2001-2008 - Lethbridge Sports Hall of Fame
Transcription
2001-2008 - Lethbridge Sports Hall of Fame
2001 • MIKE MEZEI 2002 • TREVOR McALPINE Mike Mezei won the Canadian Junior Men’s Golf Championship in Vancouver at the age of 19 as a member of the Lethbridge Country Club. He also finished near the top of two strong fields in 2000 at the Alberta Junior Men’s Golf Championship and the Alberta Men’s Amateur. Following his victory at the Canadian Junior Men’s Championship, Mike enrolled at the University of Wyoming in Laramie and joined the golf team, playing very well in the tough Mountain West Conference. His best finish in his first year of NCAA competition was sixth place at a tournament in North Carolina. Along with his prowess in golf Mike is also an outstanding student, posting a 4.0 grade point average in his first semester while studying chemical engineering at Wyoming. Trevor McAlpine carries on a tradition of great Lethbridge judokans. His outstanding year included a gold medal at the Pan American Junior Judo Championships in Mexico, and another gold medal at the United States Open in Las Vegas. Mike is very happy to be selected Sportsperson of the Year and especially proud to be connected to the Lethbridge Sports Hall of Fame, where his grandfather Bert became an inductee in 1993. Called “A Natural” by his coach Yosh Senda, the twenty-year-old McAlpine fights as a heavyweight and although he weighs two hundred fifty pounds he’s considered small by heavyweight standards. He often faces opponents that out-weigh him by over fifty pounds, so he relies on his technique and quickness to win. Coach Senda puts Trevor in the same class with several past Lethbridge judokans who went on to represent Canada internationally. As McAlpine continues to gain strength and experience, he has several goals for the future. Among them is making the Canadian Olympic Team and representing Canada at the 2004 Games in Athens, Greece. 2003 • Nicole Stratychuk 2004 • Jim Steacy Returning from the World Junior Taekwondo Championships in Puerto Rico last December with three medals, one gold and two bronze, around her neck, Nicole Stratychuk gave herself and coach James Murphy an early 2002 Christmas present. In the 2003-04 Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS) season, Jim Steacy dominated the weight throw competition. He won the Canada West conference and CIS national championships, setting records in both events, earning him a slew of honours. Among them, Steacy was awarded the 2004 University of Lethbridge Pronghorns Male Athlete of the Year and the 2004 CIS Field Athlete of the Year. Already a national champion in middle-weight sparring and patterns, Nicole claimed the World Title in the women’s second-degree black belt patterns and added bronze medals in team sparring and team power breaking, helping Team Canada to gain the fourth-most medals out of 32 nations competing at the event. Many patterns can be practised in Taekwondo and Stratychuk was tied with her competitor in the final after self and judge chosen patterns were completed. In the tie-breaker to determine the winner, Nicole came out on top after successfully completing one of the most difficult and challenging patterns. As a hammer thrower, Jim was the 2003 Junior Pan American Games hammer throw event champion in Bridgetown, Barbados setting the championship meet record in the process. He also was the discus event bronze medalist. With record setting throws, Jim won gold medals at the Canadian National Junior Track and Field Championships in 2003 in both the hammer and discus events. These feats resulted in Jim being selected for two prestigious provincial awards – 2003 Athletics Alberta Junior Male Athlete of the Year as well as the 2003 Alberta Sport Recreation Parks and Wildlife Foundation Junior Male Athlete of the Year. The accolades Steacy has already racked up hardly scratches the surface for this budding Olympian as he sets his sights on competing in the hammer throw event at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China. 2006 • Jim Steacy 2005 • Brent Seabrook Jim Steacy dominated the weight throw and shot put events during the 2005 Canada West conference and Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS) national competition season. Jim won both Championship titles, setting event records and earning himself many awards – Canada West first team all-star, Canada West Field Athlete of the Year, CIS first team All-Canadian, CIS Field Athlete of the Year, and ending his indoor season being named the 2005 University of Lethbridge Pronghorns Male Athlete of the Year. 19-year-old Brent Seabrook from Tsawwassen, BC was recently named the Harry Ingarfield Most Valuable Player of the Lethbridge Hurricanes and captured the Mountview Dodge Top Defenceman award as well. Seabrook was also a member of the Canadian World Junior Hockey Championship Team, which defeated Russia 6-1 in the final to claim the gold. The Chicago Blackhawks first round draft pick in 2003 led the Hurricanes to the WHL playoffs for the first time since 2002 and Seabrook was named to the WHL East Conference 2nd All Star Team. During the outdoor season in the hammer throw event, Jim represented Canada at three National Track and Field team competitions. He was named captain of the FISU (World University Games) team in Izmir, Turkey in July 2005, was the gold medalist at the Jeux De La Francophonie Games in Niger, Africa in December 2005 and won a silver medal at the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne, Australia in March 2006. Steacy won gold at the Canadian National Track and Field Championships and broke the Canadian Senior hammer throw event record at the prestigious IAAF Telestra-A-Grand Prix Meet in Brisbane Australia. In honour of his remarkable year in sport, Jim was chosen to receive the Athletics Alberta Senior Male Athlete of the Year as well as the Athletics Canada Eric C. Coy Memorial Trophy dedicated to the outstanding Canadian Athlete of the Year in the Throwing Events. 2007 • ashley patzer Ashley Patzer followed a stellar freshman season with the University of Lethbridge Pronghorns Women’s rugby team, delivering dominant performances, leading her team to their first Canada West title and being named Canada West All-Star and MVP. During the Canada West championships, she recorded 21 total points and in a must-win game against seven-time defending champions, University of Alberta, she accounted for the only points scored in a 3-0 victory, which marked the first-ever conference loss for the Pandas. At the CIS Tournament, where the Horns finished with the bronze medal, Ashley was named the CIS player of the year, an All-Canadian and tournament All-Star, while finishing second in tournament scoring with 31 points and leading the tournament in tries with 5. The Lethbridge native looks to have a bright future in women’s rugby. Already seeing time in the national program, Patzer was a member of the FISU Championships team last summer and of the senior sevens team this spring. She also captained the National U19 Women’s team to victory over England in March. 2007 • Jim Steacy Jim Steacy returned from a season away from university competition and did not miss a beat. He remained undefeated in the weight throw versus Canadian competition, winning Canada West university conference gold and breaking his own record in the weight throw event, while also claiming gold in the shot put event. He was named a Canada West first team all-star as well as being awarded Canada West Field Athlete of the Year and Canada West Student-Athlete-Community Service award for combined excellence in athletics, academics and community involvement. At the CIS national meet, he once again broke his own record en route to his fourth national gold in the weight throw event, and also claimed his second CIS shot put title. For the third time he was named CIS Field Athlete of the Year and raised his number of first team All-Canadian awards to six. For his efforts, Jim was selected University of Lethbridge Pronghorns Male Athlete of the Year. Away from the University, Steacy also made his mark. He is the Canadian record holder in the hammer throw event and three-time Senior National champion. Internationally, Jim represented Canada on a number of occasions, claiming a gold medal at the Pan American Games in 2007. Jim was named to the Americas team and competed at the IAAF World Cup in Athletics where he placed 6th against the best in the world. He was selected for the Athletics Canada Eric C. Coy Memorial Trophy dedicated to the outstanding Canadian Athlete of the Year in the Throwing Events. Ashley was recently named 2007 U of L Pronghorns Athlete of the Year. 2008 • foster rink The prairies have long been known for excellence in the sport of curling and this year a Lethbridge senior women’s rink stood beside curling icons Pat Ryan and Kevin Martin of Alberta and Jennifer Jones of Manitoba as 2008 world champions in their respective divisions. The front end of Shirley Kohuch and Chris Wilson joined fellow Lethbridge resident Shirley McPherson and Calgarian Diane Foster in travelling to Vierumaki, Finland for the World Senior Curling Championships held March 8-16, 2008. They came away with the trip of a lifetime when they defeated Scotland 10-2 in the final to cap an undefeated run to the world title. 2008 • zach boychuk Zach Boychuk, a native of Airdrie, AB, was drafted in the fifth round, 88th overall by the Lethbridge Hurricanes in the 2004 WHL Bantam draft. In 2005-2006, he received the Carl Trentini Memorial award as Hurricanes Rookie of the Year. Zack was a member of Team WHL at the ADT Canada-Russia Challenge twice (2006 & 2007) and played for Canada’s 2006 U18 Junior World Cup team, helping them win the gold medal. Boychuk was also part of the gold medal winning U20 team at the 2008 World Junior Hockey Championships. As well, Zach participated in the 2008 Home Hardware CHL/NHL Top Prospects Game in Edmonton, where he finished second in the Fastest Skater competition and was named the Team White Player of the Game. He was recently named the CHL Player of the Week for the April 22nd period and has been ranked 8th in the NHL Central Scouting Final Rankings for the 2008 NHL Entry Draft. The ladies earned their first European visit by taking the 2007 Canadian Senior Women’s crown in Trois Rivieres, Quebec. Against all provinces and territories the talented team of Wilson at lead, Kohuch 2nd, McPherson 3rd and Foster throwing skip stones, bested a strong field. The four-year partnership for the Lethbridge ladies, initiated by Shirley McPherson, has truly been a successful one and has brought pride and honor not only to their busy curling club on 6th Avenue but to the city of Lethbridge and southern Alberta as well. Photo Courtesy of The Galt Museum & Archives 1961 Lethbridge and District Exhibition Rodeo
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