Olympic champion Maude Charron headlines Canada's weightlifting team at Paris Games

Boady Santavy will compete in the men's 89 kg event

Image | Tokyo Olympics Weightlifting Women

Caption: Maude Charron, pictured celebrating her gold medal at Tokyo Games in 2021, captured Canada's second-ever Olympic weightlifting title. (Luca Bruno/The Associated Press)

Gold medallist Maude Charron, of Rimouski, Que., will lead Canada's two-person weightlifting team at the Paris Olympics.
Charron, who won weightlifting gold at the Tokyo Games in 2021, will compete in the women's 59-kilogram event in Paris. In Tokyo, she lifted 236 kg in the 64 kg category, four more than the silver medallist.
It was just the second-ever Olympic gold medal won by a Canadian weightlifter, following Christine Girard, of Rouyn-Noranda, Que., who won 63 kg gold at the 2012 London Games.
"I'm thrilled to represent Canada once more at these Olympic Games," said Charron. "I'm looking forward to enjoying every moment to the fullest with my coaches, my parents and my friends. We are only two on the team to represent our sport and our country and we will do our very best to make Canadians proud."
WATCH | Charron opens up to Ariel Helwani about defending her Olympic title:

Media Video | Olympic champion Maude Charron opens up about defending her title in Paris

Caption: Ariel Helwani sits down with the Olympic weightlifter to discuss her goals, her new weight category, and getting the opportunity to celebrate these Games with family.

Open Full Embed in New Tab (external link)Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage.
Joining Charron in Paris will be Boady Santavy, of Sarnia, Ont., who will compete in the men's 89 kg event.
Santavy will be making his second Olympic appearance, after finishing fourth in the men's 96 kg event — missing the podium by one kilogram — in Tokyo.
Santavy, a silver medallist at the Lima 2019 Pan American Games, continues his family's Olympic legacy. His grandfather Bob competed in 1976 Montreal Olympics and was poised to join the Mexico City 1968 team before an injury.
"Generations of weightlifters have gone before me and I am proud to raise the bar for Canada," said Santavy. "I have been through so much to reach the pinnacle of the Olympic Games and I will not let Canada down. I will take the platform in Paris with pride, knowing that my life is my message and my strength comes from a higher power."
Weightlifting at the Paris Games takes place Aug. 7-11 at South Paris Arena 6.