OTTAWA - July 14, 2021: Kimberley Howitt competing at Ottawa Summer Twilight #11 at the Terry Fox Athletic Facility.

Lions win 13 medals at Ontario Masters Championship

The height of the season for many of our masters athletes took place this past weekend at the Ontario Masters Championships. Competing against the province’s best, Lions athletes managed to bring home an impressive 13 medals including a staggering 10 golds. 

A quartet of athletes managed to win a pair of gold medals on the weekend. 

Completing one of the more rare track doubles, Kimberley Howitt took top spot in both the 200 and 800 metre events. The 38-year old won the W35 800 in a time of 2:27.23 on Sunday before coming back later in the day to win the 200 in 29.96 seconds.

Joining Howitt as a double gold medalist on the track was Jodi Molstad. The 48-year-old Molstad found herself atop the podium in both the 200 and 400 metres events, winning in times of 31.31 and 1:14.12 respectively. Molstad fell just short of the sprinting trifecta as she took the silver over 100 metres in 14.62 seconds – just over a tenth of second back from the winner Mavis Ayippey of Jamcan International. 

In the field, Club founder Bob Stavely returned to his winning ways in both the shot put and javelin. Stavely, who was a pole vaulter in his younger years, has been a strong force in masters throwing over the past 20 plus years – particularly in the javelin, where he won the M85 competition Sunday with a throw of 15.85 metres. 

As a show of strength, the 88-year-old’s mark would have also been good enough to win the M80 category. 

Also picking up the throws double was Sam Walls, who completed the much more conventional shot put/discus double. The 48-year-old Walls heaved the 16 pound shot put out to 11.60 metres, besting the field by four and a half metres. In the discus, Walls nearly doubled the second place finisher with his 37.75 metre throw. 

The other two golds came over 800 metres where Michael Conway and Gilles Frenette took top spot in the M35 and M45 categories respectively. Conway’s time of 2:06.97 was nearly 22 seconds faster than second place, while Frenette’s 2:18.80 was good for a more than four second margin of victory. 

Danette Nearing-Guibord garnered silver medals in both the W60 100 and 200 metre events.

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