Monday, January 9, 2023

John Sands Classic is back at Clarence Downey Speed Skating Oval

Lions host first long track meet since 2019

By Darren Steinke
Gordie Howe Sports Complex

Serena Dallaire, right, and the Lions skate at a recent practice.
Serena Dallaire is happy the Saskatoon Lions Speed Skating Club will have the John Sands Classic Long Track Meet back, and she added it is huge to the club’s younger members, who see it as the highlight of their skating season.

Dallaire, who is one of the Lions 17-year-old elite level skaters, speaks from experience, because she remembered the annual home long track meet being the biggest thing in her world when she was a young skater.

“I feel like it really is important for the younger kids, because I know that when I was younger I was like five or six skating, and I was skating as like a fundamental,” said Dallaire, who has been skating for around 12 years. “I was watching all the older kids skate, and I was like, ‘I can’t wait to be just like them.’

“I feel like it is really important for the younger kids to have like someone to look up to just in those meets. That is why it is important for the older kids to go. It is so important to have those role models.”

For the first time since January of 2019, the John Sands Classic will be returning to the Clarence Downey Speed Skating Oval. It is slated be held over two days on Saturday, January 14 and Sunday, January 15 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on both days.

The John Sands Classic wasn’t able to be held in January of 2020 due to weather conditions being too frigid. In January of 2021 and 2022, the annual meet was cancelled due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

Frigid weather isn’t expected to be a concern this year as temperatures are expected to be around -7 C for both days of the upcoming John Sands Classic. Those conditions should provide perfect days for speed skating.

While Dallaire’s competitive focus is on peaking for major national level competitions, the Grade 12 student at Walter Murray Collegiate and the rest of the Lions older elite level skaters will all take part in the John Sands Classic. For the older skaters, Dallaire said the home long track meet is important in a different way, because you interact the club’s younger skaters in a race event environment.

Serena Dallaire made the Top 30 RBC Future Olympians list.
Dallaire said it feels like a full circle moment for her being an older skater meeting the club’s younger skaters and realizing they look up to her.

“It is a different experience being the older kid, because you kind of have to set what it is like for the younger kids and like be a good role model and do everything right,” said Dallaire, who stands 5-foot-4. “It is still fun, because all the younger kids like look up to you, and it is so cute seeing them like saying ‘oh good race’ after your race.

“It reminds me of when I was younger. I love watching the younger kids just like having that passion for it, because that was me, when I was younger as well. I think it is really good.”

Veteran Lions coach Tim Comfort, who is the Saskatchewan Speed Skating Association provincial coach and technical director, said there are no qualifications for the John Sands Classic and the event provides a way for skaters to take part in a meet environment without having to go to a provincial or national championship. He expects to draw skaters from across the Prairie provinces.

“We hope to get people from Manitoba,” said Comfort. “We did for our short track meet.

“We hope to also get people from Alberta. We did for our short track meet, so hopefully, that happens again, and we get 80 to 100 people here skating. There will be skaters from Melville, Saskatoon, Moose Jaw, Regina and Prince Albert all from Saskatchewan.”

Be it a practice or a meet, Comfort said it is always special to skate at the Clarence Downey Speed Skating Oval. He said the current Lions club members are aware the Oval is the place where superstar Catriona Le May Doan, who competed in four Winter Olympics, grew up skating and first learned the skills to become a competitor in speed skating. Overall, Comfort said the Oval has a natural feel.

“You come here, and it’s just the purest thing, because you’re outside,” said Comfort. “The snow is in your face, and the wind is in your face and the lights at night.

A group of Lions skaters speed down a straightaway.
“It is kind of a magical place. For most of them, it doesn’t matter how fast they are in a race. The workouts are invigorating.

“You go home, and you’re tired and happy.”

Comfort added that speed skating is a volunteer rich sport and numerous volunteers help make the Lions Speed Skating Club and John Sands Classic go. He gave a tip of the hat to Rob Makowsky for stepping up to be the Lions new president, and to former president Chris Veeman for taking up a new role as the president of the Saskatchewan Speed Skating Association. Veeman is also the meet coordinator for the Bob Sands Classic.

Comfort added Mike Dallaire, who is Serena’s father, is handling the electronic timing at the John Sands Classic and will also handle the electronic timing at the Canada Winter Games, which start February 18 and run to March 5 with most events being held across Prince Edward Island. Speed Skating runs February 18 to 25 with short track events to be held at the Eliyahu Wellness Centre Canada Games Place in North Rustico, P.E.I., while the long track events are set for Halifax Oval in Halifax, N.S.

“We have a rich tradition of volunteers here,” said Comfort.

Serena Dallaire will be heading to the Canada Winter Games too representing Saskatchewan on the female long track team. This past Dec. 6, Dallaire was named to the Top 30 RBC Future Olympians list along with Lions clubmate Fergus English.

Last season, current Lions skater Oskar Stack-Michasiw, while former Lions members Daniel Pauli, Bon Lowe and Luca Veeman were named to the Top 30 RBC Future Olympians list. Pauli, Lowe and Veeman are all currently skating out of Calgary at the Olympic Oval indoor facility.

The Lions will host their first long track meet since January of 2019.
Dallaire is focused on having a good finish to the current 2022-23 season. When the season is done and she graduates from Walter Murray Collegiate, she wants to see how far she can go with elite level speed skating.

“I plan to move to Calgary, so I’ve applied to university,” said Dallaire. “I’m all ready.

“I’m planning on continuing skating for at least a few more years to see where it takes me until I am done being a junior. The Oval program is like the next step I feel like, so that is where I am planning on going next year after I graduate.”

For more information about the Saskatoon Lions Speed Skating Club, feel free to check out their website at www.slspeedskating.com.