
Mill, Adams Jr. score fourth-quarter TDs to lead Stampeders past Argos 29-19
Toronto Argos quarterback Nick Arbuckle (4) is sacked by Calgary Stampeders defensive lineman Folarin Orimolade (7) during first half CFL football action in Toronto, Saturday, June 14, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jon Blacker
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CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Halifax's long, complicated relationship with building a stadium
As Halifax council ponders a plan to transform a pop-up stadium at the Wanderers Grounds into a more permanent space, it's the latest chapter in a decade-plus long debate about building a stadium in the city. Past discussions have come with a range of price tags for taxpayers and been derailed by unforeseen circumstances, including a global pandemic. "It's a huge opportunity for us right here. Our city is truly growing and we need to get this right, but we've been talking about a stadium for way before my time on council," said Coun. Tony Mancini, who first joined council after a January 2016 byelection win. He made the comments Wednesday as municipal staff presented a plan for the so-called Wanderers Block to the city's community planning and economic development committee. The area is mostly municipal land and part of the Halifax Common. "How do we finally get to a conclusion on this stadium conversation?" said Mancini. The Halifax Wanderers professional men's soccer team has played at the site since 2019, while the Halifax Tides women's team started playing at the Wanderers Grounds this year. City staff came up with a mix of stadium options for the site that would range in size, as well as changes to facilities operated by groups such as the Halifax Lancers and the Wanderers Lawn Bowling Club. The anticipated costs ranged from $116 million to $123 million, assuming construction starts in 2029. Contingencies of 25 per cent were included in the estimates to account for things like inflation and changes made during the construction process. No action was taken Wednesday, and council will consider the plan at a future meeting. In 2023, the Wanderers suggested a stadium would cost about $40 million. They asked Halifax to build and operate the facility with the team as the lead tenant. CFL hopes While stadium talk in Halifax relates to professional soccer teams, the previous debate was anchored on bringing a CFL franchise to Halifax. A group known as Schooner Sports and Entertainment was behind the proposal and it sought municipal and provincial funding to build a 24,000-seat, $110-million stadium in Shannon Park in 2022. Besides professional football, the space would have been used for community sports and major concerts. In December 2019, Halifax council voted to give the proponents $20 million, but only if a list of conditions were met. Considering that the proponent's preferred location for a stadium was Shannon Park, it was odd that council approved the funding on the condition that the stadium be built in another approved location. The proponent's enthusiasm wasn't dampened. "We're thrilled. We thank council for their due diligence and very spirited debate. We're very excited to move forward," said SSE partner Anthony LeBlanc. By April 2020, LeBlanc had taken an executive role with the NHL's Ottawa Senators. But in his absence, other SSE officials remained bullish. "We're more optimistic than we've ever been probably on the stadium itself," said founding partner Gary Drummond in late 2020. The project soon quietly disappeared from the public conversation, while the two affiliated companies behind the venture — Schooner Sports and Entertainment and Maritime Football Limited — have had their registrations revoked in the Registry of Joint Stock Companies. 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup The 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup was played in six Canadian cities: Vancouver, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Ottawa, Montreal and Moncton, N.B. For a time, Halifax hoped to be one of those cities, but Halifax council voted in early 2012 to withdraw its bid. The reason? A stadium was too expensive to build on its own. While the stadium cost was estimated at between $54.8 million and $71.1 million, the provincial government had not signed on to the project. The city was willing to spend $20 million on it. 2014 Commonwealth Games A different international sporting event was the motivation behind another Halifax stadium push. In 2005, Halifax won the right to be the Canadian city to bid for the 2014 Commonwealth Games. While hosting the games was once projected to cost $785 million, Halifax abandoned its bid in early 2007 when the projected bill reached $1.7 billion. At the time, Chris Algar, a 1999 Canada Games athlete, described the disappointment of missing out on a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. "They're saying we couldn't host it because we don't have the infrastructure," he said. "This is a chance to build that infrastructure. How do you suppose we're going to get it now?" Almost two decades later, Halifax is still trying to figure out the answer to that question.


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Toronto woman about to set sail in months-long boating race around the world. It's her second time
Melodie Schaffer, 56, is about to embark on her second Globe40 race, a months-long expedition that will sail across the world. (Courtesy of Melodie Schaffer) For the second time, Melodie Schaffer is going to compete in a months-long, 30,000-mile race that sails across the world. 'It's just an incredible feeling when you're out there,' the 56-year-old Torontonian tells CTV News Toronto. 'There's a lot of tough moments, but there are so many small, magic moments that really just carries you along to the difficult ones.' The biomedical engineer-turned-offshore sailor says she grew up with sailing—even racing in her teenage years—but got serious with the sport in 2018 with her first race. In those years, Schaffer has sailed 80,000 nautical miles, participating in races in the Caribbean and the Normandy Channel. Schaffer says she loves sailing because of its challenges. Melodie Schaffer 'It's a little bit like a chess game, the tactics that you're using, and there's a very physical aspect to it. So, it's both sort of the fitness of it and the mental challenge,' Schaffer said. The mother of three is now getting ready to embark on her next race. Next Saturday, after months of 14-hour days, preparing her boat, 'Whiskey Jack,' Schaffer will set sail from the Toronto harbour to make her way to Europe and compete in the Globe40 race. What is the Globe40 race? The offshore sailing race kicks off on Aug. 31 in Lorient, a coastal town in France, and has six different stages, starting with a dash across the Atlantic Ocean around Africa before continuing east toward Australia, Chile and Brazil. The race is expected to end in April 2026 back in France. 'Each leg is its own counting leg, and the different legs are weighted because some of the legs are short and easy, and some are really challenging,' Schaffer said, explaining how the race is ranked, pointing to Good Hope and Cape Horn as examples. Class40 boat It is a double-handed race, meaning Schaffer will have one other skipper joining her onboard the Whiskey Jack. Over the course of this race, Schaffer will have three partners. 'There's more boats this time, I think there's 15 boats in this race, and we'll see. I'm excited for it, but it is tough when you're out there,' Schaffer said. How the last race went for the Torontonian Schaffer previously competed in the Global40 race back in 2022-2023, which spanned nine months. 'There were eight legs in the last race, so we did have stopovers, but when you're on shore, you're so busy doing repairs and preparations for the next leg,' Schaffer said. 'Literally, the entire nine-month race, you're working full-on every day as you're doing it.' While there are other competitors in the race, Schaffer says the ocean is the real challenge, having to manage the waves and wind. It took Schaffer 174 days to race the ocean last time, and as soon as she finished, she thought: 'I'm coming back to do this again.' What it's like being all at sea Sailors are on their own, away from land and easy access to health care, Schaffer says, eating simple meals, often sleep deprived, and are responsible for predicting what weather is on the horizon. 'Some of my legs are out there for 35 days and that's really tough,' Schaffer said. 'You are sleep deprived, you're eating really simple meals and you're working with someone very closely at times, but a lot of the time, you're on your own.' Melodie Schaffer Outside of the inevitable challenges, Schaffer is excited to embark on this adventure, adding she feels lucky to have the opportunity to set sail on this race. 'It's quite inspiring, when you look out, you can only see about seven miles in the horizon, in the distance, and so that's sort of your vision, what you see every day,' Schaffer said. 'The ocean goes on, and on, and on, and you can feel really small, but the other side is (…) I'm out here and I'm doing it, and that's really quite a powerful feeling, to be that small on the ocean and yet, you're able to do it.'


CBC
2 hours ago
- CBC
From sippy cups to Stanley Cups, these First Nations fathers share the love of their children
Social Sharing Father's Day is an opportunity to honour the love and leadership that so many of our fathers, step dads, and guardians have given us in our lives. For others, it is a complicated day that can be experienced many different ways. CBC Indigenous spoke with three dads about the beauty and the hardships of fatherhood. Former Stanley Cup champion Reggie Leach, known as the Riverton Rifle, was famed for his play during his NHL career from 1970-83, and for his time with the Philadelphia Flyers during the "Broad Street Bullies" era. He's a father of two and said his greatest joys were the day his children were born and the day his son won the Stanley Cup. "I think that's the thing with our kids, you let them do what they enjoy. Cherish all the moments that you have," he said. Now Leach, 75, is a coach at the Shoot to Score hockey camps and his current boss, his son Jamie Leach, joined him on the call. Jamie, 55, is no stranger to hoisting the Stanley Cup either, winning in 1992 with the Pittsburgh Penguins. The Leaches are members of Berens River First Nation in Manitoba and are the first and only First Nations father and son pair to win the Stanley Cup as players. Speaking of his own son, Jamie agreed with his dad about cherishing moments. "The more and more that you get to witness — graduating high school, getting his licence, making some hockey teams that he wanted to make — it's just so nice to be a part of." What kind of fatherly advice does a Stanley Cup champion share to a fellow Stanley Cup champion? Jamie Leach shared the ice with names like Lemieux, Gretzky, and Messier, but nothing compares to the emotion that comes when he shares lessons that he learned from his dad. "He always told me whatever you do in your life, you shoot to score," said Jamie. "If you're going to do something, do the best you possibly can. You shoot to score." "Now he passes that onto his son," Reggie said with pride. Resilience But what if hockey stardom wasn't your destiny, how does a regular dad get by doing his best? Charles Bird, 48, is a father of two and grandfather of one from Black River First Nation in Manitoba. A child of residential school survivors, Bird has put a life together that his children are proud of. Bird has had sole custody of his children since 2009. His son has special needs and his daughter is studying Indigenous language at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg. It wasn't the challenges that this generation presented that Bird worried about. His father struggled in the face of trauma and addiction that residential schools brought on. A promise between father and son led to Bird making better decisions. "He told me, 'Son, live a better life for yourself. Make better choices. Don't fall into addictions and don't let them overcome you," said an emotional Bird. "You can be better than that, and you will be, because I believe in you." A promise that Bird said he has held for his father to this day. The celebration of his grandson's arrival and graduating alongside his son are two events that Bird was elated to share. His son Thurston graduated from high school the same year that Bird upgraded his education through the school division's adult education department, so they were able to walk the stage together. Fatherly advice As for some advice from the dads to other dads: Reggie Leach:"Listen to your kids, listen to what they have to say to you." Jamie Leach:"Foster a relationship with your children where they can come to you with anything."