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Canada earns Olympic berth in artistic swimming with duet gold in Lima

Aug 2, 2019 | 1:29 PM

LIMA, Peru — Jacqueline Simoneau and Claudia Holzner developed a pre-swim routine to calm their nerves when they joined forces as an artistic swimming tandem. It involves a declaration of trust and a reference to a Disney character.

And it seems to be working.

Simoneau, of Chambly, Que., and Calgary’s Holzner combined to defend Canada’s artistic swimming duet title Wednesday at the Pan American Games and earned Canada a spot at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics in the process.

The Canadian tandem finished first with a total score of 180.0343 points. Mexico was second with 174.3661 points, and the United States third with 170.6698 points.

“It was such a special moment,” Holzner said. “Before we swam our coach (Gabor Szauder) was like, ‘Jackie, go for a second Olympics,’ and ‘Claudia, become an Olympian.'”

Simoneau and Holzner returned to the pool later Wednesday as part of Canada’s nine-swimmer squad in team competition, with another Olympic berth on the line, and took the top of the podium for the second time with 179.6731 points. Mexico took second (175.1243) and the U.S. followed (170.8114).

Simoneau and Holzner, who were both members of Canada’s gold-medal winning team entry at the 2015 Pan Am Games in Toronto, started swimming together as a duet in 2017. Simoneau said she and Holzner came up with a unique pre-swim routine the moment their partnership was formed.

“We hold each other’s hands and we look each other in the eye and we say, ‘I trust you.’ And then there’s a secret word that we say right before we go.

“We came up with this the moment we started swimming together. It’s a ridiculous word, but for us it just means having a calm confidence. It’s Perry. Perry the platypus. It’s a TV character on the Disney show “Phineas and Ferb.'”

Canada swept synchronized swimming events at the Toronto Games, with Simoneau and Karine Thomas earning duet gold to go with the team victory. Simoneau and Thomas went on to place seventh at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

The sport was renamed from synchronized swimming to artistic swimming in 2017.

Later Wednesday, gymnast Ellie Black of Halifax added to her record Pan Am medal haul with a silver medal in the women’s beam event, her fifth medal this year. Black has won 10 medals over the last two Games to become Canada’s most decorated Pan Am gymnast.

Black had a chance at a 11th medal but finished fourth in the floor competition. There was more good news for Canada, however, with Brooklyn Moors of Cambridge, Ont., winning gold.

“It’s incredible to come away with one more medal,” Black said. “It’s great for this team that we’ve done so well.”

Samuel Zakutney of Ottawa was fourth and Rene Cournoyer of Repentigny, Que., was fifth in men’s horizntol bar.

 

EQUESTRIAN

Tina Irwin of Stouffville, Ont., riding Laurencio, took silver in individual dressage with a score of 77.780. Sarah Lockman of the U.S. won gold with 78.980. Irwin was part of Canada’s squad that won gold in the team dressage event on Monday and earned a berth at the 2020 Games.

“I was thrilled with the team gold but now to be on the podium individually is fantastic,” Irwin said. “It was definitely my goal, I was coming to win a medal. I was hoping for, gold but that’s okay. My horse was amazing, the whole competition.”

 

SQUASH

The Canadian women’s team of Hollie Naughton of Mississauga, Ont., Samantha Cornett of Deep River, Ont., and Calgary’s Danielle Letourneau took silver after a 2-0 loss to the United States in the final, while

The men’s team of Montreal’s Shawn DeLierre, Nick Sachvie of St. Catharines, Ont., and Calgary’s Andrew Schnell picked up a bronze medal after losing 2-0 to Colombia in the semifinals. Canada won a record seven squash medals (three silver, four bronze) at one Pan Am Games.

“Obviously, we’re disappointed with the results because we were hoping to go for gold,” Schnell said. “But it’s still just such an honour to play for your country and to play against a country like Colombia who are very fair players. Very nice people. So it was a pleasure to play today.”

 

SHOOTING

Winnipeg’s Curtis Wennberg and Amanda Chuboda of Spruce Grove, Alta., took bronze in mixed trap shooting, finishing behind two American teams. Wennberg and Chuboda just missed out on an Olympic berth, as the top two finishers earned spots for the Tokyo Games.

“Iin this event I was on all day and and it feels wonderful because it’s been 28 years since my first team medal in the Pan Am Games where I got gold in Cuba in1991,” said Wennberg. “And so it’s almost three centuries or three decades here before for winning another medal.”

 

BADMINTON

Michelle Li of Markham, Ont., advanced to the women’s semifinals with a 2-0 (21-9, 26-24) win over Mexico’s Haramara Gaitan. Toronto’s Brian Yang of defeated Osleni Gurrero of Cuba 2-1 (21-10, 15-21, 21-13) to advance to the men’s semifinals. Jason Ho-Shue of Markham also advanced with a 2-0 (21-14, 21-15) win over Mexico’s Lino Munoz.

Toronto’s Rachel Honderich and Kristen Tsai of Surrey, B.C., won their women’s doubles quarterfinal 2-0 (21-3, 21-3) over a team from Peru. Tsai then teamed with Nyl Yakura of Pickering, Ont., for a 2-0 (21-10, 21-14) win over a Cuban tandem on a mixed doubles quarterfinal.

 

TENNIS

Jada Bui of Toronto moved on to the women’s singles third round with a 6-3, 6-2 win over Brazil’s Luisa Stefani. Usue Arconada defeated Alexandra Vagramov of Vancouver 7-5, 6-2.

 

FIELD HOCKEY

Canada’s record dropped to 1-1 in women’s competition ater a 3-0 loss to regional powerhouse Argentina.

The Canadian Press