Nunavut gets ready to send its 1st hockey team to the Canada Winter Games - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 04:38 AM | Calgary | -1.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Nunavut gets ready to send its 1st hockey team to the Canada Winter Games

Nunavut hockey players will be competing with the best of the best across Canada next year when they take to the ice for the first time ever in the Canada Winter Games.

Players from across the territory practice in Yellowknife

Max Joy, in the foreground, is the captain of Team Nunavut. He says it's an amazing opportunity to compete in the Canada Winter Games. (Juanita Taylor/CBC)

Team Nunavut's hockey teamwill be competing on an elite stagenext year when ittakes to the ice for the first timein the Canada Winter Games.

The Canada Winter Games is a venue where, every four years, young athletes from across the country get the chance to show their skills in front of a national audience.

"It's the top 260 players across Canada," said Martin Joy, coach of Team Nunavut.

"If you look at the averages, you almost have a better chance of getting into the NHL than you do to the Canada Winter Games in hockey It has to land on your birth year and then you have to make the team."

Team Nunavut coach Martin Joy says sending Team Nunavut to the Canada Winter Games is a process four years in the making. (Juanita Taylor/CBC)

Joy says the process of building a team good enough to compete in the Canada Winter Games began four years ago with a group of coaches that focused on developing strong hockey skills. He called the end result "transformational."

"This year is about basically creating the whole player, not just a hockey player," he said.

"Meeting with media, being in front of scouts down there, introducing yourself. It's all those aspects of the game."

The 20 players who make up Team Nunavut mostly hail from Iqaluit, Rankin Inlet, Chesterfield Inlet, Coral Harbour and Whale Cove. They were in Yellowknife this week to play some games and hold practices, marking the first time they've all been together since the summer.

Max Joy, from Iqaluit, is the captain of Team Nunavut.

He said the players are allexcited to see each other and are looking forward to competing on what he called the "biggest stage" in Canada.

We're trying hard, and we've got to get better day by day.- Josie Cote, player

"I'm pretty nervous," he said about competing in Games. "Really excited but at the same time, yeah, nervous."

Max says last winter'sArctic Winter Games in Hay River and Fort Smith, N.W.T., laidthe foundation for Team Nunavut to prepare for the Canada Winter Games. The players also met up in Sarnia, Ont., this summer for a week-long camp.

Sixteen-year-old Josie Cote, from Iqaluit, plays centre and right wing.

He says it's "very special" to have the opportunity totrain with his team.

"We've got to represent Nunavut good," he said. "So we're trying hard, and we've got to get better day by day."

Pamela Pilakapsi, from Rankin Inlet, travelled to Yellowknife to watch her son, Xzavier Kubluitok play. She hasn't seen him in a while because he's been in Pilot Mound, Man., to play hockey.

"I'm so proud," she said. "I haven't watched him play hockey since the Arctic Winter Games [in March]."

The Canada Winter Games are scheduled to be held Feb. 15 to March 13 in Red Deer, Alta.

With files from Juanita Taylor