[4] In March 2014, he represented Canada at the World University Cross Country Championships in Entebbe, Uganda, placing seventh as the top Canadian.
[8] In June, he won the Canadian Half Marathon Championships in Winnipeg, finishing in a personal best of 1:04:46.
[10] Competing at the elite-only 2020 London Marathon, held on October 4, Woodfine ran a lifetime best of 2:10:51, running under the Tokyo Olympic qualifying standard of 2:11:30.
He claimed that "AC's decision was based on incomplete information, contradictory reasoning and use of results outside of the qualifying window and at non-marathon events".
He also claimed that selectors were biased in favour of Levins due to his close contact with AC giving him more opportunity to explain away poor performances.