pickrell.

The event is a revival of the Greater Victoria Sports Awards which ran from 1968 to 2005. The original awards were discontinu­ed due to cost and logistics following the 2005 ceremony in which NBA MVP Steve Nash was named Victoria male athlete of the year and 2004 Athens Paralympic­s multi-medallist swimmer Stephanie Dixon top female athlete.

The awards were revived last year by the Greater Victoria Sport Tourism Commission and will be held annually.

 ?? ADRIAN LAM, TIMES COLONIST ?? Vikes guard Diego Maffia has been named Victoria male athlete of the year.
ADRIAN LAM, TIMES COLONIST Vikes guard Diego Maffia has been named Victoria male athlete of the year.

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