Christine Sinclair International Canada Sporting athletics mountaineering hockey awards Rugby Christine Sinclair International Canada

Soccer legend Christine Sinclair leads B.C. Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2025

cbc.ca

Former Canada soccer captain Christine Sinclair is headed to the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame. The 41-year-old from Burnaby, B.C., who added to her distinguished resume with a goal in the Portland Thorns' 6-0 win over Vancouver Whitecaps FC Girls Elite in CONCACAF W Champions Cup play Tuesday at B.C.

Place Stadium, is joined by four other athletes, three builder-coaches, one team, one pioneer, one media member and the winner of the W.A.C.

Bennett Award in the 2025 induction class. The other athletes are hockey's Ray Ferraro, mountain biking's Cindy Devine, rugby's Nathan Hirayama and para swimming's Walter Wu.

The builder-coach inductees are Saul Miller (sports psychology), Wes Woo (weightlifting) and the late Chandra Madhosingh (table tennis).

Related News
Substitute Cristina Martin-Prieto scored in the 89th minute to give World Cup champion Spain a 1-1 draw with Canada in a women's international soccer friendly Friday.
Former Canadian international Diana Matheson is getting a taste of how the other half lives.
Maria Sharapova, a five-time Grand Slam singles champion known for plenty of on-court grit and off-court attention, and Bob and Mike Bryan, twins who won a record 16 major titles in men's doubles together, are first-ballot selections for the International Tennis Hall of Fame.
Vicky Sunohara says when she received a call last spring from Canada Sports Hall of Fame chair Bob Rooney, who informed the hockey player of her inclusion in the 2024 class, she figured it was a prank orchestrated by a former teammate.
The Northern Super League has its six founding teams with shiny new looks ahead of its kickoff next April, and now Canada's first domestic professional women's soccer league has its first player.
More than a hundred international women's soccer players are calling on FIFA to reconsider its sponsorship by Saudi Arabian oil company Saudi Aramco, which is majority state-owned, in an open letter to FIFA's president.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.