Ontario Community Newspapers

Canadian Champion (Milton, ON), 12 Feb 2015, p. 56

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5 98m as a third grader, he was too young gto be included in EC. Drury School for the i5 Deaf's weekly skiing trips to Kitchener. â€"lnstead, he turned his attention to snow- 5 boarding at Glen Eden. And the rest is his- : tory. 5 “Snowboarding is one of the most amazing 5 sports to ever be invented. I love it," said the iaircraft assembler at Toronto’s Mitsubishi 5 Heavy Industries Canada Aerospace, whose ‘ g Deaflympics dream â€" backed by those at i 5 Glen Eden, Spokes & Slopes and Corbett’s i g â€" can be supported at gofundme.com/mar- 5 tinzagozdzon. i The Zagozdzon brothers’ love of sports â€" j â€"particularly of the downhill slopes variety é â€" continues to be shared, as Michael is now 2 vice president of the Ontario Deaf Sports As- § sociation. § To say he's proud of his sibling’s accomplish- 3 3% ments would be something of an under- ‘ -"='_ statement. Said Michael, “Through hard work, dedica- tion and training, he’s earned the right to ‘ represent Canada. Martin's a great choice for Team Canada because his whole life is about ‘ mBut as a third grader, he was too young sto be included in EC Drury School for the {:â€" Deaf’ 5 weekly skiing trips to Kitchener â€"lnstead, he turned his attention to snow- : boarding at Glen Eden. And the rest is his- E tory. ¢ "Snowboarding is one of the most amazing 5 sports to ever be invented. I love it,” said the 3 aircraft assembler at Toronto’s Mitsubishi 5 Heavy Industries Canada Aerospace, whose g Deaflympics dream â€" backed by those at 3 Glen Eden, Spokes & Slopes and Corbett’s g -â€" can be supported at gofundme.com/mar- ursday, February 12 20 snowboarding.” That’s no hollow sentiment, given the untold hours spent on the hills. To that end, Zagozdzon was more than a little excited when Glen Eden opened early this season. He can be found there most week nights, while weekends are reserved for trips to ei- ther Horseshoe Resort or Mount St. Louis Moonstone. While known for his speed and balance, the local snowboarder has become increasingly- confident with his tricks. Zagozdzon’ 3 love of snowboarding Wrestlin began early, and only got stronger he Michaelis twins mirrored each other in more than just looks last week- end in Bramp- ton. The Milton Dyâ€" namo Wrestling Club veterans delivered strik- ineg-similar performances en route to On- tario Amateur championship g twins cla no gold fore upstaging York's Sebastian Galaote 16-8 for the gold. The brothers are Craig Kielburgâ€" er Secondary School’s first- ever Ontario champs. School captain Colin Moffat claimed juvenile bronze in the 69-kg. division, dominating Ja- Truth in Advertising Matters. 1 Creativity is subjective. The truth isn't. snowboarding." That's no hollow sentiment, given the untold hours spent on the hills. To that end, Zagozdzon was more than a little excited when Glen Eden opened early this season. He can be found there most week nights, while weekends are reserved for trips to ei- ther Horseshoe Resort or Mount St. Louis Moonstone. While known for his speed and balance, the local snowboarder has become increasingly- confident with his tricks. With that in mind, he’s heading to Russia with more than an ’l’m just happy to be here' mentality. ”I want to represent my country and be a great role model in my community â€" to encourage deaf children to try snowboard- ing and perhaps go to the Deaflympics too someday," he said. ‘And of course my goal is to bring home some medals." Steve LeBIanc can be reached at sleblanc@mil- toncanadianchampion.com or on Twitter @ MiltonOnSports. “What worked for us this weekend was the fact that we shared the basketball," said coach Alana Juzenas, whose Royals finished second in the regular season at 12-1 and begin the playoffs this afternoon at home against T.A. Blakelock. ”We would have loved to have been playing on the championship side, but after that first game we played some of the best basketball we have all season." The Milton Dy- namo Wrestling Club veterans delivered strik- ineg-similar performances en route to On- tario Amateur championship juvenile gold. Neither gave up a single on the ,. . 3 Jake (left) and Cole Micl gold medal victory. way to the final, where Jake turned in an es- pecially impressive 15â€"12 victory over Mari- posa's Noah Erskine to reign supreme in the 72-kilogram ranks. Following a first-round bye, he dispatched his opposition with 10-0 and 4-0 shutouts to reach the final. Also a defensive specialist, Cole enjoyed three straight 10-0 superiority wins be- twins mirrored each other in more than just looks last week- end in Bramp- ton. Reding delivers big run to consolation title REGISTER NOW! School’s first- ever Ontario champs. School captain Colin Moffat claimed juvenile bronze in the 69-kg. division, dominating Ja- elis get their hands raised in cob Policarpio :he Ontario championships. SUPP’MPMM of the Matmen ' 14-2 after a 9-3 semifinal loss to eventual champion Amanie McLaren of Mariposa. Nathan Nguyen won three matches to place fourth in the 58-kg. cadet class. Craig Kielburger’s wrestlers head to Oakville’s King's Christian Thursday for the Halton championship and then host the Golden Horseshoe Athletic Conference (GHAC) championships Friday, Feb. 20. Following their tournament opening setback, Reding trounced London's Catholic Central 69-27 â€" with Brathwaite leading offensively with 20 points â€" and then upstaged Jean Vanier of Richmond Hill 69-48. David had a team-high 18 points in the latter win. His all-star team inclusion followed his win of the three-point challenge at the recent Silver Fox Tournament in Hamilton.

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