(Ottawa, Canada---20 June 2026) Anabelle Muir at the Canadian Track and Field Championships presented by Bell at the Terry Fox Athletic Facility.

Copyright 2026 Miles Ryan Rowat / Mundo Sport Images.

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Lions Win Four Gold Medals at Ontario Legion Championships in Sudbury

For the first time in a decade, the Ottawa Lions sent a full delegation to the Ontario Legion Track and Field Championships — and made the trip count. Athletes representing District G, which covers Eastern Ontario, combined for seven medals, including four gold, over two days of competition at Laurentian University in Sudbury on Friday and Saturday.

Anabelle Muir supplied the marquee moment, winning the U18 girls pole vault with a personal-best clearance of 3.55m, 45 centimetres clear of her nearest competitor. Muir has flourished since moving to Ottawa last year, adding 35 centimetres to her best as she now sits second on the Club’s all-time U18 list.

Fresh off winning gold with the U20 men’s 4x400m relay team at the Canadian Championships last month, Ethan Hood got his first taste of individual gold in a Lions uniform. The North Grenville Secondary School student won the U18 boys 400m in a personal-best 49.14 seconds, holding off District E’s Julio Lai-Fang (49.39) down the stretch. Hood’s time ranks sixth all-time among Lions U18 sprinters.

Every time Jarred Rathwell has stepped onto the javelin runway this season, he’s walked away with a personal best, and Saturday was no different. Competing in the U18 boys event, Rathwell threw a personal-best 54.48m with the 700-gram implement to take top spot. The St. Joseph’s student moves to fourth on the Club’s U18 all-time list with the throw.

In the rarely contested octathlon, Parker Baetz won U18 boys gold with 4,368 points across the eight-event discipline. Along the way, he set personal bests in the long jump, 100m, 400m and 1000m.

Roan Gerth turned heads in her steeplechase debut, becoming the first athlete in Club history to break five minutes over the 1500m distance. Her time of 4:59.45 was good for silver in the U16 category. The event looks like a natural fit for the Glebe student, an OFSAA finalist over 1500m who narrowly missed qualifying in the 300m hurdles during the high school season. Gerth also placed fourth in the 2000m in 6:42.16 — the second-fastest time in Club history.

Jake Claydon-St. John added U16 800m bronze in 2:01.13, two hundredths off the personal best he set at the OFSAA Championships in June. He also lowered his 1200m best to 3:20.27 to place fourth.

Brooklyn Reesal rounded out the medal count with U16 girls discus bronze, throwing 30.50m to move to seventh on the Club’s all-time U16 list. She also improved her shot put to 9.68m in Sudbury.

(Ottawa, Canada---19 July 2024) Grace Streek competing at Ottawa Summer Twilight #7 at the Terry Fox Athletic Facility. Copyright 2024 Miles Ryan Rowat/ Mundo Sport Images.

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Lions Triumph at Ontario Legion Championships with Multiple Medals

A small but mighty crew of Lions competed at the recent Ontario Legion Track and Field Championships at the Toronto Track and Field Centre on the campus of York University. Despite just six athletes donning the District G singlet in the Ontario capital, it did not quell the medal haul with a total of six coming back to Ottawa. 

Grace Streek continued to assert herself as one of Canada’s top up and coming runners. The 17-year-old was the class of the 2000 metre steeplechase – winning in a time of 7 minutes and 15.93 seconds. Streek has been a force all season in the steeplechase, having won every race she’s competed in including two provincial titles. Not satisfied with just one medal, Grace secured a bronze medal over 3000m, finishing in 10:56.56.

Following her victory at the OFSAA Track and Field Championships last month, Mallea McMullin was a favourite to take gold in the U16 girls javelin and she did not disappoint. The Louis-Riel student launched the 500g implement out to a personal best distance of 40.56 metres to easily take top spot in the event. McMullin’s nearest competitor finished over six metres back. 

Also asserting himself as a name to be reckoned with in the javelin was Hudson Kennedy. The soon to be grade 10 student at St. Michael in Kemptville unleashed a massive personal best of 45.04m to take home the silver medal. Kennedy’s performance in Toronto was nearly eight metres better than his qualifying throw when he won the District G Meet the month before.

Eli Mordel continued to show the same versatility that has served him well all season as he medalled in both the 110m hurdles and the pole vault. The Sir Robert Borden student leapt a personal best height of 4.00 metres in the pole vault to secure the silver medal. He added another lifetime best in the 110 metre hurdles, crossing the line in 14.71 seconds to take home the bronze. Mordel’s two performances currently rank him 9th and 11th respectively in Canada for the two events. 

Next up on the schedule for the athletes is this weekend’ s Ontario U14/U16/U18 Championships in Brampton before some head to Calgary for the Royal Canadian Legion Championships the weekend after. 

Full results from the Ontario Legion Championships are available on our website.