News & Events

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COPSIN Thanks Government of Canada For Their Investment in Sport

(April 29, 2026 – Vancouver, BC) The Canadian Olympic and Paralympic Sport Institute Network (COPSIN) welcomes the Government of Canada’s...

Weekly Roundup
Weekly Roundup – April 22-28

Team Canada wraps Pacific Four Series Regina’s Gabrielle Senft and the Canadian women’s rugby team wrapped the 2026 Pacific Four Series...

Weekly Roundup
Weekly Roundup – April 15-21

Senft, Canada fall to New Zealand Regina’s Gabrielle Senft and the Canadian women’s rugby team fell 36-14 to New Zealand...

Weekly Roundup
Weekly Roundup – April 8-14

Sask. Swimmers add medals to their count Three Saskatchewan swimmers found their way to the podium at the Speedo Canadian...

Weekly Roundup
Weekly Roundup – April 1-7

Connell finishes ninth at 2026 Pan American Championships Saskatoon racquetball player Lee Connell wrapped competition at the 2026 Pan American...

Event
Building Your Integrated Support Team

Join your fellow CSCS athletes on Sunday, June 7 at 2:00 p.m. for Building Your Integrated Support Team (IST), an...

Event
Building Your Performance Lunchbox

Join your fellow CSCS athletes on Sunday, May 3 at 10 a.m. Building Your Performance Lunchbox, an online workshop facilitated...

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Building Your Mental Skills Toolbox

Join your fellow CSCS athletes on Sunday, April 19 at 10 a.m. for Building Your Mental Skills Toolbox, an online...

Weekly Roundup
Weekly Roundup – March 24 – 31

Dash, Wright 2026 Saskatchewan Wheelchair Curling Champions Fresh off winning a Paralympic gold medal in Italy, Kipling skip, Gil Dash...

Weekly Roundup
COPSIN Welcomes the Final Report of the Future of Sport in Canada Commission and Commits to Supporting Its Implementation

Thursday, March 26, 2026 (TORONTO) – The release of the Future of Sport in Canada Commission’s final report marks an...

Weekly Roundup
Weekly Roundup – During the Paralympics

Sask. pair at Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship Surrey, B.C. is playing host to the 2026 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling...

Event
Building your Coaching Toolbox: Coaching Gen Z Athletes

If you are coaching Gen Z athletes, this webinar is for you. Robert Fegg breaks down what has changed, where...

News
MILANO CORTINA PARALYMPIC RECAP

Day 8 - March 14, 2026 Gil Dash wins gold with wheelchair curling team Kipling’s Gil Dash will be returning...

Weekly Roundup
Cheer on Sask for the Milano Cortina Paralympic Winter Games

Saskatchewan will be represented in all six sports at the upcoming Paralympic Winter Games, running March 6-15 in Milano Cortina,...

Weekly Roundup
Weekly Roundup – Feb. 25 – March 3

Norsten named captain of Team Canada Carissa Norsten, who hails from Waldheim, will be leading Canada’s Women’s Sevens Team into...

Weekly Roundup
Weekly Roundup – During the Olympics

Tarasoff, Abramowicz dive to medals in Australia Two Saskatchewan divers both set personal bests while representing the maple leaf on...

News
Milano Cortina Olympic recap

Day 16 – Feb. 22, 2026 Canada captures silver The 2026 Winter Olympic Games in Milano Cortina were capped off...

Weekly Roundup
The Network Behind the Nation: COPSIN at Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics

(Victoria, BC – Feb 4, 2026) A key partner of Team Canada 2026, the Canadian Olympic and Paralympic Sport Institute Network (COPSIN)...

Weekly Roundup
Weekly Roundup – Jan 21 – Feb 3

Bronze for Canada Rugby 7s The Canadian women’s sevens team dazzles in bronze after defeating the United States 24-19 in...

Event
Cheer on Sask for the Milano Cortina Olympic Winter Games

Following years of dedication to sport through the grassroots level to high performance, 21 individuals from Saskatchewan will represent the province at the Olympic Winter Games February 6-22  in Milano...

Saskatchewan Stories

Etta Love: Cleans up on world records

December 13, 2024

From mirroring the actions of her mother at the gym as a child, to standing on the youth weightlifting stage as a world record holder, Etta Love is grateful for the influence the sport has had in her life.

The women in Love’s life have always stood as her idols, representing everything she hoped to be as she grew up.

At the age of three, Love would regularly join her mom at the gym and it didn’t take long for Love’s plastic toy weights to turn into real ones. By the age of five, Love was enrolled in a kid’s CrossFit class in Saskatoon.

“It started as play for me. It was a way for me to imitate and copy the women I saw in my life, who I thought were powerful and amazing,” said Love.

Her progression in the sport came quickly, as she later joined an Olympic style weightlifting class at the age of ten.

In the years following, Love came to find the gym and weightlifting as the space where she would do a lot of her self-growth, both emotionally and physically. The gym and everything that weightlifting represented to Love brought her solace and became the activity that she felt most free in.

“As a kid who was neurodivergent and queer, I didn’t have a lot of words to describe who I was, so I grew up feeling kind of tortured,” shared Love. “[Weightlifting] was the thing that I could do to connect with my body and who I was.”

Weightlifting began to bleed into the many other areas of Love’s life, including the athletes and role models she followed online. Love explained that she would look up to women that she could find fragments of herself in.

“I had people in my gym who I wanted to be like – my first [CrossFit] coach, Farrah Dzik and my mom – who I thought were the strongest most powerful women. I had queer athletes who I started to look up to [as well].”

However, even with having numerous female role models in her life, Love still felt separate from them. There was no one individual who could represent all the characteristics Love felt she had herself. It was through the lack of having a singular individual to model herself after that Love stepped into her own identity and strength on the platform.

“[All these women] were allowed to exist in sport with only a certain level of being complex, which always made me feel like I was too much for the sport,” confessed Love. “I also want to show that I can be someone who is existing in a complex identity and I am allowed to take up space in the sport, as my full self. I don’t have to titrate messiness.”

Not only has Love nurtured an accepting space in the sport for women, but she has gone on to achieve greatness on the scoreboard.

Fueled by a passion to achieve the goals outlined in her training journal, Love found success at the Junior World Championships, which took place from Sept.19-27 in Leon, Spain. She set a new youth world record in the female over-87-kilogram weight category with a clean and jerk lift of 146-kg.

The 17-year-old also has several other accolades, including Youth World Champion (May 2024), youngest lifter to qualify for junior world championships (March 2021) and youngest North American female to every break 200-kg total (December 2020) to name a few.

For Love, setting those records took finding tangible success outside of competition. While training she would practice reaching those numbers to build the confidence to attempt them on the stage. 

“Getting those world records is a really weird feeling, because you reach this milestone that you’ve been thinking about and ruminating over for so many years. I think that moment is really important but once I reached that, I realized just how valuable the moments before were.”

With the goal of qualifying for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympic Games, Love takes each event as an opportunity to learn, and along the way, she became a role model herself.

Now, Love is a symbol of the opportunities that are available for women in the sport, both in results and having the space to be their authentic selves. Her presence on the platform, in the gym and on social media will be a moving force for other youth athletes interested in exploring weightlifting.

“The important thing that I can do here is I cannot filtre myself in this sport. I can show up on the platform as my whole self,” said Love. “I can be tough and strong, and I can also be messy and complex and emotional. Those deserve to exist on the platform and that’s how I can show other people that they also deserve to exist there.”