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Claude
Seguin, long-time Saskatchewan provincial coach and national
junior epee coach, will be inducted into the Saskatchewan Sports
Hall of Fame on June 17, 2006.
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Claude Seguin
Born: May 30, 1948 in Coniston, Ontario
Builder - Fencing
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Claude
Seguin was born in Ontario where he began coaching fencing in
1973. In 1976, he moved to Manitoba where he coached for another
three years. Seguin joined the Saskatchewan fencing scene in
1979 when he became the head coach of the Saskatoon Fencing Club
and the provincial coach of the Saskatchewan Fencing
Association. From 1990 to 1996, he was also the vice president
of the Coaches Association of Saskatchewan.
Seguin was
the coach of the Saskatchewan fencing team at the Western Canada
Summer Games in 1983, 1987, and 1990 and served in the same
capacity for the Saskatchewan fencing team at the 1991, 1995,
and 1999 Canada Games. He acted as an advisor for the 2003
Canada Games Saskatchewan fencing team and has helped other
coaches prepare for the Level IV coaching certification
examination.
Internationally, Seguin was the coach for the Canadian team at
the World University Games in 1991 in Sheffield, England and the
1995 games in Fukuoka, Japan. He also coached the Canadian
national junior epee team at the 2002 World Championships in
Antalya, Turkey, the 2003 World Championships in Plovdiv,
Bulgaria, and the 2004 World Championships in Linz, Austria. He
has been a coaching fixture at ten cadet world championships
between 1990 and 2000. Claude helped prepare and successfully
helped to qualify a Saskatchewan athlete for the Canadian
fencing team to the 1992 Barcelona Olympics.
Claude has
consistently produced athletes for our national teams at the
cadet, junior, and senior levels since 1991. His athletes have
done extremely well at the national and international levels.
Seguin, in his coaching training, has achieved his NCI Level IV
in all three weapons and in 1986 he became the first
Canadian-born coach to achieve Fencing Master status. Claude has
developed many fencing coaches through an apprentice-coaching
program.
Honours
that have come his way include Fencing Academy of Canada Junior
Development Coach of the Year in 1992, 1993, 1994 and 1996 and
the Saskatchewan Dairy Producers Coach of the Year in 1988. One
of his many accomplishments, and the one of which he may be most
proud, was coaching his son, Jean-Pierre, to become the Cadet
World Champion in epee in 2002.

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