Lanny McDonald, Mike Weir, and Cindy Klassen headline this year's inductees into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame.

Nine inductees were added to the Hall of Fame Wednesday, with Olympians Simon Whitfield and Carol Huynh, doctors Robert Jackson and Charles Tator, lacrosse star Gaylord Powless, and the Edmonton Grads women's basketball team joined McDonald, Weir, and Klassen.

McDonald starred in the NHL in the 1970s and 1980s, spending the majority of his career with the Calgary Flames and Toronto Maple Leafs. The Hanna, Alberta native finished with 500 goals and 506 assists in 1,111 career games and won the Stanley Cup with the Flames in 1989.

Weir is the only Canadian man to win a major golf tournament, after he claimed The Masters title in 2003. Weir's Masters win was one of three tour wins for the Sarnia, Ontario native that year, and one of eight for his career.

Klassen is the only Canadian to win five medals at one Olympics, capturing the feat in Italy in 2006, after she secured one gold, two silver, and two bronze medals in speed skating. Klassen also won a bronze in the previous Olympics, in Salt Lake City in 2002.

Whitfield is another Canadian Olympic hero after winning gold in the triathlon at the 2000 Sydney Olympics. Whitfield also captured a bronze medal in the event eight years later in Beijing. 

Huynh had a successful 2008 Olympics as well, becoming the first Canadian female to win a medal in wrestling, capturing the gold that year. Huynh earned a bronze at the event four years later at the London Games.

Dr. Jackson helped Canada make it's debut at the 1968 Paralympic Games and is credited for bringing arthroscopy to North America.

Dr. Tator is a leading expert and voice on sports concussions and spinal cord injuries. 

Powless, already a Canadian Lacrosse Hall of Famer, led the Oshawa Green Gaels to four Minto Cup championships in the mid to late 1960s. Powless was named MVP two of the years.

The Edmonton Grads were a women's basketball dynasty over the course of 25 years from 1915 to 1940. The Grads won 16 straight world championships during that time.