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MONTANA OEVERMANN ATTENDED TEAM CANADA TRAINING CAMP
The 16-year-old Taekwon-Do athlete was selected after competing at nationals in May
By Liz McDonald
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Another local athlete is catching national attention for their sports prowess.
Montana Oevermann recently earned an invitation to the 2023 Team Canada Selection Camp for taekwon-do after competing at nationals in Vernon in May.
From June 9 to 11, Oevermann went to Regina to compete with athletes from across the country. Selectees displayed their skills and some were chosen to represent the country at the Taekwon-Do World Championships in Finland from Sept. 4 to 10. Athletes trained for the duration of the camp even if they weren’t selected for the team, gaining enhanced skills from highlevel coaches.
When Montana and her father/coach Ryan Oevermann found out she qualified for the training camp, they said, “what the flip.”
“It was really cool, except I was kind of confused because I didn't know that anyone was watching me at the competition,” Montana explained.
While Ryan knew there were scouts at nationals, Montana said her lack of knowledge helped her perform without extra stress.
“If I knew they were watching, I’d just be more stressed, and like, I would just freeze,” she said. “So I just did what I usually do.”
At nationals, she earned a bronze medal in sparring. The 16-year-old has trained since age five and takes classes at Northern Taekwon-Do Academy in Sun Peaks.
When she isn’t practicing Taekwon-Do, Montana said she works out every day at school during her favourite class – gym. In class, they practice intervals (running for two minutes and walking for one). She said cardio helps increase her endurance for sparring.
Montana saw training camp as an opportunity.
“It means a lot because taekwondo means a lot to my dad and my family…I'm also doing it for myself because it's a great opportunity,” the athlete explained.
Ryan said Taekwon-Do training helps athletes and young women gain confidence.
“They become confident in themself but not arrogant. I think it allows them – especially young ladies – to get independence and feel more comfortable in their surroundings. For teenage girls, that’s huge.”