From empowering Indigenous youth to winning gold medals, the North American Indigenous Athletics Hall of Fame is acknowledging people involved in sports.

This year's class of inductees celebrates and recognizes 77 individuals and seven teams for their perseverance.

"The hope is their stories may inspire future generations to follow their dreams in athletics and life," the press release from the North American Indigenous Athletics Hall of Fame (NAIAHF), reads.

The honour is given to individuals and teams that show "outstanding leadership and achievement."

The NAIAHF was founded in 2022 by Dan and Susan Nimham who have been involved in Indigenous athletics for 40 years.

The 2024 inductees are the third class of individuals and teams being recognized by the organization.

Here are just some of the inductees and their achievements:

GREG EDGELOW

Greg Edgelow

Now a retired .

He won at "every level" of wrestling, his biography reads on the NAIAHF website.

Born in Edmonton, now living in Vancouver, Edgelow has Cree Ancestral Heritage from Manitoba.

In 1990 he won a bronze medal at the Goodwill Games in Seattle for wrestling and is the only Canadian to do so. He is also the only Canadian to win in four consecutive senior freestyle weight classes.

His last competition was in 1998 where he represented Canada at the World Championships in Iran.

Edgelow received the 1999 Canadian Sport Leadership Award for his "outstanding athletic achievements and leadership in volunteerism," beating out fellow finalist, Wayne Gretzky.

KATHY SMITH

kathy smith

Inducted in .

Growing up on the Six Nations of the Grand River Territory near Brantford, Ont., Smith, a member of the Mohawk Nation Sha’tekariwate turtle clan, is involved in lacrosse.

She was inspired by her father's involvement in minor sports and empowered to push the needle after noticing a lack of opportunities for girls to play.

Spending time as a coach, house league convenor and Vice President of Six Nations Girls Field Lacrosse, Smith also was the Executive Director of the Haudenosaunee National Board of Directors.

She led the Haudenosaunee women to World Cups in 2009, 2013 and 2017, and was key in the U19 World Championships in 2011 and 2019.

"She hoped the experience of representing the Haudenosaunee on the world stage, persevering through adversity, and believing in their ability to have, be, or do whatever they want, will be passed on to future generations," the biography reads on the NAIAHF website.

SYDNEY DANIELS

Sydney Daniels

Hockey player Sydney Daniels is a proud member of Mistawasis Nêhiyawak First Nation on Treaty 6 Territory, just north of Saskatoon, Sask.

She completed a four-year National Collegiate Athletic Association Division 1 ice hockey career at Harvard University where she received multiple awards and captained the team her senior year.

She participated in the International Ice Hockey Federation World Championships for Team USA bringing home a silver and gold medals in the U18 and U22 levels.

After graduation, she was drafted third overall into the National Women's Hockey League and played her first professional ice hockey season with the Boston Pride.

Recently,

"Daniels is passionate about finding ways to use her experiences to uplift Indigenous Youth," her biography reads.

HAROLD LADOUCEUR

For Harold Ladouceur

Raised between northern Alberta and the Kikino Metis settlement and Saulteaux and Moosomin Reserves in Saskatchewan, Harold Ladouceur has loved horses his entire life.

with logging horses and weekend rodeos.

"Understanding the needs of horses was ingrained in Ladouceur as a boy," his biography reads on the NAIAHF website.

Ladouceur eventually  found himself racing thoroughbreds and winning multiple awards.

According to his bio, "Ladouceur believes that horses are sacred animals that will speak to you, one only has to listen."

SAKGEENG OLD TIMERS

Oldtimers hockey team

A hockey team 100 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg is being inducted.

Players ranged from age and came from communities throughout the province.

The group joined the Canadian Oldtimers Hockey Association (COHA) in 1978 and played in tournaments around the world including Denmark, Germany, France, England and across Canada.

In 1983 and 1987 the teams won the World Cup and in 1988 received gold at the COHA National Cup.