WP_Post Object
(
[ID] => 8741
[post_author] => 20
[post_date] => 2024-10-17 20:50:28
[post_date_gmt] => 2024-10-18 02:50:28
[post_content] =>
Of all the things that Linda Vail Dodd learned at the University of Regina, one of the most valuable was how to turn archrivals into teammates. Fifty years later, those same teammates have become lifelong friends she still meets with at least once a year. "We came from fairly diverse backgrounds and there we all were, playing together," she says from her home in Regina. "It took a long time to get to know one another."
Dodd played four seasons with the University of Regina Cougettes basketball team before earning her Bachelor of Education as part of the first U of R graduating class in 1974. After growing up in Regina playing many different team sports at Davin Elementary School and Central Collegiate, joining the Cougettes basketball team was a natural choice.
In Linda's first year, Sheila Ward coached the team before Sue Higgs took over for the following three seasons. The Cougettes' best record over Dodd's four years was 8-and-8, but that wasn't what it was all about for Dodd. "Every day was great because we got to go play basketball," Dodd says. Most of the women on the team had never flown before, so travelling by plane to other provinces in the Cougette dark green blazers, green skirts, and white blouses was a highlight. So was being named GPAC first-team all-star in her third year and GPAC second-team all-star in her fourth.
In the summers, some of the athletes and Physical Education students taught the U of R's Summer Sports School, contributing to Dodd's career choice in education. After graduation, she applied for a teaching job and was hired in Regina as a physical education teacher at Balfour Collegiate. She then spent time teaching at the Saskatchewan Institute of Applied Science and Technology (now Saskatchewan Polytechnic).
Her next position was at Harrow DeGroot School. Dodd finished teaching every day at 2:30 p.m., allowing her the opportunity to coach the Cougar women's basketball team for one season in 1981-82. "It was certainly different from coaching high school, with so much higher expectations placed on the players," she says before noting how much she has enjoyed watching the team following her time with them. "The sport has grown so much in the city. We've been fortunate."
Linda Vail Dodd BEd'74 seated bottom right in her #15 jersey on the Women's Cougars basketball team C 1970s. Photo: University of Regina Athletics
"Everyone started having children and the bench became the babysitters. If a baby needed the mom, then mom came off the floor, and someone else went on. My eldest daughter wasn't even two months old when we went to our first basketball tournament."
In 1983, Dodd applied for a position at the Regina Public School Board as a consultant for Outdoor Environmental Education, defining the rest of her career. She stayed in the position for 23 years until retiring in 2006.
"We spent all of our days outside playing in the bush with kids. It's about science and nature, and the best job I could have ever had. It wasn't what I planned, but such a great experience. I'm so glad that I took that route."
Dodd also worked on programs such as Project Wet and Project Wild with the Canadian Wildlife Federation and Canadian Water Resources Agency, facilitating workshops for educators to learn about these resources and to apply them to their teaching situations.
Meanwhile, Dodd has stayed involved with basketball. After graduating from the Cougettes, she played in a senior league with her former university teammates. "Everyone started having children and the bench became the babysitters. If a baby needed the mom, then mom came off the floor, and someone else went on," she says. "[In 1984,], my eldest daughter wasn't even two months old when we went to our first basketball tournament."
Dodd has two daughters, neither of whom played basketball, as they both became involved in rhythmic gymnastics. "They loved what they did, and I loved what I did. That was important." Both of her daughters live in Regina today, as do Dodd's four grandsons.
Besides the years when her children were young, Dodd has remained an avid fan and season ticket holder for the Cougar basketball games. She enjoys attending alumni events to catch up with her teammates. Her connections from the U of R continue to weave themselves through all aspects of her life.
She credits her time playing basketball as the foundation for the rest of her life. "Sport is such a personal growth experience," she says. "If I had moved to a different university, I might not even have tried out for the basketball team. For me, everything just fit together. I'm very grateful for all of the opportunities I had to play sports after high school, starting with the U of R Cougettes."
Banner photo: Trevor Hopkin, U of R Photography
[post_title] => Linda Vail Dodd BEd’74
[post_excerpt] =>
[post_status] => publish
[comment_status] => open
[ping_status] => open
[post_password] =>
[post_name] => linda-vail-dodd-bed74
[to_ping] =>
[pinged] =>
[post_modified] => 2024-10-20 10:17:47
[post_modified_gmt] => 2024-10-20 16:17:47
[post_content_filtered] =>
[post_parent] => 0
[guid] => https://www.degreesmagazine.ca/?p=8741
[menu_order] => 0
[post_type] => post
[post_mime_type] =>
[comment_count] => 0
[filter] => raw
)
WP_Post Object
(
[ID] => 8787
[post_author] => 20
[post_date] => 2024-10-17 21:05:38
[post_date_gmt] => 2024-10-18 03:05:38
[post_content] =>
There was a time when Chris Biegler BA'89, BASc'96 wasn't sure he would continue playing basketball. A conversation with University of Regina Cougars basketball coach Ken Murray changed that - and likely altered the rest of his life. Since joining the team in 1985, Biegler still hasn't left the basketball court - nor the connections and life experience basketball taught him. "For me, it was the whole experience. The people, the players, the team putting in the time together, and the lifelong friendships I made," he says.
While his first season with the team was a rebuilding year, Biegler led the Cougars to rank in the country's top ten and play in the Canadian Interuniversity Athletic Union (CIAU) Basketball Championships in 1989. He picked up many accolades along the way and remains the only player from the University of Regina to ever win the Mike Moser Memorial Trophy as the Canadian university player of the year (in 1987). He was a three-time All-Canadian, a Great Plains Athletic Conference most valuable player and four-time first-team all-star, a CIAU men's basketball championships all-star, all-time leader in scoring average and free throw percentage, and a two-time U of R Male Athlete of the Year. He is the only player to have his jersey-number 33-retired by the team. But for Biegler, it's the success of the team that stands out. "You can't inbound the ball to yourself. You always need someone to help you along the way," he says, quickly noting that the Cougars' success in his four seasons with the U of R was a team effort led by Coach Murray.
In 1983-84, Biegler played with the University of Saskatchewan Huskies, but said he wasn't ready for university. When he returned to Regina, Murray invited him to practice with the Cougars while he played in a men's basketball league, played with a travelling men's basketball team, and focused on academics. The following season, he committed to the U of R Cougars.
"It was an interesting mix because some of the players I had played against or with through high school. It was very familiar, and we just gelled," he says. "We had the drive to be better, and we wanted to win. So, we worked hard, put in the time, trusted Ken's systems and we would beat better teams."
Chris Biegler BA'89, BASc'96 in the 80s. Photo: University of Regina Athletics
"I tell the kids I coach - put in the time, put in the work, trust your teammates, and work hard together. Magic can happen."
Looking back, it is rewarding for Biegler to have been part of a team that helped set up the future for the Cougars and the rest of his life. He also had the privilege of playing with his two younger brothers, Lawrence and Roland, which is rare in university sports. "In team sports, it's the people, the players, these lifelong friendships I made," he says. "They were my second family. Seven days a week from September to March."
Biegler completed his Bachelor of Arts in Math at the U of R before playing a year of professional basketball in Germany. He enjoyed his time touring Europe and visiting relatives. Then he returned to Regina and worked with Basketball Saskatchewan before returning to the U of R, where he achieved a Bachelor of Applied Science in Industrial Systems Engineering. It was there he met his future spouse, Leah Lawrence BASc'94. Their careers took them to Calgary, where Biegler worked with ATCO Energy Solutions, and then onto Ottawa in 2015, where he became a consultant with Clean Energy Capitalists.
"Playing a sport - especially a team sport, where people are relying on you, and you go through the cycles of the highs, the lows, the winning, and the losing, putting in the time and the effort, it sets you up further down the road for whatever happens in your life," he says. "You can handle anything because you've experienced the pressure to succeed, the pressure to perform. Working together as a team transfers from sports, and you'll be better at what you do."
Biegler has coached basketball throughout the years and is currently an assistant coach at a high school in Ottawa, while also scouting players in various age groups for club basketball. In addition to playing in a master's league in Ottawa, he plays in masters tournaments worldwide, including the National Masters Basketball Championships in Florida each spring. Next up is the FIMBA World Maxibasketball Championships in June in Switzerland - a tournament he last played in Helsinki in 2019, where his Canadian team reached the quarterfinals.
Even from across the country, Biegler stays connected to Cougar basketball. He returns to Regina a few times a year, and he often catches up with fellow U of R alumni. He was one of the key initiators in the Cougar Alumni Basketball Endowment Fund and continues to be involved with the program. His contributions to the sport have been recognized through inductions into the University of Regina Sports Hall of Fame, the Regina Sports Hall of Fame, the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame, and his jersey retirement with the Cougars.
"Coaching, playing, working, I just keep on moving," he says of his life today. "I tell the kids I coach - with sport, you can travel, see your province, see Canada, see different countries. Put in the time, put in the work, trust your teammates, and work hard together. Magic can happen."
[post_title] => Chris Biegler BA’89, BASc’96
[post_excerpt] =>
[post_status] => publish
[comment_status] => open
[ping_status] => open
[post_password] =>
[post_name] => chris-biegler-ba93-basc96
[to_ping] =>
[pinged] =>
[post_modified] => 2024-10-24 11:32:17
[post_modified_gmt] => 2024-10-24 17:32:17
[post_content_filtered] =>
[post_parent] => 0
[guid] => https://www.degreesmagazine.ca/?p=8787
[menu_order] => 0
[post_type] => post
[post_mime_type] =>
[comment_count] => 0
[filter] => raw
)