Tuesday, 10 January 2017
Competition Recap - Variety Village
Friday, 23 December 2016
Competition Recap - 2016 Mistletoe Classic
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cr: @shannysteele (Instagram) |
It's that time of year again for the annual Mistletoe Classic! This competition is sanctioned by the Ontario Weightlifting Association and is hosted at Kanama High Performance in Scarborough. While a relatively small competition, the caliber of lifting is great and this event is an opportunity for new lifters to get a feel for the competitive environment.
This year, Guelph Barbell Club had two new lifters join who were interested in trying a weightlifting competition. The biggest challenge for new lifters on the competition platform is often figuring out how to prepare for a lift and how to remain focused in an environment where everyone is watching you - especially judges who sit only a few meters away from the lifting platform.
Aaron joined Guelph Barbell Club after trying powerlifting. While powerlifting was fun and was making him stronger, he decided that Olympic weightlifting might offer a greater technical challenge. Aaron started watching lifting videos online and tried to tech himself how to snatch and clean & jerk with no direction other than coaches on YouTube! In all honesty, his approach worked pretty well and he had a decent foundation to work with when he joined Guelph Barbell.
Aaron competed in the 85 kg weight class. It might have been nerves, or it might have just been a bad lift, but he missed is opening snatch at 79 kg. After refocusing, Aaron returned to the platform and made that 79 kg lift look easy! Even though Aaron's third attempt at 83 kg looked like it was going up, at the last minute it was dropped and he finished the snatch portion of the competition and was credited with 79 kg.
Aaron was pumped for the C&J part of the competition as this is his better lift. He hit his opening lift with ease at 104 kg. For the second lift, he nailed 107 kg. Aaron attempted a 111 kg third attempt, which would have been a new PR, but narrowly missed it. Pretty sure that with a few adjustments, 111 kg is just around the corner. Aaron finished the competition with a bronze place finish and a total of 186 kg.

Syd was competing in the 75+ kg weight class. The snatch has always been Syd's better lift, so she was able to hit her opening lift at 63 kg with ease. She followed that up with an easy 65 kg for her second attempt. A PR attempt at 69 kg was narrowly missed, but Syd was off to a great start in this competition.
Next came the C&J. Syd progressed well through the warmup and made her opening attempt at 72 kg look easy. So we bumped her up to 76 kg for attempt number 2. Unfortunately, the bar path on the jerk just got slightly out in front of her which resulted in a missed lift. To give her a little bit more time to rest in between attempts, we bumped her 3rd and final attempt up to 77 kg. A little bit of core instability in the clean resulted in another missed C&J. This is a weight that I know Syd can make, and she will make this easily at the next competition!! Sad finished the competition with a gold medal and a total of 137 kg.
Despite the poor weather and slow start due to late arrivals, overall this was a fantastic competition. There was some great lifting and it's a great place to be a spectator. For Guelph Barbell Club, two new members had a great start to competitive weightlifting. Both Aaron and Syd finished the competition making 3/6 lifts, both finished with official OWA totals and medaled in their respective weight classes. Looking forward to seeing what is next for these lifters!
Thursday, 17 November 2016
My Other Favorite Sport
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Women's Wrestling Tournament on day 1 of the Bill Farrell International at the New York Athletic Club |
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Black Bear Sam Stewart getting ready to launch her opponent during the bronze medal match at the 2016 NYAC |
Saturday, 27 August 2016
The 646 Weightlifting Grand Prix



Activism or Slack-tivism?
Let me start with this - Just being educated about diseases isn't enough to make people healthier. Social media activism may "raise awareness" but there are few (if any) legitimate actions associated with sitting behind your computer and "sharing" a post.
A few years ago women were updating their status update with a color - nothing other than a color. Why? Apparently to raise awareness about breast cancer. How? I have no freaking clue. Last year, people were trying to show-up one another by posting increasingly obnoxious ways to get dunked by ice water - to raise awareness about ALS. This year, I have seen a horrifying trend of women posting photos of the underwear they are wearing to apparently "raise awareness about women's genital health". (Don't do a google image search of that one - EWW). And most recently, I have been challenged to do 22 push ups for 22 days to raise awareness about veteran suicide and PTSD.
These are just a few examples of the phenomenon of "raising awareness" for diseases. People continue to "raise awareness" of different health issues online without following this up with actions. What does awareness mean anyway, and what is supposed to come of people sharing photos, videos or bra colours? To me, these things feel very reminiscent of the 1990's chain letter phenomenon where you were threatened with years of bad luck if you didn't share the message with all your friends. Of all the recent "awareness campaigns" that I have seen, at least the ALS ice-bucket challenge involved donating money to fund ALS research. But that aside, everything else feels like a social media chain letter. "Share this if you care about _______".
To date, I have not participated in any of these social media challenges and I do not plan to. Why? Because I invest my time in energy in volunteering with the associations that I am a member of and donate funds to charities that are meaningful to me.
The 22 days of 22 push ups really bothers me. I'm not saying that the incidence of mental health issues among members of the Canadian Forces should be ignored. In fact, this is a very concerning issue that requires more resources and funding devoted to it. But sharing videos of myself doing push ups isn't going to change policy and it's certainly not going to make my veteran spouse feel like I care. In fact, my spouse is sick of being judged as being broken and damaged because of being a member of the CF but that's another issue entirely.
There is nothing wrong with awareness - but it would be more beneficial if social media awareness campaigns were followed up with real actions. Awareness may be a first step towards changing behaviour but just being educated about diseases isn't enough to make people healthier. Perhaps "sharing" things online makes people feel like they are helping. But if this generation of social media warriors tried donating time, energy and/or funds to these issues, maybe actions would do more for these causes than just raising awareness.
So forgive me for not going online and saying: "Hey motherfuckers, look at what I'm doing"!! while posting the color of my bra, a photo of my underwear or videos of myself getting dunked with a bucket of water or doing push ups. I'll stick to continuing with the actions that I currently engage in to try and influence what I can.
Wednesday, 28 October 2015
Competition Recap - Hybrid Open
Guelph Barbell Club's youngest member just completed her first ever weightlifting competition! Tiffany comes to us from Barbados where she was a member of the national swim team. While not a stranger to competition, Tiffany is relatively new to the sport of weightlifting.
Tiffany trained hard all summer via remote coaching, while she was completing her internship in Windsor. Upon her return to Guelph, she had just 6 weeks to get ready to compete at the Hybrid Open.
Following our arrival at the competition venue, Tiffany jumped on the scale and easily made weight for the 69 kg division. She then got down to business - and by business, I mean she finished an engineering assignment!
When it came time, Tiffany began her warmup. I think that she was trying to put her game face on, but it came across as more like "OMG! I have to get on a platform and lift in front of judges!?" As Tiffany warmed up, coach decided to set her opening snatch at 43 kg, which is well below her training PR of 54.5 kg. But the goal was to have her hit an easy opening lift to get some confidence on the lifting platform. The plan worked, and after Tiffany easily hit a 43 kg snatch, she REALLY put her game face on! Tiff followed that lift with successful snatches at 47 and 50 kg.
Up next, Tiffany rocked her opening C&J at 64 kg. She looked so confident on the platform that coach uped her next lift to 70 kg. For her third and final C&J, Tiffany attempted 77 kg, which was just slightly shy of her training PR. She missed the lift, but hit 5/6 lifts overall and finished with an official competition total of 120kg.
An excellent first competition for our Junior member, Tiffany Hinds!
Sunday, 14 June 2015
Competition Recap - Toronto Weightlifting Championships
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Wide variety of strength events at the 2015 Toronto Pro Show |