Mary Pearson-Coutts is one of Canada's greatest female basketball players of all-time. She starred with Team Canada for seven years and played in two Pan-American Games, winning the bronze medal in 1967. Mary would have been an Olympian except that women's basketball wasn't introduced as an Olympic sport unti11976, after she had retired. At the club level, Mary was a member of the University of Victoria Vikettes when they won their first national title, the 1964-65 Canadian junior championships. As a senior she was instrumental in leading the Victoria Rawlings, Maplettes, Westerners and Home Lumber to six Canadian Senior A titles in the 1960's and 1970's. In total, Mary played on eight senior national championship teams, the other titles coming with the Canadian Senior A champion Vancouver - Molsons and Mount Pleasant Legion teams. Mary's eight national titles were the most ever, at the time, for a Canadian female basketball player. Even in retirement, Mary remained a force on the court and competed in two Masters Olympics.
Frederick Richardson was one of the greatest rifle shooting competitors in Canadian history. He became well known and respected in the Canadian shooting ranks before competing 17 times at Bisley, the Super Bowl of rifle shooting. This was more than any other Canadian and he was at his eagle-eyed best in 1930 when he won the Governor General's Medal for the Canadian championship and the coveted All-Comers Aggregate at Bisley. Richardson also coached Canada's winning teams in the Mackinnon and Rajah of Kolpore's Cup competitions. The greatest prize of all, the King's Prize, eluded Fred but he laid claim to most of the other awards in international rifle shooting, including the massive Prince of Wales Cup. In Canadian meets, he won the provincial championships of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Ontario. In total, he won 262 national and international championship medals and trophies.