U of T, Canadian Sport Centre Ontario join forces to support region’s top athletes

TORONTO, ON – The University of Toronto’s Faculty of Kinesiology & Physical Education (KPE) entered a formal partnership with Canadian Sport Centre Ontario (CSCO) on June 27 that will enhance support for Ontario’s top athletes while augmenting learning and research opportunities for U of T students, faculty and staff across a broad range of sport science projects.  The five-year agreement solidifies a long-standing history of working together to offer high performance athletes the best resources in testing, training and evaluation, and access to new knowledge.

“We believe it’s the merging of a world-class sport institute with a world-class academic institute,” says Debbie Low, CSCO’s chief executive officer. “This will open up doors to endless opportunities for athletes, coaches and sport scientists.” The CSCO is part of a national network of sport centres that provide personal and professional services to high performance athletes and coaches, including access to experts in a variety of areas, from trainers and physiologists to chiropractors and sport psychologists.

One aspect of the partnership is the sport science assistant program, already in its second year. The CSCO employs undergraduate kinesiology students from U of T as summer science assistants, giving them hands-on experience and a window into the world of applied sport science. Working alongside leading scientists and researchers, the students perform tests ranging from biomechanical analysis with underwater cameras to aerobic endurance tests on top athletes such as hockey standout Hayley Wickenheiser and swimmer Tobias Oriwol, who will compete in London this summer. “This is a great experiential learning piece for the students,” says Dr. Jason Vescovi, lead of CSCO’s applied sport science research program. “The program really highlights the support and dedication that the Centre has for research and high performance sport, especially with a partner like U of T.”

Professor Ira Jacobs, dean of the Faculty of Kinesiology and Physical Education, sees the partnership as a natural extension of U of T’s commitment to generating and disseminating knowledge across the entire physical activity spectrum, including high performance sport.  “We are helping train the next generation of scientists while bringing our unique perspectives, experiences and research skills to bear on the challenge of helping the region’s best athletes succeed on the international stage.”

Signaling its commitment to high performance sport, the University of Toronto last year approved the construction of the Goldring Centre for High Performance Sport, a hub for sport science research, sport medicine, training and competition that will be the ideal space to further collaborations with partners such as the CSCO.  The facility, a feather in the cap of the $98 million Varsity Centre complex, is set to open in January 2015.

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For more information, please contact:

Althea Blackburn-Evans
Director, Communications
Faculty of Kinesiology & Physical Education
University of Toronto
416.978.1663
a.blackburn.evans@utoronto.ca

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