Tag Archives: Sochi 2014

Try Female Hockey a Huge Success!

Female hockey is the fastest growing sport in the world and the South Okanagan is a leader in promoting and getting young girls on the ice. Five years ago, a handful of parents had a vision to see their daughters play hockey, this country’s most popular sport. That is when the Ice Dragons Female Hockey Club was formed in Penticton, under the umbrella of the Penticton Minor Hockey Association (PMHA), a program which has seen its number rise every year since then.

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Penticton, B.C. — Feeding from Canada’s two Gold medals at the Sochi Winter Olympics, PMHA, led by Barb Main, held a Try Female Hockey ice session on Thursday and judging from the number of young ladies on the ice, it was a huge success. No less than 45 young girls, most of them born between 2006 to 2009, took the ice at Memorial Arena and were introduced, in full equipment, to the coolest game on earth. With a team of coaches and volunteers, Alex Gartner set-up stations for all skills levels and abilities. Judging by the smiles on and off the ice, the girls loved their experience.

“I have three daughters in the Ice Dragons’ program and they get more out of female hockey socially, physically and developmentally than with any other activities and that, while having a lot more fun”, explains Barb Main. “I strongly feel that every girl should have this opportunity.”

Present in the attendance was former President of the Okanagan Mainland Hockey Association (OMAHA) and current PMHA Referee in Chief Larry Jeeves, who has been a big supporter of growing the female participation in the entire region. Jeeves, who resides in Penticton, has seen the growth of the Ice Dragons program and recognized the need for more support towards such programs in every community within the Okanagan Mainland. Jeeves was very pleased to see the number of young female players on the ice that night.

“A couple of years ago, while I was President, I set a goal for OMAHA to double the numbers of female registrations within two years. While I don’t have the exact numbers, I’m guessing that they are not far from that goal”, said Jeeves.

This past season, there were female hockey leagues in OMAHA at every level from Peewee to Midget. This included recreational leagues at each of those levels and representative leagues at the Bantam and Midget level with the hope of adding a representative league in the near future.

For the first time in the short Ice Dragons’ history, the program had a representative team which will be back again next year, a team coached by Penticton Panthers’ alumni Shawn Carter.

Also present at the ice session was Okanagan Hockey School / Academy President Andy Oakes, whose daughter was giving the game a try. The Academy introduced a Midget Female AAA team to its program back in 2011, a team coached by Rebecca Russell, who was an assistant-coach for Canada’s women national under-18 team and Head Coach of Team BC Female U-18. Her assistant-coach at the Academy is two-times Olympic Gold medalist Gina Kingsbury. Both have been extremely supportive of the Ice Dragons’ program ever since coming to the Okanagan.

“Hockey Canada recognizes the potential of women’s hockey and needed help developing young players. The higher the number of participants, the stronger our national program will be”, says Oakes about justifying the addition of a Female program to the Academy. “The demand by Universities for Canadian female hockey players is very big and we have a 100% placement rate. Through hockey, young women not only play a healthy sport, but they lean important values for all aspects of life. Through hockey, we help develop young men and women.”

While success is not judged by wins at the minor hockey level, the Ice Dragons Female Hockey Club has managed to get recognition across B.C. in its short history. They clinched the tournament banner in the Peewee C2 division at the prestigious Richmond Ravens’ tournament two years in a row and this past season, the Peewee and Midget girls finished first in their respective division.

The Ice Dragons will hold one more free ice session to Try Female Hockey on Wednesday April 2 at 6:15 p.m. at the OHS rink. For more information, please contact Barb Main at bbmain@shaw.ca or visit the Ice Dragons Hockey Club web site at http://www.icedragonshc.wordpress.com/, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/PentictonFemaleHockey and on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/IceDragons_HC

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Canadian Women bring Gold – Men will try to do the same

Donna Spencer, The Canadian Press
Published Thursday, February 20, 2014 2:55PM EST
Last Updated Thursday, February 20, 2014 6:35PM EST

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SOCHI, Russia — Canada captured a historic fourth Olympic gold medal in women’s hockey Thursday with a 3-2 overtime win over the United States in a thrilling championship final.

The only other women’s team to win more consecutive Olympic gold is the U.S. in women’s basketball with five in a row from 1996 to 2012.

Marie-Philip Poulin scored the winner on a power play at 8:10 of overtime for her second of the game. She had tied it up with 55 seconds remaining in regulation.

Trailing 1-0 after two periods and down two goals deep into the third, Canada scored twice in the final 3:26 of the regulation and suddenly the gold that had been slipping away was within reach again.

Canada’s Brianne Jenner halved the deficit at 16:34 of the third with a shot that deflected off of U.S. defender Kacey Bellamy’s knee and over goalie Jesse Vetter.

With Shannon Szabados pulled from Canada’s net for an extra attacker, forward Kelli Stack’s attempted empty-netter that would have sealed the gold for the Americans hit the post.

In overtime, Canadian defender Catherine Ward was serving a cross-checking minor and American forward Jocelyne Lamoureux a slashing minor when Canada’s Hayley Wickenheiser took off on a breakaway.

She was hauled down by Hilary Knight and Poulin scored on the ensuing four-on-three.

U.S. captain Meghan Duggan scored in the second period and Alex Carpenter added a power-play goal in the third in front of an announced 10,639 at the Bolshoy Ice Dome.

Duggan beat Szabados with a wrist shot over the Canadian goalie’s glove shoulder at 11:57 of the second. Carpenter deflected a cross-ice pass from Hilary Knight past Szabados’s left pad at 2:01 of the third.

Szabados made 27 saves for the win, while Vetter stopped 28 shots in the loss. Canada edged the Americans 3-2 in the final preliminary-round game for both countries.

With four straight gold medals in women’s hockey Wickenheiser, Jayna Hefford and Caroline Ouellette joined Soviet biathlete Alexander Tikhonov and German speedskater Claudia Pechstein as gold medallists in four consecutive Winter Games.

Article from CTV News.

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