Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - August 10, 2024, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 2024
‘Top, top, top honour’ for senior officiating at raucous table tennis medal match;
referee witnesses world-record pole vault; athletic therapist ‘can’t wait to do it again’
Manitobans savour Olympic magic in support roles
P
ARIS — To Gregory Chan’s
right was the French teenage
table tennis wunderkind
Felix Lebrun. To his left was the No.
4-seed, three-time Olympian Brazil-
ian Hugo Calderano.
It was the bronze match of the
men’s singles tournament, the
hometown crowd at the Paris Arena
Sud was going mad, and Chan had
one of the best seats in the house: the
assistant umpire’s chair.
The seasoned, blue-badge umpire
from Winnipeg was officiating his first
medal match of the Summer Olympics
with head umpire Diana Santome of
Peru. It was a privileged position the
69-year-old had long believed to be out
of reach.
“Athletes, coaches — everybody
dreams about coming to the Olympics,
but since my age, around 10 years ago,
I stopped thinking of coming to the
Olympics,” Chan said.
“But sometimes miracles do hap-
pen.”
Chan is part of a small cohort of
Manitobans on the periphery of the
Paris 2024 Summer Olympics, lending
their expertise as officials, coaches
and support staff to keep athletes on
track and the Games marching to-
wards Sunday’s closing ceremony.
To be involved in an Olympic medal
match was a “top, top, top honour,”
Chan said with a laugh, thinking about
his place amid the French fervour for
Lebrun and his brother Alexis, who
have attracted massive crowds to the
table tennis arena.
“The environment there is hard to
umpire because it was so loud and
people are trampling their feet like a
freight train going by without stop-
ping,” Chan said. “Normally, in another
tournament I would raise the hand and
say, ‘Please, quiet down.’ Otherwise
you can’t concentrate on playing.
“But it’s the home environment.”
Chan is no stranger to the extremes
of officiating the best in the world.
His resumé includes a World Cham-
pionship, Pan Am Games and Com-
monwealth Games, but receiving the
invitation to work his first Olympics
was a milestone.
“The Olympics, this is the cream of
the cream of the crop,” said Chan, a
vice-president in the Manitoba Table
Tennis Association. “The best players
in the world are here.”
He also had the distinction of being
the only North American table tennis
umpire at the Summer Games, and
probably the most senior — a detail he
shares enthusiastically.
“If anything sudden happens, it’s
the experience that manages whether
you panic or you make a bad decision,”
he said. “An experienced umpire will
draw from past experience to neutral-
ize the situation.”
And the challenging situations are
almost certain to arise at the Olympics,
as veteran athletics referee and Winni-
pegger Jane Edstrom was reminded on
Day 7 of the track-and-field meet at the
Stade de France.
It was the women’s pole vault final,
19 competitors had qualified and
Edstrom and the officials team had
managed to keep the marathon-length
event running on time — until it
wasn’t.
A computer-operated pole vault
standard malfunctioned midway
through the competition and needed to
be replaced entirely. It would delay the
final by about 20 minutes.
“I let the competition and the tech-
nical director know… I let them take
care of their business and I went down
to talk to the athletes,” said Edstrom.
“If you inform the athletes what
is going on, and prepare them for
possibly how long it will take and help
them manage the situation then, you
know what? It’s something that none of
us wanted to happen, but now that it’s
happened, how are we going to prob-
lem-solve to get around it?”
Officials responded swiftly, getting
technicians in to deal with the faulty
equipment as quickly as possible, all
the while keeping the athletes updated
on when they could expect to compete,
she said.
Keeping a level of calm among
athletes on the field is essential in such
conditions, Edstrom said.
“I take on their problems and try to
solve them and then let them wor-
ry about the competition,” said the
gold-level referee.
E
DSTROM said she’s fortunate
to have the responsibility. She
previously officiated the Summer
Games in Rio in 2016 and in Tokyo in
2021. Heading into this year, she was
hopeful the World Athletics sports
governing body would ask her back for
a third time.
“The athletes are awesome, and the
competition has been great, and the
people I’ve met are outstanding,” she
said.
It doesn’t hurt to be a small part of
some great athletics moments either,
Edstrom said. The retired phys-ed
teacher had the luck of being stationed
at the base of the pole vault Monday
when Sweden’s Armand Duplantis
broke the men’s world record at 6.25
metres.
“I always try to provide the best
stage for the athletes to perform on,”
she said. “So, if I can put them at ease,
if I can ensure that everything moves
as it should, it helps them to perform
better.”
It’s a mindset also shared by Bran-
don’s Schad Richea. The athletic ther-
apist was courtside with the Canadian
men’s indoor volleyball team, tending
to the many aches, pains and injuries
of competition.
Paris was the final stop for Richea,
who travelled the globe this year
with the Maple Volleys — as the team
is known — during their advance
through the Volleyball Nations League,
with stops in Turkey, the Philippines,
Qatar, Portugal and Poland before
landing in France for his first Olympic
Games.
He was one of three Manitobans on
the team, alongside setter Luke Herr
of Winnipeg and attacker Eric Loep-
pky of Steinbach.
“They welcomed me pretty good,
being the new guy,” he said.
H
EARING O Canada played for
the first time in the Paris Arena
Sud before Canada’s opening
match against Slovenia is a memory
Richea said will stay with him forever.
“Sixteen thousand people in the are-
na and us singing as loud as we could
— loud and proud. And that’s when I
knew: it was on. We’re here,” he said.
But for all its breathtaking moments,
life at the Olympics is no walk in the
park, he said. The days are packed
with meetings, practice, workouts,
treatments, more practice, hour-long
bus trips and, of course, the games.
It was normal to log over 22,000
steps a day, he said.
“The joke is it’s almost purposely
made so you can’t do your job. It’s just
so busy,” he said. “Everybody’s got
the same intentions of trying to make
their athletes the best, and treated, and
recovered, and strength trained and
practised… it was quite something.
“But if they asked us if we’d do it
again? Absolutely. I can’t wait to do it
again.”
And, of course, there’s also the bitter
taste of defeat that’s part and parcel of
Olympic life, he said.
The Canadians’ tournament came
to an end against Serbia, losing three
games to two on Aug. 3. The men’s
volleyball team finished last in its pool
and didn’t advance out of the prelim-
inary round, where it ranked 10th
overall.
Richea keeps the tournament in
perspective: the team’s growth and
success over the season was measur-
able and, as a bonus, there were no
significant injuries.
“The result, perhaps, wasn’t what
we wanted, but in the thick of it all
we learned something from it and our
program is growing,” he said.
“We have a good core group of
professionals in all realms — whether
it’s staff, whether it’s athletes, whether
it’s at Volleyball Canada — that have
the best interests of the program in
mind… I think we’ll be making some
noise moving forward.”
“It felt good to see that,” he said.
fpcity@freepress.mb.ca
DANIELLE DA SILVA
PETROS GIANNAKOURIS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Assistant umpire Gregory Chan of Winnipeg looks on as Brazil’s Hugo Calderano plays against France's Felix Lebrun in the men's singles bronze medal table tennis match at the Olympics in Paris.
SUPPLIED
Athletic therapist Schad Richea (right) of Brandon with Canadian men’s volleyball team
manager Cassandra Nicol before the opening ceremony on July 26.
ALEKSANDRA SZMIGIEL / REUTERS
Official Jane Edstrom (left) watches as Sweden’s Armand Duplantis competes in the pole vault.
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