Showing posts with label Rob Vanstone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rob Vanstone. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 20

"How Is She Doing This?"

Heart on her sleeve

Rob Vanstone | Regina Leader-Post
Wednesday, February 20, 2008

The people rose to their feet to salute a remarkable feat.

Michelle Englot and her Saskatchewan team had just lost 8-4 to Mary-Anne Arsenault's Nova Scotia quartet during the Scotties Tournament of Hearts' Tuesday afternoon draw, but the result was irrelevant.

At 4:24 p.m., after the teams shook hands, Englot was hugged by teammate Cindy Simmons. The Saskatchewan skip proceeded to the other end of the ice to collect her curling paraphernalia.

People applauded. Englot waved. The ovation intensified. She waved again.

As Englot made the return trip down Sheet A, a handful of spectators in the northeast corner of the Brandt Centre stood up and applauded. Within seconds, many of the 3,819 spectators had followed suit.

The Regina curler was in tears by the time she reached the end of the ice, to be embraced once again.

Shortly thereafter, Englot left the ice, walked briskly to the dressing room, got changed and embarked for Montmartre -- where a funeral was held for her father, Joe, on Tuesday evening.

Neither Englot nor her teammates spoke to reporters following Tuesday afternoon's draw. The media respected their request that no interviews be conducted at that time.

I could only sit back and wonder: How is she doing this?

Ordinarily, the grieving process is very private. Not this time. In front of thousands of onlookers, Englot is mourning her father, who died of a heart attack Friday at age 74. She faces questions about a sad circumstance after virtually every draw.

I can relate to Englot's situation, but only to an extent. I lost my father to a heart attack on June 1, 1982. Alan Vanstone was 61 years old. I was 18.

For days afterward, I sat on the recliner with the dog. I did not have to face anybody. I watched whatever was on television. And it was hell.

"I may have been on the recliner if I didn't have this," Englot said with a chuckle the other day.

In that respect, the curling has been therapeutic. For three hours at a time, Englot can concentrate on something other than a sad situation.

Initially, it was impossible for the six-time provincial women's champion to separate curling and personal tragedy. The team lost its first two games at the Scotties.

"We were still very emotional the first couple of games and I think it showed," said Englot, who rebounded with four consecutive victories before facing Nova Scotia on Tuesday afternoon.

With a 4-3 record, Englot is very much in the mix, which again raises the question: How is she doing this?

In 22 years of scribbling for a meagre living, I have never dealt with a storyline quite like this one.

Until Friday, I had never interviewed someone at a competition on the day a loved one had died. Until Tuesday, a story's subject had yet to attend a funeral following a major sporting event.

In the space of a few unimaginably difficult days, Englot has stood up to the scrutiny while dealing with the misfortune. Additionally, she won four games in a row. It is to marvel.

"She has always been mentally tough," said Saskatchewan fifth Lorie Kehler, a longtime teammate and friend of Englot's. "She has played through a lot of adversity in the last few years.

"I think she's been pretty steady the last few years, but we had a few years -- the (2001 Olympic) Trials in particular -- when she had some stuff going on and she performed well through that, so she's mentally tough.

"Her whole family is a curling family. They've followed each other and played growing up. This is very much what her dad wanted, for her to carry on. I think she's certainly drawing strength from that."

The crowd has also buoyed her spirits.

"The encouragement from the fans has really helped," Englot said. "It has been awesome. The support I've been getting on and off the ice has been very helpful and just incredible."

The same description applies to Englot herself.

"She's just a great competitor," Kehler concluded.

"She's just a good lady."

© The StarPhoenix (Saskatoon) 2008

Saturday, February 16

Let's Stand Up For Michelle

I couldn't agree more.

Let's stand up for Michelle

Rob Vanstone, The Leader-Post
Published: Saturday, February 16, 2008

Suddenly, Michelle Englot is dealing with the Scotties Tournament of Heartbreaks.

The Regina curler, who is skipping Team Saskatchewan at the Canadian women's curling championship, learned early Friday morning that her father, Joe, had died on the family farm in Montmartre. He was 74.

Mere hours later, Michelle Englot was on the ice at the Brandt Centre, practising for her sixth Scotties. In the afternoon, Englot and her team members -- Darlene Kidd, Roberta Materi and Cindy Simmons -- competed in the Ford Hot Shots skills competition.

During the Hot Shots, Derek Schneider -- Englot's 17-year-old son -- occupied a front-row seat near his mother. The two shared an extended embrace shortly before Englot returned to the ice and positioned her broom near the button.

After Englot's Hot Shots obligations concluded, she spent a few minutes speaking with teammates and loved ones before approaching a handful of reporters.

"Are you ready?" one of them inquired.

Englot somehow managed a chuckle and said: "As ready as I'll ever be."

It was uncomfortable for everyone involved. The ever-accommodating Englot faced reporters at a time when she had every reason to decline.

CJME's Mitchell Blair posed the first question: "What's going through your mind right now?"

"I'm not quite sure yet ...," she said, pausing. "It's unexpected and very sad. I'm feeling for my mom and my brothers and sister. I'm just hoping to get through this."

A choked-up Englot responded to all lines of inquiry for a few minutes before being comforted by teammates. Two members of the Yukon/Northwest Territories team consoled the Saskatchewan skip before she walked away. Simmons put her arm around Englot as they approached the dressing room.

Somehow, Englot is going to compete in a prominent, nationally televised event in the midst of personal tragedy. Until Friday, Englot was upbeat about the way her life was going. And now this.

Englot is in the unenviable -- yet accustomed -- position of dealing with a private matter in very public fashion.

While watching curling, we watch ordinary citizens who are suddenly cast in the role of celebrities. People like Eric Tillman, Ken Miller, Kent Austin, Kerry Joseph, Brent Parker and Curtis Hunt sign up for this, and are compensated accordingly.

The curlers, by contrast, often end up paying for the privilege of competing in a national event. Time off from work is required. Other expenses are incurred as they curl for a trophy instead of cash.

However, the curlers often face more scrutiny and reveal more of themselves than most athletes. During televised matches, their every word is beamed across the country. There is no secrecy to the decision-making process as the cameras zoom in and the analysts weigh in. Coaches and quarterbacks rarely, if ever, face such an intrusion.

Life in the spotlight cannot be easy under ideal circumstances. Imagine what it must be like for Englot during these devastating days. She will be grieving in front of 6,000 people.

Hopefully, the hometown crowd will prove to be a source of strength and solace for a lady of class and courage. If anyone ever deserved a standing ovation at the Brandt Centre, it is Michelle Englot.
© The Leader-Post (Regina) 2008

Friday, February 15

Englot Exemplifies Those In Sport Who Get It

Englot exemplifies those in sport who get it

Rob Vanstone, The Leader-Post
Published: Friday, February 15, 2008

DISCLOSURE: This is not the most objective column in the history of sports journalism.

The intent is not to resort to cheerleading -- think of how hideous I would look in the outfit -- but instead to laud the admirable qualities of Saskatchewan's skip at the 2008 Scotties Tournament of Hearts.

Michelle Englot left an imprint early in the career of a rumpled scribe. The year was 1989, when Englot -- who was known as Michelle Schneider at the time -- was representing Saskatchewan for the second time at the Canadian women's curling championship.

At that time, I was on the curling beat for the Leader-Post. Englot was media-friendly enough to qualify for a national event that was based in Kelowna, B.C., where the mild climate provided a nice respite from the bitterness of a Saskatchewan winter.

I followed Englot's team to Kelowna, as did Peter Loubardias of CKCK Radio. Early in the week, it appeared that we might also be following Englot, Joan Stricker, Lorie Kehler and Leanne Eberle (now Whitrow) to the world women's curling championship in Milwaukee.

Englot created plenty of media attention as a result of her torrid start in Kelowna. After each draw, she was encircled by reporters, including Mr. Loubardias and yours truly.

Without fail, Englot would provide answers that were insightful, candid and funny. She made our phony-baloney jobs very easy that week.

But the enduring memory pertains to what happened once the media pack dispersed. Every time, Englot would make a point of approaching the two-headed Regina media delegation and ask us: "Anything else you guys need?''

The routine was not altered later in the week, when Englot's fortunes turned. She was equally courteous and candid following victories and defeats.

You do not forget things like that.

A simple courtesy still resonates, 19 years after the excursion to Kelowna.

The details of the games elude me, after all these years, but I remain appreciative of Englot's good nature.

She recognized and appreciated that the Leader-Post and CKCK Radio had gone to considerable expense to ensure that the Saskatchewan team was covered. She also grasped the notion that the newspaper and Regina's information station were a conduit to the people back home.

It seems like a basic notion, but it is lost on so many people.

When the Saskatchewan Roughriders' players staged one of their periodic media boycotts in 2003, I attempted to explain to then head coach Danny Barrett that the team was penalizing its fans by withholding interviews. The breath was wasted.

Last year, I discussed life in a fishbowl with Barrett's successor, Kent Austin. He realized that dealing with the media could be time-consuming and occasionally irritating, but he made the point (without any provocation from me) that conducting interviews was a fundamental component of sharing information with the fans.

I resisted the temptation to applaud. Austin often commended players who "get it'' -- ones who grasp what the team is trying to achieve, and those who understand the environment.

When I think of people who "get it,'' Englot is near the top of the list. It is appropriate, of course, that she regularly deals with the media in the line of duty at SaskTel. She knows the routine better than most.

I doubt that anyone had to explain the procedure to Michelle Englot. She is intuitively courteous -- even when the questions are somewhat less than courteous.

Again, we flash back to 1989. Englot was expecting her first child when she curled in Kelowna. She faced some rather personal inquiries about whether the pregnancy would affect her performance.

Englot responded in good humour, joking that nobody posed such questions of male curlers whose stomachs were conspicuous.

A generation later, Englot is a six-time provincial champion. She is preparing to curl at another Scotties -- this time at home.

Naturally, the Brandt Centre crowd will be behind Michelle Englot. All the cheers will be well-deserved.
© The Leader-Post (Regina) 2008