she is a member of canada’s sport hall of fame and the nova scotia sport hall of fame.
away from the rink, jones carved out a fascinating 37-year career with cbc as a reporter and host, telling stories of everyday canadians. she was also the first female sports anchor in halifax.
her open-minded seeking and sense of adventure served her well in that role.
“colleen was exceptional at managing all this, her office, her makeup room and booking network all ran from the front seat of her car,” said saunders. “while in the car in traffic, she could book an interview, put on makeup and arrive just in time.”
colleen jones, with her husband scott saunders, represented nova scotia as skips at the 2011 canadian senior curling championships in digby.
herald file
saunders said her curling and work careers took off when their young family, with sons luke and zach, was established.
“with the kids and her career fully launched, she broke out in full blossom in the late ’90s and early 2000s. she literally became the embodiment of the then-contemporary super mom.”
ken bagnell, ceo of canadian sport institute atlantic, had a front-row seat as the mental performance coach of the jones rink, which included mary-anne arsenault, nancy delahunt and kim kelly. bagnell said jones was always looking for an edge to improve her performance.
“physical preparation, nutrition, mental performance, any edge that she could get, she was looking for it,” said bagnell. “she trained so much. every day, she was training with the team or on her own. she was looking for the things that are now common; they weren’t common back then. she was a pioneer in many of those.”