
At 38, Karen Paquin leads by example as Canada looks to make mark at Rugby World Cup
So the veteran flanker stepped away to concentrate on coaching at Quebec City's CNDF (Campus Notre-Dame-de-Foy).
'I enjoyed it quite a bit, but I knew I didn't feel quite done,' Paquin said. 'But I knew at that point I needed to be away a bit, so I kept playing, but more for my local club and my province and those kinds of games.'
Paquin's mind changed when she watched Canada at the 2024 Pacific Four Series. She liked the look of the team's more expansive gameplay.
'I was like 'That might be something I want to get into.' Because it looked different, and it looked really fun. And I thought I have so much more to learn from this,' she recalled. 'So I decided to give it a try.'
Paquin says she returned to the game for all the right reasons. And today, the 38-year-old from Quebec City is poised to play in her fourth World Cup.
Captain Alex Tessier is delighted to have Paquin back in the fold.
'We love Karen,' Tessier enthused. 'Karen is very unique, I can tell you right now, there is no second Karen on this team. She's amazing and I think she inspires a lot of girls on the team … She's one of the fastest on the team and one of the hardest workers.'
'And she brings a whole bag of experience as well … It's valuable to have a player like her when you have high-pressure games,' Tessier added. 'She knows what those high-pressure games feel like, and I think that will really help us.'
The second-ranked Canadian women open Group B play against No. 14 Fiji on Saturday in York, England.
Like Paquin (who has won 45 caps for Canada), forwards Tyson Beukeboom (77 caps) and Olivia DeMerchant (61 caps) will be competing in their fourth World Cup.
Paquin returned to action for Canada earlier this year, starting against the U.S. in May in Pacific Four Series play — her first start since the last World Cup. But first, she had to pass muster for Canada coach Kevin Rouet.
Rouet admits he did not take it easy on Paquin when she returned to camp ahead of last fall's WXV tournament.
'She came back, and the game had changed so much, and she was lost every time. And I said, 'Karen, you have to do better. I won't give it that easy to you,'' Route recalled. 'She came back and she had an amazing Pac Four.'
'Fourth World Cup and she's still excited,' he added.
Rouet loves the way Paquin puts her body on the line every time she steps on the pitch.
'Normally when you're older, you can save your body in practice but Karen doesn't,' he said with a laugh. 'She sets the example to the youngsters.'
Paquin knows just one speed — top gear. And watch out, anyone who gets in her way.
Paquin's commitment to the sport was shown at the 2017 World Cup when she tore her meniscus against Wales in Canada's second match. She finished the game and continued playing 'on one leg' for the rest of the tournament.
Amazingly, she spent a month training for bobsled when she came home. Then it became clear she needed surgery.
Initially, it was thought it might only take three to four months to recover. But they found another tear, requiring a second operation. Paquin was out for 18 months.
Paquin says she feels fine ahead of this tournament.
'My body's good, my mind's in the right place,' she said. 'It's been hard juggling work and training at the same time but I guess that's the reality of it. But right now I'm in a good place. I'm excited for it, really.'
In addition to a string of World Cups — with a silver medal at the 2014 tournament where Canada finished runner-up to England — Paquin's rich rugby resume includes two Olympics in sevens play. She won gold at the 2015 Pan-American Games and bronze in 2016 in Rio in Olympic sevens, as well as silver at the 2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens.
Paquin was named to the 2014-15 World Rugby Women's Sevens Dream Team.
Paquin continues to coach these days. It pays the bills while giving her the satisfaction of preparing the next generation of players.
A former chemical engineer, Paquin left her job in 2012 to try out for the national sevens team. Years later, she says this World Cup feels like the end of the road for her when it comes to international play.
'I know I'll keep playing rugby, so it's not the end of my rugby, it's just the end of my international rugby days … I've come to enjoy it one last time with the amazing people that are here. And I'm going to do my very best, and then I'll move on to focus on coaching and see what that life is like.'
—
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 20, 2025
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Winnipeg Free Press
6 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Former captain Tyler Ardron returns to Canada rugby lineup for first time since 2021
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Replacements Jesse Mackail, Palmerston North, New Zealand, Seattle Seawolves (MLR); Emerson Prior, Brockville, Ont., Utah Warriors (MLR); Kyle Steeves, Winnipeg, New England Free Jacks (MLR); Mason Flesch, Cobourg, Ont., Chicago Hounds (MLR); iôn Parry, Cardiff, Wales, Ebbw Vale RFC (Wales); Stephen Webb, Toronto, UBC; Spencer Jones, Cambridge, New Zealand, Utah Warriors (MLR); Nic Benn, Caves Beach, Australia, Utah Warriors (MLR). — This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 20, 2025


CTV News
6 minutes ago
- CTV News
Former captain Tyler Ardron returns to Canada rugby lineup for first time since 2021
Canada's Tyler Ardron, right, tries to block the kick by Italy's Callum Braley during the Rugby World Cup Pool B match in Fukuoka, western Japan, Thursday, Sept. 26, CANADIAN PRESS/Kyodo News via AP Former captain Tyler Ardron returns to the Canadian rugby lineup up for the first time in almost four years on Friday when Canada hosts the United States in Calgary in the Pacific Nations Cup. The tournament marks the start of World Cup qualifying for the 25th-ranked Canadian men and 16th-ranked Americans. Ardron won the last of his 38 caps in October 2021 when Canada lost a two-match World Cup qualifier against Chile 54-46 on aggregate. That loss consigned Canada -- which was beaten 59-50 on aggregate by the U.S. in an earlier two-game qualifying series -- to the sidelines at the World Cup for the first time. The 34-year-old Ardron, a native of Peterborough, Ont., who plays in France for Castres Olympique, has been brought back into the fold by new Canada coach Steve Meehan. Ardron will line up at No. 8 between captain Lucas Rumball and Matt Oworu. 'The effort and understanding the team has shown in training has been very good,' Meehan said in a statement. 'Competition for (the) starting 15 and reserves was high and this demonstrates the depth we're building. 'It's now time to execute what we've practised. This begins on Friday evening in the Pacific Nations Cup with a strong performance against the U.S.A.' The Pacific Nations Cup, which also features No. 9 Fiji, No. 13 Samoa, No. 14 Japan and No. 19 Tonga, will send three teams to the 2027 World Cup, which is being hosted by No. 6 Australia. Fiji and Japan have already qualified by virtue of their performance at the 2023 tournament, so a top-five finish would do it for Canada if Fiji and Japan finish above it. Also Friday, Tonga hosts Samoa in Nuku'alofa in Pool A play. Canada will complete Pool B play against Japan in Sendai on Aug. 30. The semifinals and fifth-versus-sixth game are scheduled for Sept. 14 in Denver with the championship and third-place game Sept. 20 in Salt Lake City. Canada finished sixth in last year's Pacific Nations Cup, beaten 30-17 by Tonga after group stage losses to the U.S. (28-15) and Japan (55-28) Meehan's matchday 23 features 18 players from Major League Rugby including 12 in the starting 15. There are six players from the MLR-champion New England Free Jacks and five from the Chicago Hounds including captain Lucas Rumball. Seattle Seawolves prop Dewald Kotze, a 28-year-old from Edmonton, gets his first start while University of British Columbia scrum half Stephen Webb earn his first cap off the bench. Webb is the son of the late Bill Webb, co-founder of the now-defunct Toronto Arrows. Friday's match is the first for the Canadian men at McMahon Stadium since 2017 when they faced Georgia. Meehan took over the Canadian men after Kingsley Jones stepped down in December after seven years at the helm. The team lost Meehan's first two games in charge — 25-18 to No. 22 Belgium and 24-23 to No. 15 Spain on a last-minute Spanish penalty kick — in July in Edmonton. Veteran forward Evan Olmstead started against Spain, his first cap for Canada since the 2019 Rugby World Cup. Canada has lost seven straight since a 35-22 win over No. 21 Romania in July 2024 in Ottawa. That losing run includes a 28-15 defeat at the hands of the U.S. in August 2024 in last year's Pacific Nations Cup. The 2027 World Cup features an expanded 24-team field, up from 20 last year in France. In MLR news Wednesday, the Miami Sharks confirmed it will not take part in the league in 2026. The North American league featured 11 teams last season but was reduced to nine in July when NOLA Gold, based in the New Orleans suburb of Metairie, backed out and the San Diego Legion and Rugby Football Club Los Angeles (RFC L.A.) announced they will join forces and compete in the league next season as the California Legion. The Miami roster last season included Canadian backs Guiseppe du Toit and Shane O'Leary. Josiah Morra, who starts on the wing for Canada on Friday, spent time with the Sharks on loan from the New England Free Jacks. --- This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 20, 2025 Neil Davidson, The Canadian Press


Winnipeg Free Press
36 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
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Akot's contract with the Sea Bears required him to stay for the entire CEBL season but the 26-year-old made the decision to leave anyway. South Sudan had expectations of going far at AfroBasket, which runs through the weekend, but were knocked out of the competition after a 78-65 loss to Senegal early Monday. Akot contacted the Sea Bears expressing his interest in coming home and playing Friday night. He will practice and address media on Thursday. Akot struggled in four appearances in Angola, averaging 1.5 points and 1.5 rebounds in just under 20 minutes per game. In 19 games this summer with Winnipeg, Akot produced 11.2 points, 5.3 rebounds and 2.2 assists while averaging 29.8 minutes. Taylor AllenReporter Taylor Allen is a sports reporter for the Winnipeg Free Press. Taylor was the Vince Leah intern in the Free Press newsroom twice while earning his joint communications degree/diploma at the University of Winnipeg and Red River College Polytechnic. He signed on full-time in 2019 and mainly covers the Blue Bombers, curling, and basketball. Read more about Taylor. Every piece of reporting Taylor produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.