Fast, Furious, and Female: Chandra Crawford

Posted in Current Events on January 30th, 2010 by Lisa

By Daphne Bramham

After Chandra Crawford won Olympic gold in cross-country skiing four years ago, she decided to use her “few seconds of fame or pseudo-fame” to encourage girls to go out, play, compete and keep on doing it into their teens and beyond.

Crawford believes girls can be empowered through sports, gaining confidence not only to pursue Olympic dreams but to take leadership roles in all aspects of life. She especially wants that message to get to girls in remote and first nations communities.

It couldn’t come at a better time. Fewer Canadian girls and boys are actively involved in sports and obesity among young Canadians is reaching epidemic proportions.

What Crawford is trying to do is make sports cool. She’s replicating for others the kind of support she got growing up in Canmore, Alta.

It started with her parents, who encouraged both their daughters to cross-country ski.

Both are now Olympians.

Chandra will compete in her second Games in Whistler, while her 21-year-old sister Rosanna, a biathlete, qualified for her first Olympics earlier this month.

But family wasn’t the only factor. Crawford had a tight-knit group of friends who pushed each other both academically and athletically. Then, she was helped by her Team Canada mates.

“It’s very important to pursue my goals with someone. I don’t know if that’s a particularly female thing to value the relationships so much, but I certainly do.

“Just pushing toward goals with my teammates and my family and sharing the journey is so much a big part of it for me, ” she says.

To help her cause, Crawford created a non-profit called Fast and Female ( fastandfemale.com)for girls aged nine to 19. It’s funded by her major sponsor, Best Buy, and private donations from friends.

It gets no government support and no support from Vanoc or any official sporting organizations.

“Fast and Female was really born out of the need that I perceived for young women to be more engaged in sport and get hooked on a healthy, active lifestyle, which I think can, in a lot of ways, insulate a developing teen from a lot of the pressures. If they’re just focused on sport and hanging out with others, it can be a real saving grace for a family and it can be a real distraction,” she says.

“I definitely focused more on the social side and what we can affect in terms of popularity of participation in sports. I want to create more of a coolness factor and the excitement around being part of it.”

That coolness factor means focusing on the fun parts of skiing, things like music pumping as the girls put aside snowplowing and head straight downhill or over jumps.

It means hip-hop dancing and yoga to build flexibility as well as camaraderie.

Crawford and her Olympian teammates help coach and give inspirational talks. And, of course, there’s the cool hot-pink logo of a pigtailed girl in goggles that’s on everything from black T-shirts to pink shopping bags, pink toques and pink head scarves.

Even in the short time that it’s been operating, Crawford sees more “young, up-and-comers who are going to nip at my heels and challenge me to be better.”

That’s important because it takes at least a decade to peak as a cross-country skier. The world’s best are in their late 20s and early 30s. Crawford is 26.

Right now, Fast and Female is focused on cross-country skiing, biathlon and summer endurance sports and is oversubscribed. But Crawford’s aim is to make it a nationwide “wellness through sport program” involving a wide variety of sports.

Crawford’s initiative couldn’t have come at a better time.

Girls’ participation has long lagged behind boys’ at all ages and then drops off precipitously as girls hit their mid-teens. By the time they are between 19 and 24, Statistics Canada reports that only a third of young women regularly compete in sports, compared with 52 per cent of young men.

Participation rates, however, are down for both genders. From 1992 to 2005, the number of kids taking part in sports dropped to 51 per cent from 57 per cent.

While two-thirds of boys played sports in 1995, StatsCan found the number had dropped to 56 per cent by 2005. Among girls, the rate fell to 45 per cent from 49 per cent.

The only good news is that the gap between boys’ and girls’ participation has narrowed.

Yet what remains is a perception that sports are more important for boys than girls.

StatsCan found no difference in boys’ participation rates regardless of family type, even though lone-parent families tend to be poorer.

But girls’ participation drops off sharply in single-parent families.

Citing an American study, StatsCan researchers suggest parents facing financial pressures sacrifice a girl’s chance to play sports because that has traditionally not been as important to young girls’ identities as it is to boys’.

In a separate study of children under 15 in 219 aboriginal communities, StatsCan found a much wider gap between boys’ and girls’ participation rates: 73 per cent of boys participated at least once a week, compared with only 63 per cent of girls.

That’s one reason Crawford and Fast and Female have targeted reserve communities.

The other is history.

Crawford grew up hearing stories about the success of a 1960s program sponsored by the federal government to introduce aboriginal kids to cross-country skiing.

It produced a number of top-level competitors, including twin sisters Sharon and Shirley Firth.

Four-time Olympians — their first was in Sapporo in 1972 — the Firths competed for an unprecedented 17 years on the World Cup circuit, winning a total of 79 medals at a variety of distances.

“Between growing up with that kind of lore about what kind of impact it has had and the combination about reading so frequently about the awful living conditions and depressing situation in some of our remote communities I thought this could be an area where I could try to make a difference,” says Crawford.

“A lot of my athlete friends are doing a great job of targeting Africa and different parts of the world. But I thought, here’s an area that’s really not getting as much as it could and if I could do anything about that it would be great and I think we’ll get some great skiers.

“So it’s a really good fit … and some of these communities could really benefit from the kind of injection of energy Fast and Female can bring.”

Sharon Firth is now a mentor for Fast and Female and will be leading its camp in Yellowknife. She’ll be joined by two other first nations skiers — Sekwan Trottier from La Ronge, Sask., the provincial champion, and Marika Cockney, the daughter of Angus Cockney, who trained with the Firths in the 1980s and is now a coach.

Both were participants in one of the first Fast and Female events two years ago.

“This is absolutely the dream,” says Crawford. “It creates future leaders.”

Last year, the Canadian government finally updated its 20-year-old sports policy for women and girls, which had long been overtaken by court decisions upholding their right to access publicly funded facilities and organized sports programs.

Its objective is admirable: “To foster sports environments — from playground to podium — where women and girls … are provided with quality sports experiences and equitable support by sport organizations.”

But Canada still has a long way to go. In 2004, little more than one-third of the 5.2 million members of national sport organizations were women.

That said, Canada’s elite female winter athletes have been more successful than their male peers. In the last three Winter Olympics, women have won most of our medals. In 2006 in Turin, Crawford and her female teammates accounted for two-thirds of Canada’s medals.

Women shine in the Paralympics as well, even though in the past Games they have comprised less than half the Canadian contingent.

In 2000, women won 46 per cent of the medals even though they made up only 38 per cent of the team.

In Athens, they won 62 per cent of the medals with only 47 per cent of the team spots.

Imagine how Canada would fare in international competitions if more girls were competing and pushing each other. Just imagine how much stronger our communities would be if more young women stepped up to take leadership roles.

That’s what Crawford and her Fast and Female crew dream about — and they’re working hard to make it happen.

‘Someone who is truly remarkable’: Clara Hughes named flag-bearer for Vancouver

Posted in Current Events on January 30th, 2010 by Lisa

By Shi Davidi (CP)

Over a successful career spent on the ice and on her bike, Clara Hughes has grown into more than simply an accomplished amateur athlete.

She’s an advocate for the environment. She’s a humanitarian activist. She’s a motivational speaker and engaged world citizen.

And now the 37-year-old is the face of Canada’s Olympic team as the flag-bearer for the Vancouver Olympics.

“I think she is the cream of the crop,” said Beckie Scott, the former Olympic cross-country champion who shares many of the same qualities as Hughes.

“Not just when it comes to what she’s accomplished as an athlete, but as a human being. She’s a gem. She’s someone who is truly remarkable in all arenas.”

The flag-bearer carries both overt and subtle messages about the image a country wants to project as it strides into the opening ceremonies of an Olympic Games and the Canadian Olympic Committee believes Hughes delivers all the right ones.

Hard work, relentless determination, dignified humility and a desire to impact the greater good are quintessential Canadian traits, and each is obvious in the Winnipeg native who now lives in Glen Sutton, Que.

“For me, and I think most of the team members would say, Clara as a human being represents what we’re trying to do as a Canadian team,” said Chris Rudge, the Canadian Olympic Committee’s executive director.

“And that is be very good at what we do, set very clear goals and objectives and want to win, yet not lose sight of the things that are as important as a human being as well. I don’t know of any athlete that embodies that in this country more than Clara does.”

Hughes hopes people will get that message when she leads the 206-person Canadian team into B.C. Place for the opening ceremonies on Feb. 12.

“I want people to be inspired that I’ve always strived for excellence and I’ve always gone beyond what anybody ever thought I could do, what I thought I myself could do,” she said.

“And I’ve allowed myself to be inspired, kept my eyes open and my senses open to inspiration around me. I’ve had people inspire me in my life that really showed me that is the way to live and I’d like to show that to people.”

As an athlete, few other Canadian Olympians are as accomplished as Hughes. With five career medals, she’s tied for second among Canucks with short-track speedskater Mark Gagnon and track star Philip Edwards, one short of long-track teammate Cindy Klassen.

Two of them, both bronze, were claimed in cycling during the 1996 Atlanta Games, the other three in speedskating. She heads into her fifth Olympics as the defending champion in the 5,000, and the silver she won during last year’s world championships at the Richmond Olympic Oval offers hope that she can deliver again.

But out of competition, Hughes has been just as impactful.

Four years ago in Turin, she donated $10,000 of her own money to the humanitarian group Right to Play, well before the Canadian Olympic Committee began handing out cash prizes for medals. She urged others to follow her lead, and some $400,000 was raised.

“I was in awe,” said Scott, who is also involved with Right to Play. “It’s really indicative of the kind of person she is. She kicked off one of the biggest fundraising efforts that Right to Play has had in its history, and … at the same time moved Canadians to look inward and be inspired to give and be conscious of people who don’t have the same opportunities and who do live in incredibly disadvantaged areas.”

Hughes did more than simply write a cheque. She went on trips to Africa and the Middle East to do some of the organization’s actual outreach work, which aims to use sport as way to improve the lives of children in poor and troubled areas.

Later in 2006, Hughes also began working with Nature Conservancy of Canada, Quebec Region to help raise funds for the preservation of the Sutton Mountain Range.

Unlike some athletes who shun the chance to act as a role model, Hughes has embraced it. Underlining that is her recent revelations of a trouble-filled childhood marked by underage drinking and soft drug use.

“I want young people to realize that when they look at us as Olympic athletes, sometimes we look larger than life, but many of us have histories,” she said. “Many of us have gone in bad directions and had lives that aren’t storybook beginnings. They might look like a storybook ending but the beginnings can be pretty rough.

“For me it’s really important to show young people you can turn your life around. It’s just the most crucial thing is to look for some kind of inspiration, something that means something to you that you can focus on. When you have that gift, and you have that mind set, you can do anything.”

The continuing search for new challenges is what has allowed Hughes to remain a leader in her sport through a switch from cycling to speedskating about a decade ago, and into her activities beyond, too.

There isn’t an ounce of complacency in her nor is there any sense she feels she has all the answers. She isn’t just open to finding new ways to improve, she’s driven by it.

“I look at every race I’ve done and I’ve won the Olympics but I’ve never felt like I’ve perfected a performance,” she said. “That’s what I work for, just to be better than I ever have been. I don’t have any control on how that compares to everybody else, but what I can focus on is just getting more out of myself than maybe even I know is there.”

That’s a goal Hughes has been pursuing ever since she watched the 1988 Calgary Olympics as a teenage girl in Winnipeg and fell in love with speedskating. She started soon after but a year later she switched over to cycling, a sport she quickly took to and made a name in.

Mirek Mazur, who at the time was coaching Manitoba’s provincial team, took her under his wing and became instantly impressed with his new charge. She followed him to Dundas, Ont., when Mazur took over Ontario’s program and it was under his guidance that she won a pair of cycling bronze medals at the 1996 Olympics.

“I didn’t really think much of her when I first met her,” said Mazur, who now coaches privately in Dundas. “But over time you could see how easy things were coming to her.

“It’s hard to find someone with such (work) ethic. When there was a plan to do something, she did it. She had questions, she was curious about things and she had dedication. When it was snowing she would ride beside me and the guys, or be the first one to go out.

“She’s a leader on an everyday basis.”

Hughes continued to cycle through the 2000 Sydney Olympics before she decided to pursue her initial dream of speedskating at the Winter Games.

While one might think a decade away from the sport would have hurt her chances of success in it, Mazur believes the cycling years actually helped her reach the upper levels of speedskating.

Her teenaged stint on the ice provided a technical base upon which to work, while the explosive power she built up through cycling helped put her on par with her rivals while she ironed out the kinks.

The results were quick to come. A bronze in the 5,000 at the 2002 Salt Lake Olympics made her just the second woman and fourth athlete to win medals in both the Summer and Winter Games.

“She gained so much physically from cycling,” said Mazur.

That showed in 2006, when she won gold in the gruelling 5,000 and helped the women’s pursuit team to silver. The look of sheer joy on her face when she realized she had become an Olympic champion is an enduring image from the Turin Games.

That being said, the chance for a crowning moment on her career comes in Vancouver, where in a sense the Olympic dream born 22 years earlier during the Calgary Games comes full circle when she serves as flag-bearer and competes on home ice.

“It’s such an opportunity as an athlete with all the experience I’ve had over 20 years now, I feel like I get to put the best of everything I’ve ever done and ever learned into this huge opportunity, a home Olympics,” said Hughes. “It’s just exciting.”

And people are excited for her.

“As an athlete she’s as good as it gets,” said Scott. “I’m so proud and so happy for her that she’ll be carrying the flag, it’s really amazing.”

Read more here.

Pre-Olympic bike ride and Lunarfest

Posted in Art, Current Events on January 24th, 2010 by Lisa

This weekend, with a break in the torrential pineapple express rains that might derail the Climate Change Olympics, as they’re being called by some here in balmy Vancouver where it’s 14 degrees and people are wandering around in shorts, we decided to cruise around town on the bikes to see how the preaprations for the “really big shew” were coming along. Thinking that we might still be able to ride around the seawall and catch a last look at the Athlete’s Village on False Creek, we rode in that direction. The inukshuk village which had been erected on the rocky shore across from Science World had proliferated since last we saw it in December.

Ty decided he would add to the community with his own Frankenstein’s -monster-like big-boy creation.

Upon finding that the pathway past the Athlete’s Village was blocked, we decided to ride the Greenway through the Downtown Eastside and into Gastown, have lunch at Chill Winstons and then ride around the seawall to the Convention Centre and from there, down Granville.

I kept trying to take some pictures of the cheesy painted fibreglass eagles in front of the Fairmont Vancouver hotel but some guy on a bike kept getting in the way …

Many of the buildings downtown are all dressed up with photographs of Canadian athletes blown up to enormous proportions. On Granville Street, which has once again been converted to a pedestrian mall rather than a car thoroughfare, sculptures and thousands of small lanterns handmade by local kids have been installed for Lunarfest.

These sculptures and lanterns look great at night, although they would be even better if there were fewer street lights inferring.

The Art Gallery, too, is all dressed up in a “Modesty Veil”, as this art piece is called.

This piece is made entirely from plastic bottles – fabulous!

See more here and here.

Note: there is so little snow on the mountains here that apparently Vanoc has guys in little bulldozers building mogul hills out of lumber and straw, to be covered by a thin veneer of the old snow from last November stockpiled in the dark valleys of the upper mountains against just such an eventuality …