Septem ber 2 8 , 2 0 1 7 |40 OAKVILLE H O C K E Y A C A D EM Y BEAVER | Thursday, RISING STARS DEVELOPMENT LEAGUE 4 -8 YEARS OLD LEA R N TO SKATE www.insidehalton.com | OAKVILLE & R E P D EFEN C E C L IN IC S H O U S E LEA G U E D E FE N C E C L IN IC S R E P S K IL L S C L IN IC S C H O U S E L E A G U E S K IL L S C L IN IC S IN T R O TO H O C K E Y Oakville's Kaitlyn Shikaze races to her fifth consecutive provincial mountain bike racing championship in Haliburton recently. | photo submitted S H O O T 2 SCO RE C L IN IC S G IR L S O N L Y S K IL L S C L IN IC S & A D U L T S K IL L S C L IN IC A D U L T L E A R N TO SKATE tiT E A M T R A IN IN G tiS M A L L G R O U P T R A IN IN G P R IV A T E / S E M I P R IV A T E T R A IN IN G p .a d a y , m a r c h Kaitlyn Shikaze wins a fifth straight Ontario mountain biking championship Kaitlyn Shikaze won her fifth consecutive provincial mountain biking championship this summer. The 16-year-old Oakville athlete was com peting in the Cadet E xp ert W om en 's division at Sir Sam's Ski R esort in Haliburton. She faced extra pressure in this year's final, suffering a flat tire in the second of two laps but still managing to win in 4 6 .0 6 seconds, less than two seconds faster than Kelly Lawson of the Centurion N ext Wave Cycling Team. Kaitlyn' s younger sister Sarah Shikaze fin ished third in the Minime under-15 wom en's category. Earlier this summer, Kaitlyn competed at the national MTB championship in Canmore, Alta., finishing second as a member of the Ontario team. Sarah competed on the same course as part of the Alberta Cup and won in the open wom en' s category. Both girls race for Cyclepath Oakville. Ch r i s t m a s , su m m er cam ps break a n d 20 1 6 & 2017 PLATINUM MEDALWINNER IN CHILDREN S SPORTS INSTRUCTION READERS c HOIc E AWARD! Zeron drives Lost In Tim e to Metro Pace win In less than a month, Lost In Time went from winning at an Ohio fair to capturing the $ 8 1 6 ,0 0 0 Metro Pace at Mohawk Racetrack. Driven by Oakville' s Scott Zeron, Lost In Time came through with a huge performance to defeat nine other two-year-old pacers last Saturday in harness racing' s richest race for rookies. The Jim Mulinix-trained son of A Rocknroll Dance shot out from post-five and got away second to a fired up Hayden Hanover, who posted a 27.1-second opening-quarter. Just as the field paced by the first-quarter marker, Zeron circled around to the lead. Lost In Time' s lead was brief and it settled into the second spot at the three-quarter mark. In the stretch, Lost In Time was angled out of the pocket and immediately surged by Stay Hungry and onto a 1:50.1 victory. "I knew last week heading into this week how great he was and if I got anywhere near the same effort we were going to be in good shape," said Zeron about Lost In Time. "I wanted to control the pace, at w orst sit in the tw o-hole and it kind of ended up that way and the tw o-hole trip worked out good ." Owned by Mulinix, Denny Miller and William Rufenacht, Lost In Time was a $ 4 7 ,0 0 0 purchase at last year' s Lexington Selected Yearling Sale. The bay pacing colt, who finished second in his elimination, was making just his fourth career start on Satur day. Lost In Time' s only victory prior to the Metro was a 2 :0 3 .4 time in a $ 7 5 0 race at the Hicksville, Ohio fair on Aug. 25. The fair start was also the first charted-line for the rookie, who then qualified at Hoosier Park before finishing second in a Kentucky Sires Stakes event prior to the Metro. Winning driver Zeron is now a two-time Metro champion, as he piloted Artspeak to victory in the 2 0 1 4 edition. Lost In Time is now two for four with $ 4 2 5 ,8 7 5 earned for his connections. A $2 win ticket on Lost In Time returned $8.20. The $2 E xacta with Hayden Hanover paid $ 1 8 4 .2 0 , while the $1 Trifecta including Pedro Hanover returned $368.30. -- Mark McKelvie, WEG Communications Readers Selection m M ^ tii, it I h i 1111 SPEERS ROAD, OAKVILLE 905 8 4 2 -2 4 2 3 OAKVILLEHOCKEYACADEMY.COM ·