For Tyendinaga’s Caroline Markland, lacrosse is more than just a sport.

The Township of Tyendinaga has a variety of recreation opportunities for both youth and adults. Having great facilities, for starters, makes that possible.
The weekly report for games Feb. 20-26 submitted by the Quinte Red Devils AAA minor hockey association
Gymnastics had been Hudson Mulvihill’s sports focus for most of her life. That was until she started playing lacrosse.
After first going to The Frederick Gunn School in Connecticut last year for a high school victory lap, the 19-year-old is now playing NCAA lacrosse for the Limestone University Saints in South Carolina.
The previous issue (Fall 2022) of Total Sports Quinte magazine included a feature on Tyendinaga basketball players who competed at the Ontario Summer Indigenous Games.
I love hockey. It has the power to bring people and communities together, while teaching us important lessons about teamwork, commitment, and sacrifice. Friendly competition makes us strive to be better and healthier versions of ourselves, further contributing to the joy, sense of fulfillment, and life lessons that transcend the sport itself.
With the return of high school sports to a more regular schedule this fall, the Bayside Secondary School Devils enjoyed tremendous success. Accomplishments, both as teams and individuals, were achieved in cross-country running, football, golf, rugby, soccer and more.
Both seeded second in their respective tournaments, the Centennial Secondary School Chargers claimed silver at the Ontario Federation of School Athletic Associations girls ‘AA’ championship tournament Nov. 24-26 in Stratford while the Nicholson Catholic College Crusaders were the runner-up at the OFSAA girls ‘A’ showdown the same weekend in Walkerton.
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