Olympian Annamay Oldershaw looking forward to opportunity ahead in new role with Team Canada

Compartir
Compartir articulo

TORONTO (June 13, 2019) — At the age of 35, Annamay Oldershaw, who competed for Canada in swimming at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, is focused on going to another Games – except this time she has a much different role.

On Thursday, the Canadian Olympic Committee announced Oldershaw as Team Canada’s Chef de Mission for the2020 Winter Youth Olympic Games to be held in Lausanne, Switzerland.

As Chef de Mission, she will be responsible for providing overall leadership for Team Canada, by creating a positive and supportive environment conducive to achieving optimal performance for all of the teenaged team members.

"It’s an absolute honour to be selected as Chef de Mission," said Oldershaw. "To know that I will be representing Canada again on the international stage, nearly 10 years later, is incredibly exciting."

In the fall of 2012, Oldershaw retired from competitive swimming after battling a serious illness she had contracted two years earlier. It was not before a phenomenal career for the breaststroke specialist, however, who proudly represented Canada from 2000 to 2012.

At the 2009 FINA World Championships in Rome, she broke the women’s 200m breaststroke world record with a time of 2 minutes and 20.12 seconds and went on to win the silver medal in the final. That world record stood for three years before being broken at London 2012, but Oldershaw still holds five Canadian records.

At the 2007 Pan American Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, she won silver in both the 100m and 200m breaststroke events as well as the 4x100m medley relay. In 2008, she placed first at the Canadian Trials in the 100m and 200m breaststroke events, qualifying her for the Olympic Games in Beijing where she finished sixth in the 200m breaststroke, 10th in the 100m breaststroke, and was also a member of the 4×100m medley relay that placed seventh.

"Looking back at it all, I consider myself very lucky to have had the career I did and to have competed at the Olympics, representing Canada, is something I will never forget," she said. "Like most athletes though, the good times came with the bad, moments where I just didn’t want to swim anymore. Thankfully, I had friends and mentors that I could lean on to get through it all and that is my goal in Lausanne, to be that someone these kids can talk to."

Oldershaw, who grew up in Edmonton but now resides in Hamilton, knows a thing or two about inspiring kids.

She works for the Halton District School Board as a teacher at River Oaks Public School. She is also a coach for the Etobicoke Swim Club’s elite team, working with swimmers aged 12 to 18.

At home, she is a mother to two young daughters, Josephine and Margaret, with husband, Mark Oldershaw, a three-time Olympian and Olympic bronze medallist in canoe sprint.

"I love watching kids grow and I think it’s going to be a privilege to be able to watch these next generation athletes in Lausanne develop into Canada’s future Olympians."

Twenty-six years after it was bestowed the title of Olympic Capital, Lausanne will be welcoming the third edition of the Winter Youth Olympic Games January 9-22, 2020.

The Youth Olympic Games are an international Olympic sporting event of the highest level for athletes aged 15-18.

They combine sports performance, culture and education in an authentic celebration of sport with a festive atmosphere. The aim is to encourage young people to adopt and represent the positive values of sport – respect for others, for themselves and for our environment; friendship between people and cultures; and, excellence in self-giving – and to become sports ambassadors throughout the world.

-30-

MEDIA CONTACT:

Josh Su, Specialist, Public Relations

Canadian Olympic Committee

C: 647-464-4060

E: jsu@olympic.ca

25 Years at #1: Your best source of news about the Olympics is www.aroundtherings.com, for subscribers only

Recents Articles

Paris 2024, the Games with 12 billion interactions, 11,000 live hours and automatic replays

After the inauguration of an Artificial Intelligence Olympic Agenda that seeks to empower athletes, the competition and the public, the IOC's Director of Marketing and Digital Engagement, Leandro Larrosa, explains how the links between AI and networks will transform the imminent Olympic experience.

París 2024, los Juegos de las 12 billones de interacciones, 11 mil horas en vivo y repeticiones automáticas

Luego de la inauguración de una Agenda Olímpica de Inteligencia Artificial que busca empoderar a los atletas, la competencia y al público, el director de Marketing y Compromiso Digital del COI, Leandro Larrosa, expone cómo los vínculos entre la IA y las redes transformarán la inminente experiencia olímpica.

Bach: “There will be six to eight Palestinian athletes in Paris”

The top president reported that the IOC will grant invitations if no other athlete manages to qualify; the Arab nation has two guaranteed places, only one achieved since the beginning of the war.

Bach: “Habrá entre seis y ocho atletas palestinos en París”

El máximo mandatario informó que el COI concederá invitaciones si ningún otro atleta consigue clasificarse; la nación árabe tiene dos plazas aseguradas, solo una conseguida desde el inicio de la guerra.

Security in Paris 2024: the “anti-terrorist perimeter” was extended for the opening ceremony

Three months after the parade on the Seine River and hours after the arrest of a 16-year-old teenager, the Paris police established new security measures and stated: “The terrorist threat remains very high, even if there is no concrete threat.”