The B.C. Seniors Games are all about sportsmanship and camaraderie - and a big helping of good, old-fashioned competition to keep those in their golden years on top of their game.
A pair of Â鶹Éç¹ú²úathletes brought their best to the recent B.C. Senior Games in Penticton, and brought home a nice collection of medals in the process.
Theodora Carroll and Vello Erics, both swimming for Squamish, won medals in several different disciplines. Carroll, competing in her third Seniors Games, won a gold medal, three silver medals and placed fourth in another very self-satisfying race.
"I was very pleased," said Carroll, who competed in the women's 65-69 category. "Apart from the medals, I was happy with all my results. I brought my times down in everything."
She won silver in the 25- and 50-metre backstroke and swam the freestyle portion in the women's 4x25-metre medley relay for her third silver. Carroll captured gold in the 4x25-metre medley relay, swimming breaststroke in the third leg of the team event.
Although she won four medals in total, Carroll was extremely happy with her performance in the 4x25-metre individual medley, perhaps the most challenging race in competitive swimming. Swimmers cover the butterfly, backstroke, breaststroke and freestyle in four consecutive 25-metre lengths.
She has won a total of 14 medals during the past three years of competition at the BC Seniors Games, and wants to encourage more seniors (aged 55-plus) to become involved in competition.
"We've got some great swimmers in Â鶹Éç¹ú²úbut we need to get them out to compete," she said. Vello Erics won a silver and a bronze medal in the men's 4x50 and 4x25-metre relay events respectively.
Carroll has experienced a wealth of positive energy and sportsmanship that come from the BC Seniors Games, and wants to see Â鶹Éç¹ú²úact as the host city in the near future. "I've tried to encourage council to seek to host the games in the future," she said. "There are a lot of people who would love to see the games come to the corridor, so hopefully the community will become enthusiastic about bringing the games to Squamish."