Beach volleyball is so big, 1st Yukon women's team is at the Canada Summer Games
CBC
Paige Poelman says she's sometimes met by surprised reactions when she tells people at the Canada Summer Games that she's on the Yukon's beach volleyball team.
"People are like, 'How does that work? Does Yukon have beaches?' We don't really, but we make do," says Poelman, 20, who is on the territory's first-ever entry into the women's event at the Games, now underway in Ontario's Niagara Region.
Poelman said beach volleyball has taken off in the Yukon recently, which was already mad about indoor volleyball:
"It's a big thing. We love it there."
Extending the opportunity to play outside in the summer just made sense, she said.
When Poelman began playing beach volleyball in 2019, she took to gravel courts at the Rotary Park in Whitehorse.
The growth of the sport in the region recently led to the construction of new sand courts behind a local high school.
Poelman said it's hard to believe how far things have come in a few years, and now she's representing Yukon nationally.
"I am very grateful I get to be here," she said about the Canada Summer Games, which began Aug. 6 and continue through Aug. 21. "It's very cool to be part of this national event. I never really realized how big of an event it is, but it is."
According to the Games, beach volleyball made its debut at the competition in 2001, but didn't become an annual event until 2009.
There are two players on a beach volleyball team, compared to indoor volleyball, which has six players.
At this year's Canada Summer Games, every province and territory is represented in beach volleyball, although Northwest Territories did not field a women's team, said Games spokesperson Christopher Seguin. He added that 50 athletes are playing beach volleyball, with 24 of them women.
Poelman's partner in the sand is Caelon Workman, a friend she's known through indoor volleyball since elementary school.
Workman, 21, said the team is staying in "super nice" Brock University dorm rooms in St. Catharines during the Games, and it can get "pretty packed" in the cafeteria where the athletes eat.