logo
‘Representing Canada': London dragon boat club sends 20 athletes to World Championships in Germany

‘Representing Canada': London dragon boat club sends 20 athletes to World Championships in Germany

CTV News12-07-2025
Twenty athletes who train three times per week on Fanshawe Lake are in Germany preparing to compete for Canada at this week's IDBF World Dragon Boat Racing Championships.
For the first time in the event's 17-year history, they have a Breast Cancer Survivor division and London Rowbust has 10 members.
'It's crazy to think that when we started Rowbust 26 years ago, that some of us would be representing Canada with Canada on our backs at a World Championship,' said Linda Kuska, a long-time Rowbust captain. 'I just never, ever thought that that would ever happen in my competitive paddling career.'
Kuska must be one of the most fit 62 year olds in the Forest City. She's a relentless paddler.
'Paddling for Canada means that you are representing, for me, every breast cancer survivor that survived,' said Kuska. 'We're always thinking of those who have not survived and have not had the opportunity to go on and do something more. Wearing Canada on your back and wearing and flying that Canadian flag is going to be it'll be priceless. I'm sure there'll be many tears over there.'
LONDON DRAGON BOAT
Breast Cancer Survivor Linda Kuska of the Rowbust Dragon Boat Team prepares to represent Team Canada at the World Championships in Germany during in a practice on Fanshawe Lake. (Brent Lale/CTV News London)
Leading the BCP division for Canada is Rowbust coach Cheryl McLachlan. She held a training camp on Fanshawe Lake with athletes trying out from Newfoundland to British Columbia.
'Sarah [Shelland] and I started this crusade in 2009, saying to the International community that these are athletes too, and they should have a division at the at the world level, representing nation against nation,' said McLachlan, who leads 100 London Dragon Boat Club (LDBC) athletes ever week on the water.
'I've been to the World's quite a few times and Canada to me is the land of strong and free and the best country in the world,' said McLachlan, describing what it means to wear the Canadian logo. 'I think back to my very first-time representing Canada, it brings tears to my eyes. It was in China and the sport there is like the NHL. When you look at your jersey and see Canada you cannot help but bring a tear to your eye or a choke.'
This is also the first time there has been a Para division, and the London PenDragons have four athletes.
LONDON DRAGON BOAT
Cheryl McLachlan coaches members of the London Dragon Boat Club on Fanshawe Lake. McLachlan will be leading Team Canada in the Breast Cancer Survivor Paddling Division at the World Championships in Germany July 14-20, 2025. (Brent Lale/CTV News London)
'It's my first World Championship as a paddler,' said Georgette Mink, a former Canadian Armed Forces Officer who competes in the Para Division.
The former standup paddle boarder moved to St. Thomas a few years back and made the transition to the Dragon Boat. She describes the LDBC as a 'family.'
'I started three years ago as a new newbie in the boat and the biggest thing is just being coachable and listening to the coaching staff and the coaching here is outstanding. You can see the results, the amount of London Pendragon and London Rowbust that's going to worlds out of our contingents. It speaks for itself,' Said Mink.
The LDBC has athletes in Germany competing in not only the Breast Cancer Survivor and Para Divisions but also Senior A, Senior B and U18.
'I love being on the water and it's really just a great area at Fanshawe Lake,' said Jane Holman of the London PenDragons, who is competing in U18 in Germany. 'I can come here after a long day and just practice and clear my mind. It's really calm, and I have great coaches.'
LONDON DRAGON BOAT
Members of Team Canada's Breast Cancer Dragon Boat team paddle in a practice on Fanshawe Lake in preparation for the World Championships in Germany July 14-20, 2025. (Brent Lale/CTV News London)
Holman is a second-generation paddler. Her mother Christine, a breast cancer survivor is Rowbust member.
'I've grown up with Rowbust,' said Holman. 'My mom joined about seven or eight years ago. They really helped bring me into this sport and they showed me lots of ways to deal with stress. Every time in the boat, think of her and think of what she's done to get here.'
McLachlan said Dragon Boat Racing is the fastest growing sport in the world.
'Anybody can come on down here to Fanshawe Lake and we'll throw you in the in the boat and teach you the paddle,' said McLachlan. 'Then you get, you get hooked in on the race day at the London Festival that we have every June, and you can't not get hooked.'
It's what happened to many of these LDBC athletes, and now 20 of them are overseas ready to compete for Canada.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ESPN pundit rips Raptors, plus what's next for Toronto this summer
ESPN pundit rips Raptors, plus what's next for Toronto this summer

National Post

timean hour ago

  • National Post

ESPN pundit rips Raptors, plus what's next for Toronto this summer

The dog days of summer are upon us, but basketball never stops and the Toronto Raptors remain busy. Article content The team's Summer League stint in Las Vegas went well, with plenty of youngsters impressing in a strong run and the veterans, including Scottie Barnes — who recently turned 24 — also getting work in. Article content Article content Last year, the team felt it got huge benefits from a mini-camp held in Spain, improving chemistry significantly, which helped during the tough stretches of a long, losing season — so they're doing it again. Article content This time, Toronto's camp will be held in Madrid at the facilities of Real Madrid. Toronto and Real Madrid have met in pre-season matchups over the years and enjoy a strong relationship. Article content Chus Mateo, who was Real Madrid's head coach until being dismissed last month, even joined Darko Rajakovic's coaching staff at Summer League last summer. Centre Bruno Fernando signed with the club after being cut by the Raptors last season, joining former Raptor Serge Ibaka, who also was on the roster. Article content The Raptors will mostly go their separate ways following the camp, before reuniting toward the end of September ahead of media day in Toronto and training camp in Calgary. The well-travelled organization also will visit British Columbia, California and the U.S. East Coast during the pre-season before Season 31 tips off. Article content RAPTORS OVERPAY? Article content According to ESPN insider Bobby Marks, a long-time front office member of the New Jersey/Brooklyn Nets, the Raptors helped contribute to the chilly restricted free agency market. Article content Golden State forward Jonathan Kuminga, Chicago guard Josh Giddey, Nets wing Cam Thomas and Philadelphia guard Quentin Grimes have yet to come to terms with their existing clubs or new ones via offer sheets. Article content Marks posits that Toronto giving Quickley five years and close to $160 million (it was reported as up to $175 million) a year ago has 'totally screwed up restricted free agency,' Marks said on YouTube. Article content 'That's where (the other restricted free agents and their agents) are looking at as the benchmark. Article content 'That contract screwed up a lot of things, and that's why you can't use comps … I don't think Toronto got enough heat for that number because Immanuel Quickley is not a $32-33-million (a year) guy,' Marks said. Article content Article content Article content Marks said players and their camps now want a deal like that, but teams aren't giving them out, leading to standoffs. Article content Article content Toronto had seen Quickley as the centrepiece of its OG Anunoby deal with the New York Knicks (even though RJ Barrett had more of a pedigree and has actually improved more in Toronto, leading the team in scoring since arriving). The former sixth man of the year award runner-up brings a skillset no other Raptor possesses (elite pull-up three-point capabilities) and one that complements Barnes tremendously in theory (Quickley only played in 33 games this season and rarely was in at the same time as Barnes in his 38 2023-24 Raptors contests). Article content Toronto bet heavily on upside and fit with Quickley's deal and will need to rely on his staying on the court and the salary cap continuing to rise significantly for people to change their minds about the deal. Article content Apropos of nothing, this corner would easily pick a healthy Quickley in Toronto over Kuminga, Giddey or Grimes.

Canadian women to face Japan twice in Nagasaki in FIFA November international window
Canadian women to face Japan twice in Nagasaki in FIFA November international window

CBC

time2 hours ago

  • CBC

Canadian women to face Japan twice in Nagasaki in FIFA November international window

The Canadian women's soccer team will play two matches against Japan in Nagasaki during the November FIFA international window. Canada, ranked ninth in the world, will face No. 8 Japan on Nov. 29 and Dec. 2. The first game will take place at Nagasaki Stadium City (Peace Stadium) and the second at Transcosmos Stadium Nagasaki in nearby Isahaya. "We're excited for the opportunity to face Japan," Canada coach Casey Stoney said in a statement. "These are the kind of challenges we want as we build toward our 2026 World Cup qualification journey. "Japan is one of the most technically gifted and tactically disciplined teams in the world, and playing them on their home soil will demand the best from us. We're looking forward to the opportunity and the lessons it will bring." Japan holds an 8-4-4 edge in the all-time series between the two that dates back to 1995. Canada is winless in the last three meetings (0-2-1), blanked 3-0 the last time they met, at the 2023 SheBelieves Cup. Canada's last victory was a 2-0 decision at the 2018 Algarve Cup.

Blue Jays banking on Louis Varland bringing power to bullpen - Sunday slip up aside
Blue Jays banking on Louis Varland bringing power to bullpen - Sunday slip up aside

National Post

time2 hours ago

  • National Post

Blue Jays banking on Louis Varland bringing power to bullpen - Sunday slip up aside

If there is a wildcard in the Blue Jays aspirations for the remaining two months of the season, it would seem as though it has nothing to do with regressing to that form of playoff qualification. Article content No, the wildcard of interest at this point for the first-place team may be an under-the-radar trade deadline acquisition. Article content As much as the marquee from a Toronto perspective was the deal with Cleveland that brought potential ace starter Shane Bieber here, a somewhat unheralded reliever from the Twins may be critical to the team's big October ambitions. Article content Louis Varland, a hard-throwing 27-year-old righty, was acquired to be an influential (and much-needed) arm for the back end of a bullpen in need of some more shutdown sizzle. Article content The upside is in his stuff, his attitude and his velocity. Article content The downside is in the precarious world of being a big-league reliever, a reality Varland endured in Sunday's demoralizing loss to the Royals. Article content Article content After recording two outs on just four pitches in his eighth-inning appearance, Varland allowed back-to-back hits enabling the visitors to tie the game on the way to a 7-4 extra-innings win that continued the Jays recent wobbles. Article content That blip aside, the Jays believe they have an arm that can thrive in high-leverage situations, a big reason he was a focus of Toronto general manager Ross Atkins at last week's deadline. Article content 'He's all business,' manager John Schneider said of his first impressions of Varland, who came here along with Ty France in a deal that sent Alan Roden and Kendry Rojas back to the Twin Cities. 'I love his demeanour. In conversation with him and with (pitching coach Pete Walker) and he's ready for anything. Article content 'There's no surprises. Velo. Curveball. And he's a really good athlete too. But I like his demeanour on the mound.' Article content Article content There were some flashes of that potential in Varland's initial appearance the day after the trade. Coming in during a blowout at the hands of the Royals (and unlike Sunday's stumble), Varland retired all three hitters and did so with confidence and apparent ease. Article content That attacking mindset is what originally attracted Atkins to Varland, a pitcher the GM says has been on his radar for a couple of years. Article content 'We were very aggressive in trying to acquire him,' Atkins said on trade deadline day. 'He has been very effective this year as a reliever. Has as good a fastball as you can find and as good of a curveball as you can find. He's extremely aggressive. He's coming after you and that's attractive to us. (He) immediately impacts our bullpen in a significant way.' Article content It's clear that the Jays wanted — and needed — some back-of-the-bullpen power to team up with closer Jeff Hoffman and ideally the return to health and efficiency of Yimi Garcia. Article content Based on his first full season in that role, Varland seems like he could be suited to the assignment. He certainly relishes the opportunity and employs a mound presence to match. Article content 'First off, it's easier to get three outs rather than 15 to 21 outs (as a starter),' Varland said of his transition from starter to reliever. 'I changed some mechanical stuff to be more deceptive, so I think that's helped me get more outs. Article content 'I handle (the late-game pressure) pretty well. At first I thought I'd get nervous, but I'm pretty calm out there, collected. Basically just throw your best pitches and stick to the game plan and things should normally work out. Article content 'I would say I'm a pitcher who goes right after hitters. It's not like I'm nitpicking certain areas, especially my fastball. I like the challenge of it.' Article content The hope from a Jays perspective is that Varland will be a potent fit late in games. Like many bullpens around the majors, the Toronto unit has been hard used to this point. And, looking forward, bullpens need to be high-octane heavy come playoff time. Article content Varland said that in his initial conversations with Schneider and Walker, his new team has made it clear they are counting on the Saint Paul, Minn., native to be a key component. Article content 'They want me here,' Varland said. 'They want to use me (in important) situations. We've got a really good team and the team just got better (at the deadline).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store