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Catriona became Saskatoon's first woman gold
medal winner at the Olympic Games since 1928 when she won the 500 metre
speed skating championship at Nagano, Japan, in Olympic record time of
38.21 seconds.
Catriona was born in Saskatoon on Dec. 13,
1970, one of three daughters of Iain and Shauna LeMay.
Soccer was one of her early interests but
she also found time for ringette and track and field, setting
Saskatchewan high school records in track and representing Saskatchewan
at the 1993 Canada Games at Kamloops.
Speed skating was her first love and she was
competing with the Saskatoon Lions Club as early as 1981. She won many
trophies, including the club's outstanding skater award seven times.
Catriona left her mark in Saskatchewan, holding provincial outdoor
records on 24 occasions, provincial indoor records on seven occasions
and being honored with the Dairy Foundation Fitness Foundation award
five times. She was also named Sask Sport female athlete of the year
twice.
At the Canadian level, she has held Canadian
championships, from bantam through senior sprint. She won her first
international gold medal at the World Cup competition in 1995, won four
silvers and a bronze on the World Cup tour in 1996, and won a bronze and
silver at the World Cup at Lillehammer, Norway, in 1997.
She represented Canada in two events at the
1992 Winter Olympics at Albertville, France, and raced in three events
at the Winter Olympics in Norway, in 1994. The Olympics of her life came
to a gold medal level at Nagano, Japan. Catriona took her victory flag
with the Canadian flag and followed up with a bronze medal showing in
the 1,000 metres at one minute, 17.37 and was 13th in the 1,500 metres.
Catriona finished an amazing year on the
World Cup circuit, winning the world sprint championship and two gold
medals and a silver medal at the World Cup single distances in Calgary.
In 2002, Catriona went on to repeat her
Olympic success with a gold medal in the 500m at the Salt Lake City
Olympics. That same year she was also the world sprint Champion, and won
the Lou Marsh award as Canada’s athlete of the year.
She was also named Canada’s female athlete
of the year in both 2001 and 2002. |