Lancers hockey players 'Bringing Hockey Home' with new skills program - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 09:47 PM | Calgary | -6.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Windsor

Lancers hockey players 'Bringing Hockey Home' with new skills program

Arabella Belangerplayed on boys ice hockey teams for six years.As the only girl on those teams, Belanger was often fodder for jokes, although she says they were always made in good spirit and were never harmful.

The new program aims to inspire an interest in university-level women's hockey

A bunch of women's hockey players on one knee while their coach instructs them on their next drill
The University of Windsor's women's hockey team is trying to get young girls interested in playing for the Lancers by having their players conduct on-ice sessions in their home communities across Canada. (TJ Dhir/CBC)

Arabella Belangerplayed on boys ice hockey teams for six years.As the only girl on those teams, Belanger was often fodder for jokes, although she says they were always made in good spirit and were never harmful.

But when she switched to playing on a girls'team, she says she was struck by the change in both team culture and the game itself.

With growth in the women'shockey game in Windsor-Essex, the Lakeshore Lightning player had the opportunity to be a part of the first-ever Lancers Players Club and Bringing Hockey Home,a new initiative of the University of Windsor's Lancers women's hockey team.

The goal of the program is inspiring more girls to get into hockey and explore U Sports, as they work with Lancers hockey players during their off season.

"There's a lot more girls playing now than there was then," Belanger said. "It's really amazing to see the growth in women's hockey over the past 10 years."

A girl wearing a beige sweater sitting in a hockey changing room
Arabella Belanger is one of eight successful applicants in the Lancers Players Club. She participated in eight skills sessions with an assistant coach of the University of Windsor's women's hockey team and two sessions with the full team, one off-ice and another on-ice. (TJ Dhir/CBC)

Belanger was one of eight successful applicants for the club, which was only open to Windsor-Essex players. As a member, she received eight weekly skills training sessions with assistant coach Amy Maitre and was able to participate in a team workout and the team's on-ice practice on Tuesday.

"It's been awesome," she said. "I got to train with a lot of girls that I already know, which is cool, but also some of the younger ones that I don't know."

But the Lancers are not only trying to lure local talent.

Players on the team from four other provinces and the Greater Toronto Area participated in on-ice sessions during their off-seasonto get young players in their home communities interested in playing U Sports hockey. That, and the Lancers Players Club, formedBringing Hockey Home.

Players on the UWindsor women's hockey team coaches spent the summer on ice, bringing their love of the sport to young womenPlayers spread out to communities from Essex county to Vancouver Island to help run tryouts , practices and camps for female hockey organizations in 5 provinces.

Devynn Dion, who plays defence for the Lancers, said the opportunity to help shape the lives of young girls in her hometown of Surrey, B.C. was inspiring.

"As a program, we have a mentee-mentor mentorship in our own team," Dion said of the Lancers. "So being able to facilitate that in other teams and show what our team culture is about was really important.

"It was nice to see an outside perspective that I didn't have growing up."

A female hockey player on the ice wearing a dark blue jersey
Devynn Dion plays defence for the University of Windsor's women's hockey team. She says nothing like the Bringing Hockey Home program was around when she was younger. (TJ Dhir/CBC)

Dion's experiences working with the next generation of players in her local community and Windsor-Essex have sparked an interest in a career in coaching and recruitment, she says.

"I obviously would love to help give back to the community and help female hockey develop more," she said.

Bringing Hockey Home was made possible as a result of a one-time grant of $44,280 from the Calgary Foundation.

Deanna Iwanicka, the head coach of the Lancers' women's hockey team, said the inspiration for the program was to build better connections with communities across Canada and get young girls thinking about playing for the Lancers.

"I think we've done a really good job of building a network here," said Iwanicka. "There's people from across Canada coming together for four or five years of their life. They're getting a great education; they're getting this great athletic experience they're building this network of people that they're going to know and be with probably for the rest of their lives."

A woman with blonde hair wearing a dark blue polo shirt
Deanna Iwanicka is women's hockey head coach at the University of Windsor. She says the goal of the Bringing Hockey Home program is designed at growing connections with communities across Canada and get young girls thinking about playing for the Lancers. (Meg Roberts/CBC )

Iwanicka says women's hockey always needs more support to grow.

"Anything we can do to create exposure to the game, build that network around the game is going to be impactful."

The Calgary Foundation said theychose to grant the team the money because they were impressed by the Lancers' goal to inspire the next generation of players.

"They recognized that this program had a lot of potential to get more girls, especially in rural areas, interested in hockey and potentially pursue their own post-secondary athletic career," said Jason Bates, the foundation's vice-president of grants and community initiatives, in an email. "The Lancers' drive to do this speaks to the team's leadership, not only on the ice, but in the wider community."