Table tennis, trampoline, track and more â U of T athletes at Toronto 2015 Pan Am/Parapan Am Games
șüÀêÊÓÆ” student Michelle Li is U of T's first double medallist at the â with a gold medal in singles badminton and a bronze in the doubles competition.
To take the gold, Li had to beat her doubles partner, Rachel Honderich.
âWe both know each other's game really well, so I think that makes it harder,â Li told CBC Radio's Matt Galloway on Metro Morning July 17. âIt's kind of like a chess game, we're always changing strategies.â
Li's gold medal capped the first week of the Games, which saw triumph for U of T rower Kate Sauks, who also took gold in women's lightweight double sculls, equestrienne Belinda Trussell who won team silver in dressage â and swimmer Zack Chetrat who won bronze and broke the Canadian record in the 200m butterfly. (.)
But there is much more to come. World champion trampolinist Rosie MacLennan, a , is set to compete on July 19 and Olympic hurdler and national champion will compete July 22. (.)
Who are some of the other U of T alumni and students preparing for the Games?
UTM's Anqi Luo
When table tennis phenom Anqi Luo takes her place at the table during the , the șüÀêÊÓÆ” student will be one to watch.
Considered the best Canadian table tennis player in her age group, Luo will compete in doubles and singles events as part of Canadaâs six-member table tennis team.
Although she is just 18 years old, this wonât be Luoâs first time at the Games. The Streetsville resident, who will start her first year as a commerce student at U of T Mississauga this fall, was the youngest member of the Canadian team in the 2011 Pan Am Games in Mexico, and was the youngest-ever competitor from any country at 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi. She has chalked up major experience in international competition over the past decade, making it to the playoff rounds in the Youth Olympics in Nanjing, China, and winning a bronze with doubles partner Mo Zhang at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow.
Luo was born in China, and moved to Canada when she was eight years old. It was the basement of her family home in Mississauga that she started to play table tennis, learning from two top players â her parents. Both of Luo's parents were top professional players in China, and are now coaches at the club where Luo trains, Mississaugaâs Elite Table Tennis Training Centre. Luoâs mother, Junya Chen, is head coach of the Canadian Womenâs National Team, making Chen her daughterâs coach.
To prepare for the Toronto games, Luo spent June at a training camp in China where she worked intensively with her new doubles partner, Quebecâs Alicia CĂŽtĂ©. The team played for six hours every day, along with weights, running and flexibility training. Back in Canada, she continued training sessions, playing for four hours daily.
At the table, Luo grasps her wooden paddle (known in official play as a racket) in a shake hands-style grip (âItâs better for backhand,â she says) and skiffs it across the top of the celluloid ball. Using one of a number of offensive strokes â a hit, a smash or a flick â Luo sends the ball over the net, putting a spin on the ball to limit her opponentâs options to return the shot.
Luo loves the precision of the sport. âThe ball is small and each set requires a lot of control,â she says. âYou have to think about the placement, speed and spin of the ball.â A good spin will cause the ball to bounce at an unexpected angle when it hits the table. There isnât time for error â the pace of a game a Luoâs level is lighting-quick.
âThe games are very short â just half an hour to 45 minutes long â so itâs important to be able to quickly assess and adjust to my opponentâs style,â Luo says. She anticipates her most serious Pan Am competition will come from the Brazilian and American teams. âI have met most of the players at other international competitions." Knowing their playing styles will be an advantage, but she says sheâll have to learn fast about the strengths of the newer members of the opposing teams.
Her talent and training have taken her far, but Luo also admits to a little pre-game superstition â the colour of shirt in which she wins her first match becomes her lucky colour for the rest of the tournament.
While her physical training is intense, Luoâs mental preparation is more laid back. âI donât think about the game too much, she says. âThe best way is to relax, and play the game as you should.â
Now a senior player, Luo plans to scale back on international competitions to stay focused on schoolwork as she enters her first year at UTM. âJunior competition was an equal mix of fun and competitive tournamentsâ, she says, but the pressure increases at the senior level where many opponents are professional players. Luo will keep her eye on the ball, however â she hopes to compete with the Canadian Olympic team for the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Luo and the six-member Canadian table tennis team compete from July 19 to 25 at the Markham Pam Am Centre.
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Engineering's Sasha Gollish & Donna Vakalis
PhD candidate Donna Vakalis competes for Team Canada in the modern pentathlon and PhD candidate Sasha Gollish runs for Canada in the 1500m.
When theyâre not training, Vakalis studies the impact of indoor building environments on public health and productivity under the supervision of civil engineering professors Heather MacLean and Jeffrey Siegel and Gollish is one of the first students enrolled in the Facultyâs new collaborative program in engineering education (EngEd), supervised by civil engineering professor Bryan Karney.
U of T Engineering spoke to both athletes in the days leading up to the games to find out how they balance engineering and sport.
What has it been like since you found out you made Team Canada?
Gollish: Itâs been a total rush for sure! But it only happened recently so Iâm not even sure it has totally sunk in. My goal was to qualify for the Pan Ams, but my other goal was to run fast. So Iâve been travelling a lot and continuing to compete.
Vakalis: Iâve been focused on world championships, which just happened last weekend, in Germany. It may sound like a lot all at once, but itâs actually useful because itâs a little tricky to peak twice in a year. You donât want them too far apart, or right on top of each other, but two weeks is actually perfect.
Letâs talk about what it took to get here. When did you decide that you were going to go for it?
Gollish: Last summer I was competing in Leuven, Belgium, in a series that is basically like the Belgian Cup. I ran a 4:13 and I thought, hey, if I can run that now, I wonder what I can run next summer.
Vakalis: The fall after I competed [at the Olympics] in London, I started school. At that point I thought it might be time to retire, because it just requires a lot of energy in addition to being a full-time student. However, I surprised myself and learned how to be even more efficient with my time. At the beginning of this school year I found myself being really fit and eager to compete. I had to make a choice, am I going to go for it or not? I made that choice, and my supervisors fortunately were supportive. The goal of this whole season has been to qualify for Pan Ams.
When did you realize you actually had a shot?
Gollish: It wasnât until I ran at Harry Jerome, part of the national series which was June 9 in Vancouver. The rankings were really tight and I was sitting in third position. There just werenât that many fast races in North America, and I was trying to really push my boundaries. Plus there are a lot of awesome middle-distance runners right now in Canada: Kate Van Buskirk, Hilary Stellingwerff, Sheila Reid, Nicole Siffuentes. It could have been any two of us that were named to that team.
Vakalis: I was at a world cup in Rome in April. Because of how our qualification system works, they take our top two scores from last yearâs world championships and the four world cups. At the moment I crossed the finish line in Rome, I knew I had done what it takes to qualify.
Why did you choose to do graduate studies at U of T?
Gollish: U of T is a pretty awesome engineering school to get into. Itâs also got a phenomenal running program, and my coaches are the varsity coaches, so itâs a natural fit.
Another reason was my supervisor, Bryan Karney. We met a few years ago, and we share a passion for the science, the math. I call it the âEnginerdâ passion. My other background is coaching, so the Engineering Education (called EngEd) program is a really unique way to blend the skills of coaching and engineering.
Vakalis: There were multiple reasons. I knew I wanted to live in Toronto, and from doing my masters here, I knew U of T has a really strong school with a rigorous academic program. But I also care a lot about the people and atmosphere in the department. For me the single most important factor was meeting the professors and their students. Now, finishing up my third year I feel like I am part of a really smart, ambitious, supportive family.
Have you learned anything as an engineer that has affected your athletics, or vice versa?
Gollish: I take a very scientific approach to things, which I think is probably rooted in studying engineering. With running, there are a lot of fads that come and go, but I always look to see what the science says.
Thereâs also the whole efficiency game. Iâm always trying to be efficient with my time, and maximize it, to use a calculus term. Itâs not necessarily about doing more with less effort, but asking how can I get the most out of each day
Vakalis: There are so many connections if you are willing to think analogically. For example, as an athlete you can start to see connections between the structural properties of materials and the way your body works. I was recovering from an injury earlier this year, and it was helpful to understand the mechanics of my body, in order to heal smarter and faster.
In the other direction, being a pentathlete who has to execute moves perfectly when an Olympic berth will be on the line, it helps to be able to think clearly under tremendous pressure. Thatâs helpful for standing up and teaching a class, or being able to answer a challenging question in front of your thesis defence committee.
What is it like to be competing on home turf in Toronto?
Gollish: Obviously itâs pretty cool. Most athletes donât get that opportunity, but it also comes with a host of pressures. Youâve got all your friends and family who are super-stoked to come out and watch you, and thereâs the feeling that you have to perform.
But you donât. At the end of the day, they know how hard you worked, they know how dedicated you are. If it doesnât go that well they still love you.
Vakalis: In modern pentathlon, weâve never had a world cup in Canada, so this is a first in terms of the caliber of competition at home. Honestly, I donât think I will even know how much it means until the day I compete. There are members of my family and really close friends who have never been able to watch me compete, who will be there in the stands next weekend.
When I think of them itâs a very acute and intense feeling, but I also feel a little bit of that same feeling about the whole community. Having U of T students and Torontonians around, and being able to share with them something that is a big part of my life, and is really important to me. It feels really special, because it is.
These interviews have been edited and condensed.
Cheering on the sidelines and through social media
These Games are allowing Team Canada's 733 athletes to compete at home in front of cheering crowds and thousands of enthusiastic volunteers â but the support is demonstrated online as well, on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and now, YouTube.
Hana, Hasna, and Sarah Syed are students at the șüÀêÊÓÆ” Scarborough, . They're also U of T Ambassadors at the Games and volunteer at U of T House at UTSC.
With their brother, Bilal, the siblings form a group called DEYSOfficial. Below, they perform a song they wrote to celebrate the Games: