Despite being part of the first generation of athletes to use the Lambrick Park throwing cage, Adam Keenan, a 2011 graduate of Lambrick Park secondary, is not part of the Lambrick Park B次元官网网址楾ossy Posse.B次元官网网址
Surely, however, heB次元官网网址檒l be made an honorary member this week, as he arrives in the Gold Coast of Australia for the 2018 Commonwealth Games, starting today, April 4 until April 15.
Keenan was first in the hammer throw at the 2017 Canadian Track and Field Championships, and still owns the Canadian junior hammer record from 2013. HeB次元官网网址檚 next in line to be CanadaB次元官网网址檚 top hammer thrower, the payoff after seven years dedicated to throwing. Keenan finished high school in 2011 with gold in the shot put, discus and hammer. He then focused on the hammer qualified for the Commonwealth Games through a B次元官网网址渓ast-chanceB次元官网网址 effort in December.
Coming off an injury, the pressure is on Keenan, not just to throw well, but to focus on his university studies while heB次元官网网址檚 there.
MEDAL ALERT! Adam Keenan Canadian Champion in Senior Mens Hammer 馃
B次元官网网址 BC Athletics (@BC_Athletics)
B次元官网网址淚 notified my professors that I will be gone for 10 days to compete for Canada,B次元官网网址 Keenan said. B次元官网网址淭hey have all been incredibly supportive and encouragingB次元官网网址 Bringing my schoolwork with me to Australia will allow me to have reprieve from the pressure of the Commonwealth Games.B次元官网网址
After a fairly anticlimactic season, Keenan and his coach agreed he needed one more chance to make a big throw. It was at his last-chance attempt, at a December meet in Phoenix, that Keenan threw 72.57 metres to qualify for the Games. ItB次元官网网址檚 an important stepping stone in his career. Since 2011 Keenan trained in Kamloops with coach Anatoliy Bodnarchuk Canadian, who also coached Olympic medalist Dylan Armstrong (shot put). Keenan is currently finishing school at Northern Arizona University.
Among those heB次元官网网址檒l join in Australia are fellow hammer thrower Sultana Frizell, the two-time reigning Commonwealth Games womenB次元官网网址檚 hammer gold medalist (2010 and 2014) and Commonwealth Games record holder, who spent 2016 training out of the Lambrick Park throwing cage. It was also Frizell who helped coin the term Tossy Posse, though she since returned to her home province of Ontario.
Keenan is among more than a dozen athletes whoB次元官网网址檝e come through, or from, Greater Victoria, as the community has become an athlete springboard for international level competition.
Keenan and Frizell join local cyclist Jay Lamoreux, Claremont grad Matt Sharpe (triathlon) and current Claremont student Bryden Hattie (diving), and HattieB次元官网网址檚 Boardworks Diving club teammate Celina Toth, national diving champion in the 10m platform.
Two Oak Bay High grads, Maddie Secco and Kathleen Leahy, will represent Team CanadaB次元官网网址檚 field hockey team at the Games.
First training: Check! Field Hockey Canada's Women's National Team is on the ground and running in Gold Coast. They kick off the Commonwealth Games on April 5 against host-nation Australia!
B次元官网网址 Field Hockey Canada (@FieldHockeyCan)
Mount Douglas secondary grad Conor Morgan, a 6-foot-9 forward in his fourth year with the UBC Thunderbirds, has been named to the Canadian basketball team.
A contingent of Swimming CanadaB次元官网网址檚 athletes from the High Performance Centre based at Saanich Commonwealth Place includes Olympic medalist Hilary Caldwell, recent Claremont grad Sarah Darcel (University of California, Berkeley), UVic Vikes standout Jeremy Bagshaw, LadysmithB次元官网网址檚 Faith Knelson, and HPC coach Ryan Mallette. Caldwell will seek the podium in the 200-metre backstroke, the event she won bronze in at the 2016 Rio Olympics.
Saint Michaels University School grads Mike Fuailefau and Luke McCloskey, both of local club Castaway Wanderers, join Oak Bay High grads Connor Braid (James Bay) and Caroline Crossley (CW) as locally produced players on the rugby sevens teams for the Games.