Charlottetown’s Peter Gallant gets the nod for Hall induction for an outstanding curling career, both as player and coach. In an illustrious playing career, Gallant has won nine provincial men’s championships, four provincial mixed, a senior provincial title, and a Canadian mixed championship, won on home ice in 1987 in Summerside, where he skipped the team of Kathie Gallant, Phillip Gorveatt and Simone MacKenzie to a national title.
In recent years he has become one of the most sought after coaches in world curling, guiding numerous teams including working with the likes of Brad Gushue, Suzanne Birt and his son Brett’s rink when they were dominant on the junior stage. Arguably one of his finest achievements was guiding the Eun Jung Kim team of South Korea to a silver medal at their home 2018 Winter Olympic Games.
Charlottetown’s Robert Campbell is one of PEI’s most successful curlers, with an outstanding curling resume to his name.
In 1985 he was third stone for the Kent Scales rink that finished second in the Canadian Junior Championships, earning all-star honours, and in 1991 he won the first of eight PEI Men’s Curling Championships, six of which were as skip.
Campbell won three Mixed Provincial Championships, which he then followed by guiding his team to a national title on two occasions. In 1989 he skipped Angela Roberts, Mark O’Rourke and Kathy O’Rourke to the Canadian title in Brandon, Manitoba, and he followed this up 21 years later in 2010 with another title, this time with Rebecca Jean MacDonald, Robbie Doherty, and Jackie Reid. That same year he went with MacDonald to the World Mixed Doubles Championships in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Always regarded as a versatile, and skillful curler, with numerous all-star honours to his name, Hall of Fame induction will round-off an outstanding curling career for Robert Campbell.
Forty years of outstanding success in training horses has earned Harry Poulton the call to the Hall. Moving out west when 18 years old, Poulton has the distinction of training not just one, but two World Champion horses.
Teaming up with owners Gordon and Illa Rumpel, Poulton turned On the Road Again (bought for $10,000) into a horse that earned over $3 million in three years, twice winning Canada’s Horse of the Year in 1984 and 1985, in addition to being named both Three Year Old Pacing Colt of the Year, and Aged Pacing Colt of the Year. Notable race wins included both the Meadowlands Pace and the Canadian Pacing Derby.
Remarkably, Poulton trained another world champion in Matt’s Scooter, who won more than $3 million and was another two time Canadian Horse of the Year. Poulton’s tremendous achievements have seen him win the Canadian Trotting Horseman of the Year in 1988, and Glen Garnsey North American Trainer of the Year award in 1989. That year also saw Poulton train and drive Stargaze Hanover to victory in the Gold Cup and Saucer.
Click link to read this story at the PEI Sports Hall of Fame website: https://peisportshalloffame.ca/sports-hall-to-host-induction-on-november-25/