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Mary competing at the RBC training ground while also playing Humber rugby sevens
Photo credit Laurel Jarvis - from the March 19 RBC Training Ground qualifier in Toronto

Mary Adarkwa named finalist in Olympic talent search

By: Brian Findlay
Stellick Marketing Communications
Humber rugby athlete Mary Adarkwa has been named a finalist in RBC Training Ground.
 
RBC Training Ground is the Canadian Olympic Committee's official cross-country talent search, designed to identify and fund future Olympians.
 
Adarkwa, a former U Sports wrestler who recently switched to Rugby 7s, will now compete with 96 other athletes at a national final event in Toronto, with funding and a spot on a Team Canada program on the line.
 
The RBC Training Ground national final will be held on December 2 in Toronto. Thirty athletes from the final will earn funding, a spot on Team Canada with one of twelve partner National Sport Organizations, and an accelerated path to the Olympics. 
 
"I'm really looking forward to meeting other athletes and Olympians at the final," said Adarkwa, who has been recovering from a high ankle sprain but expects to be cleared soon. "I'm also excited for the opportunity to potentially advance my athletic career."
 
This year 2,200 athletes (aged 14-25) from a wide range of sports who participated in free local qualifier events across the country, performing core speed, strength, power and endurance tests in front of Olympic talent scouts to find the sport for which they are most suited, or earn a funding boost in their existing sport based on their raw physical abilities.
 
"Since moving across to Rugby 7s Mary has demonstrated excellent aerial and contact skills," said Jennifer Joyce, Strength and Conditioning Coach at Rugby Canada. "Her results core athletic testing results were also strong so we're excited to see her at the final."
 
 During RBC Training Ground National Final testing, athletes' speed, power, strength, and endurance will again be tested against sport-specific, high-performance benchmarks under supervision of program sport partners. An athlete's anthropomorphic measurements (height, wingspan, etc), sport-specific testing (conducted following the qualifier stage) and competitive sport history also play a role in who is selected for funding.
 
The finalists, who will have transportation hotel and food covered by RBC, will be joined at the Final by RBC Training Ground alumni and Olympic medalists.
 
The 30 athletes selected for funding will be announced early in 2024. The funding is administered by the participating National Sport Organization bringing the athlete into its system, and is used for things like coaching, transportation, travel, equipment, and nutrition. NSO partners include Boxing Canada; Canoe Kayak Canada; Climbing Escalade Canada; Cycling Canada Cyclisme; Freestyle Canada, Luge Canada; Rowing Canada Aviron, Rugby Canada; Speed Skating Canada; Triathlon Canada; Volleyball Canada, Boxing Canada; Climbing Canada; Triathlon Canada; and Wrestling Canada.

The complete list of 100 finalists is available at RBCTrainingground.ca in the community / news section.

Now in its 8th year, RBC Training Ground is a nation-wide talent identification and athlete-funding program dedicated to finding and supporting the next generation of Canadian Olympians. Since its inception in 2016, the program has tested 13,000 athletes at free local events across Canada, with close to 2,000 being identified by NSO partners as having Olympic potential. 

Thirteen RBC Training Ground athletes have competed at two Olympic Games, and together they've brought home a collective seven medals. Program alumni Kelsey Mitchell and Marion Thénault are among the medal winners, both of whom had never tried their Olympic sport before showing up at an RBC Training Ground event.
 
A new season of RBC Training Ground will be launching in early 2024. Visit RBCTrainingGround.ca for details.