CANADA’S WOMEN’S SITTING VOLLEYBALL TEAM SHOWING OFF THEIR MEDALS

eAwazURDU NEWS

Ottawa – If there is one team that has paid their dues in Canadian Paralympic sport, it is the women’s sitting volleyball squad. Jolan Wong, originally from Vermilion, Alta. and now living 90 minutes west of Ottawa in Pembroke, Ont., has seen the program emerge from its fledgling beginnings in 2008 to Paralympic Games medallists in 2024. “Holy, like 16 years went into this thing,” the 34-year-old Wong told CTV Ottawa two weeks ago during a ceremony to hand her the keys to the city of Pembroke.“Sixteen years of support from friends and family and community.’’

Six of the 11 athletes on the sitting volleyball squad were at their third Paralympics in Paris: Wong, team captain Danielle Ellis of White Rock, B.C., Jennifer Oakes of Calgary, Heidi Peters of Neerlandia, Alta., Felicia Voss-Shafiq of Burnaby, BC, and Katelyn Wright of Edmonton.

Paris was a second Games for Julie Kozun of Melfort, Sask. and Anne Fergusson of Carleton Place, Ont., while Allison Lang of Edmonton, Jennifer McCreesh of Smithers, B.C., and Sarah Melenka of Vegreville, Alta. made their debuts. Wong has seen the team progress from 12th place at the 2010 World Championships, to seventh at both the 2016 Paralympic Games (Canada’s first Paralympic participation in women’s sitting volleyball) and the 2018 World Championships, to fourth at the 2020 Paralympic Games then silver at the 2022 Worlds.

One of the masterminds behind this build is Nicole Ban, head coach since 2014. “I think making history with the team was the biggest thing for me,” Kozun told northeastNOW about her memories of Paris. “Being able to say that we were Canada’s first sitting volleyball team (men or women) to win a medal is probably the part that has stuck with me the most so far.”