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                  Hello Everyone,                                                                                                                                                                                                                             June 3, 2026        

                    In this Issue:

     

  1. Perdue Peak Dedication Ceremony
  2. Shelley Walushka and Stacy Halohan at the Great Mansfield Outdoors 100km and 50km
  3. Rocks!! member Ewa Breckon Runs 3000m at NOSSA
  4. SudburyROCKS!!! The supportive community that gathers for the Sudbury Rocks Marathon
  5. Seven Continents Club Finisher Race Report
  6. Jesse Winters will be presented the Bill Roman Award at Hall of Fame Dinner
  7. Sudbury Rocks Running Club - Group Runs
  8. Photos This Week,
  9. Upcoming Events: June 6 Duck and Run Sudbury, June 11, Sudbury Fitness Challenge Bush Pig Open, June 15 Black Rock Trail Club, June 21, Sudbury Fitness Challenge Canoe Marathon
 

 

 

Perdue Peak Dedication Ceremony

____________________May 30, 2026________________


Vince and Mayor Paul

 

A beautiful piece of our local landscape has officially been renamed to honour a true community icon. The stunning lookout along the Lake Laurentian 10K loop, named Perdue Peak, celebrates and recognizes Greater Sudbury running legend Vince Perdue and his late wife, Lise, for their decades of athletic leadership, community fundraising, and passion for our local trails. Thank you to Conservation Sudbury and organizers for bringing the fitting tribute to life.

This beautiful place in our local environment has been officially renamed after a true community pioneer. Set along the 10km circuit of Lake Laurentian, it's a spectacular vantage point called Perdue Peak, which pays tribute to Great Sudbury running legend Vince Perdue, and the efforts of his sadly deceased wife Lise to salute their decades of commitment sporty, their community fundraising activities and their passion for our local trails. Thank you Sudbury Conservation and the organisers for making this tribute well deserved.

Paul Lefebvre

 

 

Andre D. and Conrad W. install the Perdue Peak Plaque May 27

______________________________________________________

Helen F. M.C. of the dedication on May 30

Mayor Paul Lefebvre speaks

Organizer Andre Dumais unveils the Plaque with Vince

 

The Family

Today, many of my brother Vince's friends & family gathered to honour the contributions he & his late wife, Lise, have made in the Sudbury community. The plaque naming Perdue Peak on this portion of the Laurentian Lake Trail is beautiful. The view from this vantage point is breathtaking
A well-deserved honour for two incredible humans
Evelyn, Gary & I captured some photos & video of the special moments.
Enjoy

Lynn Stubbings

 

Gallery 1

Gallery 2 Cassidy M.


Thank you so much everyone. You have made this day such a special one for me.There are so many names attached to so many memories that I can't mention one without forgetting someone else who also contributed to my life advancement. I will send out a special thank you to the main driver, Andre Dumais, his sidekick Helen Francis and Lisa Zych. Without their enthusiastic determination the dedication here and with Lazarus Lake would not have happened. I also remember Lise. She quietly supported every challenge I took on and assisted with them all without hesitaion. She was my guardian angel on earth. I miss her dearly and truly wish she could have been a part of this. Of course I thank my family members who have circled me with a wagon train of love and support. And now Cathy has stepped up to the plate providing even more support and quidance. Thank you. I am truly a fortunate guy.

Vince

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

Shelley Walushka and Stacy Halohan at the Great Mansfield Outdoors 100km and 50km

 

 

Congratulations to Shelley Walushka for her spectacular overall win in the 2026 Great Mansfield Outdoors 100km. No competitor came even close

Also Congratulations to Stacy Halohan for placing 3rd in his age group in the 50km run. You guys surely ROCK!

  Place Bib Name Age Group Age Group Rank ChipTime GunTime
100K Grande 1 2 Walushka, Shelley Female 40-49 1 11:33:17 11:33:17
               
50K 8 150 Halonen, Stacy Male 40-49 3 5:57:24 5:57:30

 

https://n89.ca/trail-courses/great-mansfield-outdoors/


 


 

 

 

Rocks!! member Ewa Breckon Runs 3000m at NOSSA

Ewa places a close 2nd in the 3000m

CONGRATULATIONS EWA

 

 

 

 

 

Lucas Jones, winner of the SudburyRocks!!! Marathon

All Photos Here


The supportive community that gathers for the Sudbury Rocks Marathon
Randy Pascal
2026-05-28

 

There is no denying that the Sudbury Rocks Marathons races are extremely well supported.

While final numbers for the group in its entirety are still being compiled, all signs point to close to 2300 participants – a new record high for the event that celebrated year 21 this past Sunday.

In fact, based on casual race day conversations, one might surmise that the Sudbury Rocks Marathon is all about the “support” – in all of its various incarnations.

Nearly ninety runners / joggers would complete the full marathon, with 24 year-old Lucas Jones the first to cross the line, clocking in at 2:44.50 as he completed his fourth marathon and third in the nickel city.

A native of Langton (near Tillsonburg), Jones attended Laurentian University, was a member of the nordic ski team and has spent the past year or so in the Ottawa area – and still saw fit to make his way to Sudbury to run in less than ideal conditions.

“It’s the people,” said Jones, acknowledging a key motivator in selecting this race to slot into his busy calendar of athletic endeavours. “I’ve been in Ottawa for the winter and even with where I am from, the community just isn’t the same.”

“Sudbury is big enough, with lots of people, but small enough that everyone knows each other and supports each other.”

A cross-country runner during his high-school years who lost his love of running before re-engaging during his time north, Jones also had some practical reasons for choosing to race in a setting that is not at all foreign to him.

“Knowing the course is essential, especially here,” said Jones. “There’s elevation in Sudbury that there isn’t in other cities. We might be running some of the flattest roads in Sudbury, but when I did Niagara, my legs got tired because there is no change of elevation at all.”

With his sights set on perhaps eclipsing the 2:30 barrier some time in 2027, Jones managed to capture the Sudbury race by a seven-minute margin, with Alex Godin (2:51.42), Kyle Coffey (2:55.29), Nicholas Lambert (2:55.52) and Alex Chenier (2:59.36) rounding out the top five and the trio of Iris Lenauer (3:13.18), Saree Sasson (3:13.25) and Jessica Brake (3:16.23) showing the way in the women’s division.

A year ago this time, Lucy Gideon stood on the sidelines, cheering on her daughter (Megan Easter), one of a group of friends who were running in support of families who lost loved ones to cancer. Set to celebrate her 50th birthday in October, Gideon could remain on the sidelines no more.

A ten-kilometre run-walk trek was a reasonable goal, in her mind, though she plans to tap into the knowledge gained from 2026 to improve with age a year from now. “I made sure I practiced a lot, but at the end, I was exhausted,” said Gideon, an avid walker who cited no long-term connection with running at all in her background.

“Next year, I will make sure to practice even more.”

While the remainder of her daughter’s grouping were tackling the 21km, Gideon was somewhat on her own for the 10km – at least on her own as much as one can be in a race that featured more than 400 hardy souls forging forward in the rain.

“I started with a slow jog for a bit and then just walked at times – but I am very chatty, so I would talk to anyone who was beside me.”

Throw in an affinity for both music and podcasts and one has the makings of the start of a journey that the friendly psychotherapist would like to see grow and prosper in the years to come.

“Because of my age, I grew up in the seventies and eighties, so I love that and the techno stuff too,” said Gideon. “And I will listen to podcasts and keep busy pep-talking myself. This is very motivating.”

Leah Kernan also found herself motivated.

Sure, it was last minute motivation – but motivation none the less.

While the 30 year-old all-around athlete during her time at Lasalle Secondary (flag football, soccer, softball, cross-country) had been contemplating taking a shot at her half-marathon with this group of friends, it wasn’t until one week before race day that she officially took the plunge and registered.

“This is the furthest I have run; I just went for it,” said Kernan, who jogged the 21km distance with co-workers in a time of 2:41.53, with her official "training" for the race beginning seven days before the event itself - hardly the outline of ideal pre-race preparation.

“There was a lot of stretching before hand and stretching after the race too – but it felt good, ” noted Kernan. I thought I would be out of breath but I had breath the whole time. We just kind of paced ourselves.”

And, of course, supported each other through the tougher segments of the race.

“About halfway through, we were thinking we still had another 10km to go – and my music died – but running through New Sudbury and Minnow Lake was really nice. My plan is to keep running all summer.”

It’s been 18 years since Jeannine Foisy completed her one and only marathon, that in the same event she would revisit this past Sunday. This time around, it was the half-marathon that called her name – largely for the chance to share the experience with her daughter, Julianne Graveline.

“For me, I was there to support her – not realizing that she was there to support me as well,” noted Foisy, the 62 year-old daughter of figure skating great and member of the Sudbury Sports Hall of Fame, Gertie Desjardins.

“I am very active, so that helped – and I followed a program in a running book,” said Foisy. “I didn’t stress much as this wasn’t as much my goal as my daughter’s goal. During the race, we were grateful that were together and able to do this together.”

Mutual support, as it were, in a race where encouragement and assistance could be found located with ease.

Following are some of the top finishers in other primary distances:

Half-Marathon
Men

1st - Eric Leishman - 1:12.37
2nd - Keon Wallingford - 1:13.14
3rd - Evan Palmer-Charrette - 1:15.29
4th - Dan Whalen - 1:19.55
5th - Tim Tindall - 1:20.35

Women
1st - Elissa Bertuzzi - 1:24.48
2nd - Sara Perfetto - 1:28.25
3rd - Fiona Shering - 1:29.37

Perdue Family Lise's 10km
Men

1st - Jacques Tiessen - 31:56
2nd - Cory Brennan - 38:25
3rd - Christian Smith - 38:35
4th - Taylor Conaty - 39:00
5th - Eric Sampson - 39:10

Women
1st - Jayde Hurley - 41:29
2nd - Emily Soares - 47:41
3rd - Sasha Shank - 48:04

5km Run / Walk
Men

1st - Cameron Date - 16:34
2nd - Travis Annett - 16:38
3rd - Alan Wilkin - 17:27
4th - Gord Farrell - 18:36
5th - Tejada Gieselman - 19:08

Women
1st - Kylee Fowler - 18:44
2nd - Georgia Lepage - 19:06
3rd - Kristen Mrozewski - 19:11
4th - Angela Mozzon - 19:16
5th - Charlotte Grenier - 19:51

Results Below

https://results.raceroster.com/v3/events/tpwce3523z4jyp5v

 

 

 

 

 

Seven Continents Club Finisher Race Report

by William and Tawnecia Tai

___________________________________________________________

 

 

It has been a wonderful journey of over twenty years with the The Sudbury Rocks Run Club (and the former Sudbury Running Room Run Club) to complete a main goal of ours in running & our lives. The goal was to complete a half marathon (Tawnecia) and a marathon (William) on all Seven Continents, and officially join the Seven Continents Finisher Club family; which we completed last month!!!


Amongst our amazing adventures and experiences has been the Sudbury Rocks (North America), Petra Desert (Asia), Australian Outback (Oceania), Antarctica, Big Five (Africa), Disneyland Paris (Europe) and Patagonia Running Festival (South America) where we have met many new friends and fellow runners who were motivated to achieve the same goal for various reasons, including: adventure, travel, culture, dining, history, charity, education.


Our final race to complete this goal was in Patagonia, Chile where we raced a challenging but absolutely stunning course along the rivers and mountains of Patagonia at high elevation. We would recommend this race to anyone as they have a fun run, half marathon, marathon and ultra. We saw wildlife such as guanacos and condors, and to top it all off the race ended at the Rio Serrano Resort where we were treated to BBQ lamb, Patagonian Beer, and a fun celebration.


I am now moving onto my next running goal of completing a half marathon on every continent (so far one continent is completed i.e. Antarctica), and Tawnecia is thinking about her next goals.


We look forward to seeing you & the group on the road & trails, and thanks for all of the support over the years!!!


William


 

  

 

 

 

Jesse Winters will be presented the Bill Roman Award at Hall of Fame Dinner
Randy Pascal
2026-06-02

_________________________________________________________________________________________________

On Wednesday June 10th (2026), Jesse Winters will be awarded the Bill Roman Award at the 55th Annual Greater Sudbury Sports Hall of Fame Dinner in recognition of his efforts in the local running community dating back to 1993.

As the primary organizer of the Ramsey Tour Race, Winters has helped direct more than $200,000 to the Laurentian Voyageurs cross-country profgram over the years. Anyone interested in being in attendance at the 2026 Sudbury Sports Hall of Fame Dinner at which Jesse is being recognized is asked to contact Randy Pascal for tickets at either info@sudburysports.com or by text at (705) 698-1627.

The story below first appeared on SudburySports.com in September of 2018 and outlines just a few of the reasons why Jesse Winters is so deservedly being presented the Bill Roman Award.

This coming Sunday morning, the Sudbury Masters Running Club will stage the 42nd annual edition of the Ramsey Tour. For the past quarter century, however, the event has been inextricably linked to one Jesse Winters, race director for every single one of those 25 early September gatherings.

Not that Winters and the Sudbury Masters require anything close to six degrees of separation. Truthfully, they have been joined at the hip for quite some time.

Born in 1953, Winters owes his start in running, in part, to a work-related placement with a mining company in the Northwest Territories' outpost of Pine Point. ?I was playing in an open hockey league, I was 31, and playing against guys right out of juniors,? he recalled. ?I thought the only way I could compete with these guys was to be in better shape than them.?

Winters laughed as he explained the brainwave that launched his running career. ?The mine was three miles from town, so I started running to work, worked all day and ran the three miles from work back home.? The steady diet of running, hockey and even refereeing a couple of nights a week did the trick for the local financial advisor, reaching the point where a 10 km race was navigable.

Still, he was not a runner. By his own admission, he ran primarily to stay in shape for hockey. All of that changed when northern Ontario became the career destination of choice. ?We moved to Sudbury in 1986,? said Winters. ?I got a membership at the old YMCA (at the corner of Elm and Notre-Dame), running six to eight kilometers, a couple of times a week

 

There he would meet Mike Narozanski and Dan Welch. Though the Sudbury Masters dated back to the year 1969 and names like Louis Moutsgaard (still involved to this day), Vic Bridle, Mike Furlong and Ted Coe, it was the Narozanski/Welch tandem that lassoed Winters into what would become a much longer than first anticipated partnership with the group.

?Those guys are pretty chatty,? said Winters with a smile. ?They found out I was running and eventually talked me into coming out and running with them at Sudbury Arena.? A ten kilometer run to the Four Corners and back was pretty much standard fare for the group. ?They talked to me all the way there and all the way back, and before you knew it, we were finished. They were very encouraging.?

Quickly ingrained within the Masters group, Winters would gradually expand his horizons, both as a runner, but also, initially, as an administrator. ?In 1993, I don't know how this happened, but I started organizing the race (Ramsey Tour). I would get the guys to volunteer. We raised enough to cover our expenses and give a little bit away. When you haven't done a lot of race directing, it can be overwhelming.?

Though Winters would expand the scope of race sponsors, there were challenges beyond his control that lie ahead, the wave of popularity of the ?Participaction? era of the 1970s and 1980s giving way to a less active soon-to-be new millennial group. ?There was a gradual decline in runners through the 1990s,? he said.

?But as soon as the Running Room came to town (early 2000s), there was a resurgence. They have certainly put an emphasis on running, and their ?learn to run? programs and clinics have been really helpful. Right away, you have ten to twelve new people in this clinic that are going to run your race.?

On a more personal level, about the same time, the local man was ready to tackle a running goal of his own.

?When I turned 50, I was the only guy in the Club (Masters) who had not run a marathon, and I heard about it every day,? said Winters. ?What better excuse to run a marathon than when you turn fifty? Vince (Perdue) drew up a four month schedule and told me that if I followed it strictly, I would finish the race. I had two goals: to finish the race, and hopefully break four hours.?

Crossing the line in Ottawa with four minutes to spare, Winters returned to the same venue again in 2005, but would not tackle a third marathon until heading to Green Bay in 2008. Breaking the 3:45 barrier, he would qualify for Boston, and has since padded his marathon resume with stops in Chicago, Berlin, New York City and London.

On Ramsey Tour race day, however, he puts away the shoes for a bit.

?You don't have time to run the race if you are organizing the race,? confessed Winters. Over time, his troop of dedicated game day volunteers has expanded beyond the ever-faithful presence of a large number of folks who have witnessed twenty or more of these races, later welcoming aboard the primary beneficiaries of the event.

?When the university stopped funding the varsity cross-country teams, we decided to help them out with our race fundraising,? said Winters. ?That's when Dick (Moss) got involved. Now, Dick and Darren (Jermyn) organize the whole five kilometer race. They have all the volunteers, they have all of the folks in the chute, and Darren looks after all of the timing.?

?Within five minutes of the finish of the race, we have all of the results, and accurate results. I just have to organize the volunteers for the half marathon.? And, playing to his strength in the sales department, Winters' portfolio includes working with the sponsors, a group to whom he is immeasurably thankful. ?Look at a guy like Chris Laking ? he has been sponsoring the race since before I arrived in 1990.?

There will come a time that Winters will step back, just as a juncture will be reached when he can no longer endure the toll of a 26-mile marathon. For now, however, the Sudbury running community will remain thankful for his ability to participate, both as an athlete, and an organizer.

Tour Tidbits: The 2017 half-marathon champion was Ryan Marsaw, in a time of 1:29:09 ... the fastest two times posted in the event in the last five years both belong to female participants ? Kaitlyn Toohey (1:22:32) and Megan Kuikman (1:22:33), both in 2016 ... Marsaw has cracked the top five in four of the last five years, with Pierre Dumont and Brent Walker not that far behind with three appearances each ...


 


 

 

 

Sudbury Rocks Running Club - Group Runs


    Wednesdays - meet at Apex Warrior parking lot departing at 1800h. Typically runs are 1 hour or 10km.
                    Saturdays - meet at Bell Park's Elizabeth St parking lot departing at 0800h. Typically runs are longer at 1.5 hours or 15km minimum.

Generally the pace floats between 5 and 7 minutes per km. Anticipate a mixture of roads and trail running on the routes.
Inclement weather is usually just a challenge. Group has only been cancelled for local races or xmas. Cancellations or changes in meeting locations will be posted.

Locations are show in the attached photos/maps.

Wednesday pm location

Saturday am location


 

 

 

Photos This Week

May 27 Wednesday pm run

May 27 Bell Park

May 27 Bell Park

May 27 Nepahwin Lake

May 29 Duck Trail

May 29 Duck Trail

May 29 Bioski

May 29 Moonlight Bridge Pond

May 29 Moonlight Bridge Pond

May 29 Moonlight Backcountry

May 30 Rocks!! Saturday am run

May 30 Bell Park

May 30 Lilly Creek

May 30 Lilly Creek

June 1 Moonlight Trail

June 1 MoonlightTrail

June 1 Moonlight Bridge

June 1 Moonlight Pond

June 2 Moonlight

June 2 Moonlight Trail

 

 

 

 

 

Upcoming Events

 

Duck and Run Sudbury 2026

The Race to Conserve and Restore Our Wetlands
Lake Laurentian Conservation Area, Sudbury
June 6, 2026 | 10:00 a.m.

Run, walk, roll or waddle - there are options for everyone!
Register now for a 5K or 1K fun run!
Participants age 13+: $40
Participants age 5-12: $25
Participants under 5: Free


Information and Registration Here

 

 

 

I’m starting a 6 week trail running club. Featuring a new trail every week.


Our first run kicks off Monday, June 15th at 6:00 PM!

We’ll be leaving from 1127 Bancroft Dr for a relaxed 10 km trail run, lasting approximately 1 hour and 20 minutes. This will be a group-paced run with both a lead runner and a sweep, so nobody gets left behind. We’ll stop at every lookout along the way to take in the views and enjoy the experience together.

Hoping to see a huge turnout for the first one! If you’ve been thinking about coming, this is your sign — jump off the fence and let’s SKODEN!!

 

Marc Cayen https://www.facebook.com/marc.cayen


 

 

  June 11, 2026

 

Sudbury Fitness Challenge Bush Pig Open

 

June 11, 2026

https://www.waldenmbc.ca/events/2026-bush-pig-open-sfc


 

 

 

  June 21, 2026

 

Sudbury Fitness Challenge Canoe Marathon

June 21, 2026

Details to follow


 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 


 

 


 


 

 

 


Contact Us

Proud sponsor of the Sudbury Rocks!!! Race-Run-Walk for the Health of it

ttp://www.sudburyrocksmarathon.com/

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