Canada swept the relays and won two individual medals Sunday in the first ISU World Cup short-track speedskating event of the season.
Courtney Sarault, Ren茅e Steenge, Dana茅 Blais and Florence Brunelle skated to gold for Canada in the women鈥檚 3,000-metre relay. The United States took the silver and the Netherlands picked up bronze.
The Canadian men - the reigning Olympic champions - built off that momentum as William Dandjinou, Steven Dubois, Pascal Dion and Jordan Pierre-Gilles captured gold in the 5,000-metre relay.
The crowd at Maurice Richard Arena jumped to its feet as Dandjinou skated home on the last lap. South Korea won silver and Japan took bronze.
Earlier, Felix Roussel of Sherbrooke, Que., won silver in the men鈥檚 500 metres, finishing half a skate blade behind reigning Olympic champion Liu Shaoang of China. French skater Quentin Fercoq earned bronze.
It was the first time Roussel has won silver in an individual World Cup event.
Dandjinou, from Montreal, picked up a bronze in the second men鈥檚 1,000-metre event of the weekend. It was the first individual World Cup podium appearance of his career.
South Korea鈥檚 Gun Woo Kim captured gold and Italy鈥檚 Luca Spechenhauser won silver.
Three-time Olympic medallist Dubois was the only Canadian to earn some hardware on Saturday with a silver medal in the first men鈥檚 1,000-metre event.
Dubois, from Lachenaie, Que., was one of 12 Canadian skaters in the event as 33 countries and 184 athletes arrived in Montreal for the first two World Cup events this season. Skaters will return to Maurice Richard Arena next weekend for the second competition.
Some Canadian skaters will then take part in a third straight competition at home as Laval, Que., hosts the Nov. 3-5 Four Continents speedskating championships at Place Bell.
Canada came close to finding the podium on two other occasions Sunday.
Fredericton鈥檚 Rikki Doak was fourth in the women鈥檚 500-metre A final and Sarault, from Moncton, N.B., finished fourth in the women鈥檚 1,000-metre A final.
Dubois and Montreal鈥檚 Dion came first and fifth respectively in the men鈥檚 1,000-metre B final on Sunday.
Claudia Gagnon of La Baie, Que., and Blais, from Ch芒teauguay, Que., finished second and third in the women鈥檚 1,000-metre B final.
Steenge, from Brampton, Ont., and Florence Brunelle of La Baie, Que., fell out in the women鈥檚 500-metre quarterfinals.
Pierre-Gilles of Sherbrooke, Que., was knocked out in the men鈥檚 500-metre quarterfinals due to a penalty after making contact with another skater.
Xandra Velzeboer of the Netherlands captured gold in the women鈥檚 500 and South Korea鈥檚 Gilli Kim topped the podium in the women鈥檚 1,000.