Page 44 - Sports Energy News, Cornwall, Issue No 104
P. 44
44 Issue #104 September 2021 www.sportsenergynews.com
Sister Strong Fundraiser Held at Archie’s Golf
By Casey Leger fundraiser off the ground.
According to the Scleroderma
t was a beautiful day for golf, Society’s website, scleroderma is
Iand Sister Strong and Archie’s a rare, progressive, and chronic
certainly made the most of it. On autoimmune connective tissue
Saturday, August 14, Archie’s Family disorder that causes excess collagen
Golf Centre on Vincent Massey Drive accumulation. Osteosarcoma is a type
in Cornwall hosted a fundraiser to of bone cancer.
benefit the Scleroderma Society of
Archie’s owner Carol Ann Baxter
Ontario and the Pediatric Oncology was happy to support the event. “I
Group of Ontario.
was impressed by the energy and
The fundraiser was spearheaded by enthusiasm of the organizers when
Lexa MacGregor and Andrea Hum. they approached me,” she explained,
The ladies were looking to raise adding that Archie’s likes to commit
awareness of systemic scleroderma to at least one fundraising event in
and of osteosarcoma, conditions a season. “Without our community,
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
affecting a pair of young sisters from we’re nothing,” she added.
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
a family related to Ms. MacGregor All told, $27 576.00 was raised on
and to Ms. Hum. The family that Saturday. The organizers would
preferred to remain anonymous. like to thank their sponsors: Left Madison, middle Andrea, right Lexa. Photo Submitted
Stories And More About The People In Stormont, Dundas & Glengarry
“This family has been through a lot,” Mark & Crissy MacLennan Crystal Millar, Timothy Bertrand
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
said MacGregor. “It makes other MacGregor Crane: RBC: Laurie Hagan, TD Wealth Jody Hum
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
problems seem smaller.” She also Robb & Lexa MacGregor Jacquelyn Standing
noted that Madison Wolff and Jody Dr. Rachel Navaneelan RBC Wealth Management: Gord MacLennan
Hum played key roles in getting the Marc Genier & Nicole Landriault Blake Hambleton, Jo Ann Parisien, Bob & Annie Clark
Stories And More About The People In Stormont, Dundas & Glengarry
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News presents Sports Panel
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Stories And More About The People In Stormont, Dundas & Glengarry
Sports
How will the soccer landscape in Canada change following the Canadian women winning Olympic soccer gold in Tokyo this summer?
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Peter Collins - Sports Enthusiast - Soccer is commonly known as “The Beautiful Game,” because it brings people joy and passion.
Friday August 6th is a day many Canadians will remember with tremendous pride and unrestrained emotion.
For some of us, it may have been the first time we watched a soccer game from beginning to end. The end in this case included extra
Stories And More About The People In Stormont, Dundas & Glengarry
time and those excruciating penalty kicks. We were rewarded with a gold medal for Canada. For many it compares on an equal level to
Sports
Sports
Mike Weir winning the Masters in 2003, Sidney Crosby’s golden goal in the 2010 Olympics, or Brooke Henderson winning her first golf
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
major at the 2016 KPMG Championship. The gold medal win is the kind of achievement that will undoubtably propel Canadian soccer, more specifically
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
women’s soccer to the next level.
Some studies have shown that at least 42% of the children in Canada playing sports are playing soccer between the ages of 5 and 14. That is double the
Stories And More About The People In Stormont, Dundas & Glengarry
children that play hockey. 4.4 million Canadians witnessed this historic game, an unheard-of number, and the streaming of the event was also record
breaking. Maybe now, because of this victory, Canadians will finally fully embrace the game of soccer. It is the simplest of games; all you need to play
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
is a blue sky, a patch of green grass, and a ball! Now Canadian children can also dream of a gold medal.
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Jake Lapierre - Conditioning Coach - First, I’d like to express a tremendous congratulations to the Canadian women’s soccer team
for winning GOLD at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics. This win is the result of many years of hard work, struggles, disappointments, and the
Stories And More About The People In Stormont, Dundas & Glengarry
courage, heart, and determination to keep moving forward. Watching these women achieve their dreams is incredibly inspiring to many
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
young athletes across the country, especially young female athletes who (unlike young male athletes) do not have many opportunities
to watch their female sports heroes play regularly because of the lack of professional female sport leagues. Female sports have come a
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
long way in Canada, but change has been slow.
Will the Canadian women winning soccer gold at the Tokyo Olympics change the soccer landscape in Canada? It would be great to see their success help
Stories And More About The People In Stormont, Dundas & Glengarry
jumpstart Canadian women’s professional teams across Canada, or at the very least the creation of expansion teams to compete in the NWSL (National
Sports
Sports
Women’s Soccer League) in the US. Only time will tell what the impact of the historic win at the Olympics will mean for soccer here in Canada.
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Jim Riddell - Seaway Karate Club - The Canadian women’s soccer team has achieved great success in the past three Olympics,
winning bronze in 2012 in London and again in 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, and now gold in Tokyo. Interest in soccer is growing in Canada
and this most recent success will help to inspire the next generation of players. The program is in place for Canada to achieve success
Stories And More About The People In Stormont, Dundas & Glengarry
internationally, but there is still room for future growth and development. Once a female player graduates from the minor soccer program
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
there is currently no option to play professionally. Any female who wishes to continue playing must either relocate to the USA or to
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Europe. Canadian team captain Christine Sinclair stated, “I think that we are the only country ranked in the top ten that does not have
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
some sort of professional environment for their female players to play in. The goal is now to translate Olympic success into a pro team
in Canada.”
Stories And More About The People In Stormont, Dundas & Glengarry
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Sports
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Energy News
Stories And More About The People In Stormont, Dundas & Glengarry

