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Desjardins
of Gloucester thrive
in sport's hectic pace Sunday
February 20, 2000
Darren Desaulniers
The Ottawa Citizen
Life can be so hectic that it
sometimes leaves families struggling to spend
quality time together. Not so for the Desjardins
family of Gloucester. In fact, this weekend
has provided them with another opportunity
to do together what they do best: ringette.
The
25th Gloucester Ringette Tournament has been
occupying the Desjardins' time since Thursday,
with nearly every family member involved.
Bob and his wife, Wendy, have put a lot of
kilometres on their cars in the past three
days, making sure daughters Anne, Amy and
Sarah make it to their games.
Their fourth daughter,
Lisa, would also be playing in the tournament
if she were not in Lennoxville attending Bishop's
University.
"Sometimes two
vehicles are not enough when you're going
all the time, practically every night and
every weekend," Bob Desjardins said. It's
not just the daughters that are in the action,
however. Bob is assistant coach on Anne's
petite A team, and Wendy is the manager for
Amy's junior AA team. "For out of town tournaments,
only one parent goes while the other one stays
home and keeps the fire going and travels
from rink to rink," Bob said. "Last year,
we had Amy playing in Quebec City and Sarah
playing in Pickering on the same weekend,
so we were paying for two motels. I find it's
very expensive, but it's very worthwhile.
It's good for them that they have to think
of a team concept."
That weekend was
nothing compared to one the family spent at
a tournament in Whitby. All four girls and
Wendy were playing in the tournament. Each
played two games a day for a total of 10 hours
on the ice. "I was at the rink from 7 a.m.
until 11 at night," Bob Desjardins said. "That
was the craziest weekend I've ever seen."
Two years ago, Amy, strayed from ringette
to hockey, but it wasn't long until she was
back chasing a ring instead of a puck.
"Ringette is more
of a team game (than hockey), I find, because
you have to pass more and you're always together
to back each other up in case you lose the
ring," said the girl who's now 14. "You have
to communicate more." Sarah, who plays belle
A, is part of the successful Gloucester Devils
team. They won a national title in Edmonton
last year, and this year they have won all
five tournaments they've entered. "The (Gloucester)
tournament this year is our provincials, and
we're in the final (12:30 p.m. today). If
we go 6-0 (for tournament wins), that would
be pretty cool," Sarah said. "We have great
coaching and very supportive parents."
At age 10, the
youngest of the Desjardins, Anne, just enjoys
the camaraderie of playing ringette. "You
have a lot of friends from ringette, and you
always meet more and more," she said. "I think
it's important we get to spend a lot of time
together," Wendy Desjardins said. "We don't
have a lot of time to take trips together
or go out together like other families, but
I don't want to make it sound like it's not
fun, because it is a lot of fun. We're doing
it for our children."
The Gloucester
Tournament has 67 teams from across Canada
in seven age groups. The finals begin today
at 10 a.m. at the Armstrong, Potvin and Blackburn
Arenas. The last final is set for 2:30 p.m.
Reprinted with
permission
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