Two McMaster students skating for Team Canada at world championships
McMaster students Madeline Schizas and Trennt Michaud will be competing for Team Canada at next month’s ISU World Figure Skating Championships in Montreal.
Madeline and Trent are among the 15 elite figure skaters from across the country selected by Skate Canada for the 2024 World Championships being held in Montreal from March 18-24. The championships will showcase 200 athletes from 50 countries.
Madeline will be the sole Canadian competitor in the women’s field while Trennt will skate in the pair competition with Lia Pereira.
Both Trennt and Madeline say they’re looking forward to competing in front of a home crowd. Canada last hosted the World Championships in 2013.
“It’s a pretty amazing feeling,” says Trennt, a 27-year-old part-time social sciences student in his first year at McMaster. “I’ve been part of the world team since 2019 so I’m really excited to do a worlds at home in Canada.”
Madeline, a 21-year-old science student in her second year at Mac, is equally excited because it’ll be a homecoming for her parents and a chance for them to cheer on their daughter from the seats at the Bell Centre. “My mom and dad are originally from Montreal. I’m thrilled that they’ll get to see me skate in person at a world championship.”
While more than 300 million people are expected to tune into the championships, Trennt and Madeline aren’t feeling the pressure.
“I actually enjoy knowing that so many people will be watching,” says Madeline. “It gives me that little ‘push’ to put out my best performance.”
That extra push kicked in at the 2022 Olympic Winter Games in Beijing. With more than two billion people watching the games, Madeline delivered her personal best scores in both the team and free skate events during her Olympic debut.
The 21-year-old from Oakville has had a strong season, with a fourth-place finish at Skate Canada International and sixth at the ISU Four Continents Championships.
Trennt and Lia finished second at the 2024 Canadian National Skating Championships, won silver at Skate America and gold at the Grand Prix de France in their first Grand Prix season together.
Madeline and Trennt say they’re grateful for the support and understanding from faculty. “I really appreciate how accommodating my professors have been in managing my time away from the classroom,” says Madeline. Along with competing, training and a juggling a full course load, Madeline worked as a research assistant with professor Gita Ljubicic’s Straight Up North research group in the School of Earth, Environment & Society. “I’ve really enjoyed supporting projects that have a real impact on communities.”
While faculty are in the loop, both athletes don’t go out of the way to tell their classmates. “I think it’s kind of 50/50 that my classmates know,” says Madeline. “I don’t normally throw it into conversation. When I’m at school, I’m just a student just like everyone else.”
And away from Mac next month, Trennt and Madeline will be representing Team Canada and competing against the world’s top skaters while 300 million people tune in from around the world.
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