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At a time when interest in women's sports was germinating, Bobbi Rosenfeld was already dominating, not just in hockey (her favourite team sport), but in lacrosse, basketball, softball, tennis and track & field. In fact, Fanny 'Bobbie' Rosenfeld's sporting exploits were so extraordinary during the 1920s and thirties that she was named Canada's Female Athlete of the First Half-Century (1900-1950). Rosenfeld was born in Austria in 1904, but moved to Barrie, Ontario as a child and by her early twenties, had starred as a centre on the 1927 and '29 Ontario champion Toronto Patterson Pats of the North Toronto Ladies' City League. A newspaper during that era called Rosenfeld the "superwoman of ladies' hockey." In 1924, Bobbie helped inaugurate the Ladies' Ontario Hockey Association. She represented Canada in track & field at the 1928 Olympics, winning a gold medal in the 4x100 relay and a silver in the 100 yard dash. After retiring, Bobbie Rosenfeld wrote a daily column on women's sports for the Globe and Mail. |