The 44th Acadian Games a 'transformative experience' for young French athletes
Metal bleachers overlooking the soccer pitch behind Mathieu-Martin high school in Dieppe are split — on one side, a sea of fans wearing blue shirts and hoodies; on the other, fans sporting fire-engine red.
From June 25 to 30, those colours and what they represent motivate young athletes as they compete to help their delegations bring home the most gold medals at the 44th Acadian Games.
The annual games have brought together 1,100 athletes this year who qualified from all over the Maritimes in sports including volleyball, badminton and track and field — not to mention cultural events like improvisation, arts and singing.
"We're starting into the third generation of youth," said Nicole Melanson, vice-president of communications for the games. "So they have stories from some of their grandparents and their parents, and people are really attached to the Acadian Games now."
Competitors between the ages of 11 and 17 are representing 11 delegations from across New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador. The games are hosted in a different municipality each year.
For Chloe Allain, a mini-handball athlete who is representing Kent, the weekend is all about getting to meet people who are as passionate about their sport as she is.
"My favourite part of the games is really when you watch …other teams play and when you get to spend time with some of them," she said. "It's a tremendous experience."
WATCH | These young Acadian athletes are loud, proud — and here to win:
Once the weekend begins, the athletes enter a kind of miniature Olympic village.
Melanson said they don't stay with their parents. They sleep overnight inside classrooms at the high school and a local community college with their teammates, and all of their meals are made by volunteers.
But it's more than games, she said: it's a chance for youth to grow and be part of something bigger.
"It's almost a transformative experience for the kids," said Melanson, who also has children who have competed in the games.
While the red worn by the Chaleur region, the blue of the Kent area or the purple of Prince Edward Island pits these athletes against each other on the field or court, they connect on a deeper level based on what they have in common.
Since 1979, the games have been a weekend for French-Acadian youth to feel like their Acadian roots matter.
That's the case this year for one mini-handball competitor from Yarmouth, N.S.
"It is pretty special because there's not exactly a ton of people who speak French where I'm from," Finely Hanf said. "It feels pretty cool."
Melanson said the games were created at a time when bolstering the French language and Acadian culture was an important part of building New Brunswick's identity.
"The idea was as a minority language group to bring these youth together, make those contacts ... learn about the customs and the other regions and the fun differences in their accents," she said.
More than 132,000 young people have taken part in the games between 1979 and 2019, according to the games' website, and more than 4,000 volunteers are needed to put on the games each year.
For first-time competitors like Hanf, a big part of the weekend is being able to play in front of larger audiences, and on larger courts than what they might be used to in their hometowns.
"There's a lot more seating so a lot more people are watching," Hanf said about her first experience at the games. "You kind of got to block them out ... at the same time, if your team scores a goal, enjoy them cheering."
Gabby Arsenault, who is representing her province of Prince Edward Island for the first time in badminton, said this weekend is all about making memories in a new place.
"I'm hoping to have a lot of fun and to tell good stories to my friends at home," she said. "It feels even more special because there's more people to communicate [with] in French."
To Melanson, seeing the happy faces of young athletes and watching them meet new French speakers as she walks though the hallways and on the sidelines means the games are still accomplishing the goal they set out to.
"The kids suddenly feel like this is really important," Melanson said. "I'm part of something, right? And I'm included."
While finals for some sports have already taken place, all medals will be awarded Sunday when delegations will find out which region has taken home the most medals.
One of the medals she's most looking forward to seeing awarded isn't a sport or cultural medal at all.
She said throughout the weekend, some of the more than 750 volunteers at the games have a secret mission of keeping an eye out for athletes who showcase sportsmanship, and are supportive of other delegations during competitions.
That player will get the weekend's friendship award.
"Parents will never stop talking about when they were here. They're in the stands and they're exchanging their stories," Melanson said. "It's creating lasting bonds."
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New York Times
4 hours ago
- New York Times
Kenny Bednarek knows what he wants, if he can just relax: ‘Make money, get gold medals and just run fast'
Kenny Bednarek knows you are a product of your environment. Born in Tulsa, Oklahoma, he was adopted at the age of four. 'What made me love track was, as a kid, I didn't have control over my life. I was kind of terrified,' he says. 'Track was something I had control of — the only control I had in my life. Advertisement 'All of the hard work I put in, I would get the outcome. It was where I felt most free, where I had no care in the world. 'As soon as the gun went off, I was just running, having fun.' The 26-year-old is certainly running and having fun now. He has Olympic and World Athletics Championships 200-metre silver medals and this year, won six races at three Grand Slam Track (GST) meets in Kingston, Miami and Philadelphia. Bednarek clocked a wind-assisted 9.79 seconds in the 100m in Miami before running a wind-legal 200m in 19.84s. At Franklin Field in Philadelphia, he closed out the meet with a 100m personal best (PB) at 9.86s, which was also a franchise record. National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) champion Jordan Anthony is the only other American athlete with sub-10s and sub-20s times over 100m and 200m this year. 'My favourite meet was Miami and it was more because I had to prove to people that the first race (Kingston) wasn't a fluke. But I think the Philly 100m was my favourite. I had a poor reaction time — 0.2s — and I still ended up getting to the top guy at 30 to 40 metres. I didn't panic, and I came out with 9.86s.' There are few better habits than winning. 'It's getting addicting,' Bednarek says. 'I'm trying to go on a win streak that will give me gold medals. If I get my three golds, then fast times are going to come. That's the sole focus this year — PBs will come when they come — just medals. I've only got three silver ones, and I'm trying to get some golds.' He wants to win the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay at the World Championships in Tokyo this September. Those medals would be the priceless additions to a 2025 haul which has included three six-figure paydays from GST. Since turning professional in 2019, he has been part of Star Athletics, the Miami-based training group under coach Dennis Mitchell. 'It's a tense group,' he says. 'Every day is like a race. That's the main reason I'm at this level.' Advertisement 'I was getting my butt whooped every single time,' he says of the early days, when American sprinter Justin Gatlin, at the end of his career, was part of the group. Kyree King and Sha'Carri Richardson, now top-level American sprinters, joined in 2019, and the group features Olympic relay medallists Aaron Brown (Canada) and Tee Tee Terry (United States). 'Coming down from running 400m and 200m (in college), I didn't have that aggressiveness to get out of the blocks and the mechanics weren't really there. I had more of that wide-open-stride 400m mechanics.' So he worked on his block starts and acceleration phase. 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At the Prefontaine Classic in Eugene last year, he wore one with 'curve' and 'conqueror' written on either side. A post shared by Kung Fu Kenny (@kenny_bednarek) Bednarek won the 200m in 19.89s that day, when there was a 1-2-3 sweep not just for the U.S., but for Star Athletics, too. Courtney Lindsey was second, and King third. 'I'm not a person that really wants to be like, 'Look at me, I'm him', and stuff like that. I just want to go in and handle business.' Advertisement At no point does he namecheck Noah Lyles here, but the comparison with the U.S. No 1 comes easily. Lyles, an average build for a sprinter at 5ft 11in (180cm), is loud and expressive. He always jumps up high before settling into the blocks. Bednarek, despite being 6ft 2in and physically imposing, is quieter. 'When I get on the line, I always have a bow,' he says. 'I came up with the name Kung Fu Kenny. It ties with my name, and I like kung fu, martial arts, and anime. Kung fu also has a set of values that pertain to me: openness, discipline, respect and dedication.' Bednarek is one of the very few athletes who have beaten Lyles in his specialist event, the 200m, but three global finals in the past four years have seen Bednarek finish second in the 200m. In 2021, he was running in the lane outside Andre De Grasse when the Canadian earned his country's first track gold since 1996 and first 200m gold for nearly a century. Bednarek ran a personal best (19.68) for silver, but De Grasse set a national record (19.62). One year later, Lyles beat him at the World Championships in Eugene, Oregon, running the fourth-fastest 200m ever (19.31). It was a scintillating defence of his world title, and Lyles became only the third man to retain that crown. Bednarek, in 19.77, was beaten by nearly half a second, finishing closer to seventh than to Lyles. Last summer, Bednarek ran 19.62 in the Olympic final in Paris. He had matched De Grasse's performance from Tokyo and beaten Lyles on the track — the only problem was that Letsile Tebogo ran an African record of 19.46 to take Botswana's first Olympic gold medal. Bednarek reflects on what he describes as a missed opportunity. 'The biggest thing, the difference between getting first place and second place? It's always me tensing up,' he says. Advertisement 'I'm always going to come out of the bend first. That's kind of a given now from the past four years.' He was two-hundredths ahead of Tebogo at the 100m mark in last summer's final. 'I got off the turn, Tebogo was right there next to me, kind of using me as a rabbit. That shocked me, so then I tried to do a little bit too much — I would try to muscle it out — and then I started decelerating. 'That's when he got the edge over me and then he ran his 19.4s. If I ended up sticking to my race plan, I should have won.' It is the age-old sprinting principle that the winner is not the one who can go the fastest but who slows down the least and can hold their form best. 'My coach was trying to get it through my head like, 'Hey, you need to relax'. (I'd say) 'Yeah, yeah, I get it', but then, once the gun went off, I was always like, 'OK, screw it. I'm gonna just try to go'.' None of this is said with even a hint of bitterness. 'He (Tebogo) was also fighting for his mom. She passed away last year. I was happy for him that he got the gold medal. Now he's a big thing in Botswana.' Bednarek speaks with a softness that belies his size and power. His tete-a-tete with Tebogo continued after the Olympics when the pair raced at the Diamond League meets in Zurich and Brussels. Tebogo ran him down in Zurich when Bednarek tied up again. The American was one-tenth clear at halfway, down to two-hundredths at 150m, and Tebogo beat him on the line. 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Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Worth the wait: Sonny Gray's 1-hitter is his first complete game in 8 years
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Hamilton Spectator
4 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Chisholm homers in 500th regular season game, has third-most homers and steals in first 500 games
NEW YORK (AP) — Jazz Chisholm Jr. appeared in his 500th game and joined some select company. Chisholm homered into the second deck in right field Friday night to give the Yankees the lead in their 3-0 victory over the Athletics and giving him 89 career homers to go with 109 steals. Chisholm's homer off Mitch Spence in the second inning gave him the third-most homers and steals within the first 500 career games, trailing Eric Davis (107 homers, 190 steals) and former Yankee Alfonso Soriano (97 homers, 121 steals). Davis played his 500th game on Sept. 15, 1988, for the Cincinnati Reds. He finished his career in 2001 as a member of the San Francisco Giants with career totals of 282 homers, 349 steals in 1,626 games. 'That's pretty cool,' Chisholm said. 'I didn't know that. I just be out there playing and having fun but the first time I met Eric Davis, he's one of the favorite players I watched when I was a kid,' Chisholm said. 'So like watching his highlights and watching the way he plays, I feel like Byron Buxton is the closest person to him and watching Byron is just like watching E.D. (Eric Davis).' Soriano played his 500th game on Sept. 27, 2003, during his penultimate regular-season contest with the Yankees before being traded to Texas in the offseason for Alex Rodriguez. Soriano finished his career in 2014 with the Yankees with totals of 412 homers and 289 steals in 1,975 games. 'I got to meet Alfonso in Miami,' Chisholm said. 'I played with his little cousin. So for me talking about Alfonso and Eric and watching them as kids, those were the guys that I was kind of compared to in my swings even though (I'm) like small, (have) some power and some speed but yeah it's kind of sick to have same accomplishments.' After hitting Spence's cutter, Chisholm shrugged his shoulders as he rounded third and did a little shuffle before crossing the plate. Chisholm debuted Sept. 1, 2020, for the Miami Marlins and has 23 homers and 28 steals in 97 games for the Yankees, who acquired him last July 27 and moved him to third base. Chisholm's homer marked the 12th time in his career he went deep in consecutive games. It also gave him five homers since returning from a right oblique strain June 3, including one that stopped the Yankees' 30-inning scoreless streak on June 18. ___ AP MLB: