
3D-printed cast helps soccer captain get back on the field in time for Canada Games

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CTV News
3 minutes ago
- CTV News
Surge get huge night from dynamic duo to defeat Stingers at WinSport
The Calgary Surge in action Thursday against the Edmonton Stingers. The Surge got big nights from the dynamic duo of Jameer Nelson Jr. and Evan Gilyard II Thursday to help propel them past the Edmonton Stingers in CEBL playoff action. Evan Gilyard II led the way for the Surge, finishing with 28 points, five assists and a huge triple in Target Score Time that put the Surge to within a bucket of the target score of 103. That set the stage for Jameer Nelson Jr., who redirected an inbounds pass up into the bucket to advance the Surge into a western conference final showdown against the Vancouver Bandits on Saturday by a 103-95 margin. Nelson Jr. finished with 26 points, six rebounds, seven assists and two steals. Surge coach Caleb Canales said the club is lucky to have two go-to guards, in addition to a third who consistently come up big in crunch time. 'It's super special and we're super spoiled having both of them,' Canales said of the Surge's guard duo. 'Both are knocking on the door of an NBA contract. They play both ends at a high level, so we've been very spoiled by both of them.' Nelson Jr. and Gilyard II accounted for more than half of the Surge's total scoring. The club also got big performances from Sean Miller-Moore, who delivered 19 points, and Greg Brown III, who added 17 points, eight rebounds and three assists. 'I loved the fight from our group,' Canales said. 'We stuck to our identity, especially in the second half. We did a good job taking Edmonton's punch in the first half and we made plays down the stretch … it was a great way to end our games at home.' It was the third straight year the Surge have knocked out the Stingers in the playoffs. After Edmonton built a slender 50-48 lead at the half, the Surge took over the game in the third quarter, using 12-4 and 13-0 runs to propel the club to a nine-point lead after three. Gilyard was the catalyst in the third quarter, racking up 14 points. The Stingers weren't done however, going on a 12-2 run in the fourth that brought them all the way back to an 87-87 tie game with five minutes left. That was as close as Edmonton got, however, as Gilyard and Nelson took over from there, lifting Calgary to the win. Calgary goes to Vancouver to take on the Bandits, with the winner advancing to a conference final showdown in Winnipeg against the Sea Bears.


CBC
4 minutes ago
- CBC
Forget the comfort of a swimming pool. This is the 3-km open swim event at the Canada Games
No lanes. Battling wind and other elements. These are just a few of the differences when it comes to competing in the three-kilometre open water swim at the Canada Summer Games instead of a swimming pool. But competitors tell the CBC's Jeremy Eaton they love it.

Globe and Mail
27 minutes ago
- Globe and Mail
Female Canadian athletes told recent gene tests don't meet World Athletics requirements
Female Canadian athletes have been told that the new gene tests they recently underwent do not comply with World Athletics' requirements, leaving them scrambling to complete new tests before the September 1 deadline for the world championships. French athletes are also seeking meets and camps outside their country to complete the one-off tests after the Ministry of Health and Ministry of Sports ruled them illegal in France. Athletics Canada commissioned Dynacare to conduct SRY gene tests, which help to determine biological sex, at the recent national championships. However, in an e-mail sent this week to athletes and seen by Reuters it said Dynacare 'has advised us that the test kits they provided were not of the required standard.' Why the outcome of Caster Semenya's sex-eligibility battle could set new precedents in sports Athletics Canada CEO Mathieu Gentes told Reuters on Friday that the federation is 'doing everything within its power in the interest of athletes to ensure that we meet World Athletics' September 1 deadline for completion of the test. 'It's a rapidly evolving situation which we're dealing with in real time,' Gentes said. 'We are working on solutions to assist athletes in locations around the world.' Dynacare, who were not immediately available to comment, are sending new test kits to athletes based in Canada and the U.S., along with testing locations, according to Athletics Canada. The French Athletics Federation (FFA) had planned to test athletes at the national championships but was told 'such tests are prohibited under the French Bioethics Law enacted in 1994,' the FAA said in a statement to Reuters. 'As a result, ultimately, no action was carried out. 'The federation is confident in World Athletics' ability to quickly find a solution and to ensure that French athletes can take part in international competitions under the best possible conditions.' World Athletics is working with the French federation to help athletes obtain tests at other meets or at their pre-worlds training camp outside France, said Jackie Brock-Doyle, Director of Special Projects for the sport's governing body. Brock-Doyle also said World Athletics is working with federations from Poland, Belgium and Switzerland to help facilitate testing for athletes competing at the four remaining Diamond League meetings hosted by those countries. Sex eligibility rules for female athletes are complex and legally difficult. Here's how they work World Athletics approved the introduction of a test to determine if an athlete is biologically female at their council meeting in March. '(The federations) all knew in March that we were going to introduce the SRY test,' Brock-Doyle told Reuters. 'We were asked during the press conference, 'Would we be bringing it in for the world championships?' And we said at the time, 'Yes, that is our intention.'' When pressed for details about the test at the March press conference, World Athletics President Sebastian Coe said: 'The process is very straightforward, frankly very clear and it's an important one. And we will look for a testing provider, we will work on the timelines.' World Athletics then announced details of the SRY test on July 31. 'It's really important in a sport that's permanently trying to attract more women that they enter a sport believing there is no biological glass ceiling,' Coe said in a statement at the time. 'The test to confirm biological sex is a very important step in ensuring this is the case.' Brock-Doyle said World Athletics was not worried that female athletes would miss the September 13-21 worlds in Tokyo due to a failure to secure a test by the deadline. Brock-Doyle, who estimated that 40-50 per cent of athletes have been tested, said those who have completed the test but are still awaiting the result past the deadline can compete in Japan. 'Not every single result may come through, because some countries it may take two, three weeks,' she added. An adverse result – and potentially that athlete's performance at the worlds – would be investigated afterwards. Brock-Doyle also disagreed with criticism that the genetic testing regulations were pushed through too quickly. 'Would it have been better if we'd had a little bit more time? Maybe,' she said. 'But the reason we've chosen the world championships is that it's probably around 80-plus per cent of all our elite (female) athletes there.'