At number four on our list of the all-time OFSAA performers, we have the fastest woman in Canadian high school sports, Ashley Purnell. Running for the Lions of St. Mark, Purnell had a short but successful high school track and field career that included five OFSAA medals including two golds.
Unlike just about every other athlete on this list, Purnell’s spring focus in high school started off with touch football where she was a dominant force because of her speed. After some prodding from high school and future club mate, Sara Sowieta, Purnell joined her high school team in grade 10, but a conflict with a touch football game ended up causing Purnell to miss her 100m final at the Carleton Board meet and ended her season before it really got started.
Come grade 11, Purnell had made the decision to focus on track, joining Coach Hugh Conlin’s training group with the Lions and within months quickly became a threat at OFSAA. While it didn’t result in any medals, she was led qualifying in the 100 and 200 metres and was second across the line in the 300 metre hurdle final before a lane violation left her disqualified her.
As a first year senior in 2001, Purnell had a go at the 100/200/100 hurdle treble. Unfortunately for her she finished second in the 100 and 200 metre final to 2005 World Championship team member Toyin Olupona and also took silver in the hurdles behind 2008 Olympic bronze medalist Priscilla Lopes.
In the summer season that followed, Purnell would sweep all three races at the Canadian U20 Championships and sweep the 100 and 200 metres at the Canada Summer Games to set up a record breaking campaign during her final high school season.
The first record came during the East Regional competition where the St. Mark runner blew away the competition, breaking Angela Bailey’s 21 year old Canadian Interscholastic Record of 11.60 seconds with an 11.54 second clocking. A week later at the OFSAA Championships in Belleville, Purnell would equal the time to claim her first OFSAA gold by more than four tenths of a second.
A day later in the 200 metre final, Purnell would find a golden finish to her high school career as she crossed the line in a blistering 23.47 seconds, almost seven tenths ahead of silver. While the time surpassed the Canadian Interscholastic Record of 23.58, a trailing wind of +4.7 metres per second nullified the mark. It was the second time on the day that the wind had blown away her record attempts as Purnell had bested the OFSAA record of 24.05 with a time of 23.92 in the heats when the wind was registered a positive 2.4 m/s.
Later that summer Purnell would represent Canada at the World U20 Championships in Jamaica where she would place 8th in the 200 metre final behind the likes of Sanya Richards-Ross and Alyson Felix. She had qualified for the final after setting a Club record of 23.28 seconds in the preliminaries.
That fall, Purnell would head west to Stanford University where she would compete for the Cardinal. During her time in Palo Alto she broke the school’s indoor 400m record and earned All-American honours in the 4×400 metre relay. After graduating from Stanford, Purnell returned home to complete doctoral work in neuroscience at the University of Ottawa before completing a second doctorate in exercise physiology from the University of Nantes. She recently founded her own company in Ottawa, Neurovine, which helps concussion patients recover.