Sagkeeng Oldtimers hockey team inducted into North American Indigenous Athletics Hall of Fame - Action News
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Sagkeeng Oldtimers hockey team inducted into North American Indigenous Athletics Hall of Fame

The Sagkeeng Oldtimers hockey team was inducted into theNorth American Indigenous Athletics Hall of Fame at a banquet in Green Bay, Wis., last weekend.

Team from Manitoba competed in tournaments internationally

Sagkeeng Oldtimers hockey alumni players
Phil Fontaine and Ken Young played on the Sagkeeng Oldtimers team for 15-20 years. (Kevin Nepitabo/CBC )

The Sagkeeng Oldtimers hockey team was inducted into theNorth American Indigenous Athletics Hall of Fame (NAIAHF) at a banquet in Green Bay, Wis., last weekend.

Theteam, made up of players ranging in age from 35 to over 50, was based inSagkeeng First Nation, about 100 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg. Itwas activefor over two decades, playing tournaments through the Canadian Oldtimers Hockey Associationin the U.S., Europe and Canada.

NAIAHF says the team qualified for the induction because theywon the national cup in 1987.

Ken Young,who is from Opaskwayak Cree Nation in Manitoba but has been in Sagkeeng"for forever,"played with the team for 20 years. He attended the banquet in Green Bay and said it was fun.

"The joking around and the teasing was back, like the way it was," he said.

WATCH |Sagkeeng Oldtimers enterthe hall of fame:

Sagkeeng Oldtimers inducted into North American Indigenous Athletics Hall of Fame

7 months ago
Duration 2:11
A hockey team made up mostly of residential school survivors was inducted into the North American Indigenous Athletics Hall of Fame at a banquet in Green Bay, Wis., last weekend.

He said hockey helped him heal and cope with the hard times in life.

"You can't live life being bitter like a lot of us were after we left Indian residential school," he said.

Young saidbeing on the team taught him to get along with people all over the world and to always be respectful regardless of the situation.

"There were some hockey teams that we played against that were not very friendly to our people," said Young.

"But the teams that I remember that we beat that was very satisfying."

 The Sagkeeng Oldtimers sit at thier induction ceremony
The Sagkeeng Oldtimers were inducted into the North American Indigenous Athletics Hall of Fame in Green Bay, Wis., last weekend. (submitted by Josh Redbear-Ahmo)

Phil Fontaineplayed on the team for about 15 years. He said it was a privilege to represent his home,Sagkeeng First Nation,in a positive way.

He saidunlike professional players who get paid, they all played for the love of the game.

"We came across others that enjoy playing hockey as much as we did so we had a lot of games that were really quite competitive," he said.

"We played the Finns, we played the Swedes, we played Norwegians, so the experience was pretty wide and varied."

Walter and Verna Fontainefoundedthe team. Their daughter, Darlene Ahmo, saidthe couple's dedication and leadershipbrought out the best from their community.

"They just kept working really hard. That's what I remember about both of them," she said.

Josh Redbear Amos holds a picture of his late brother who was on the team while Darlene Amos hold a cowbell like the one her late mother use to always use.
Josh Redbear-Ahmo holds a picture of his late brother who was on the team while his mother Darlene Ahmo holds a cowbell like the one her late mother used to always use. (Kevin Nepitabo/CBC )

Darlene's son Josh Redbear-Ahmosaidit wasn't until he got older that he realizedhis grandparents were doing somethingspecial. Whenthey weren't travelling the world, he remembers the Oldtimers teaching youth hockey camps.

Redbear- Ahmosaid it's been an honour to seethe continuing impact of theirwork.

"My respect and my feelings for them just grows daily," he said.