Eskasoni sees stellar growth in female hockey - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 11:14 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova ScotiaEskasoni Community Bureau

Eskasoni sees stellar growth in female hockey

The sport hockey is growing in popularity in Eskasoni, N.S., with three all-female teams competing out of the community's rink.

'I would have killed to have a team, but now I'm coaching it'

Madison Gould, 28, played on a boys' hockey team as a youngster because there were no female hockey teams in Eskasoni, N.S. Now she's coaching one of three female teams in the community. (Erin Pottie/CBC)

This story is part of a series fromCBC's Eskasoni Community Bureau, based out of the Sarah Denny Cultural Centre. This series comes from weeks of conversations with community members about what they feel is important to see, hear and read on CBC's platforms.

Madison Gould sees a bright future for female hockey in her home community of Eskasoni, N.S.

Gould, 28, said the sport has come a long way from when she was child and had to play on a boys' teambecause there were no girls' teams.

Today, there are three female teams based out of the community's Dan K. Stevens Memorial Arena.

"I grew up playing boys' hockey, getting dressed in boys' dressing rooms," said Gould. "Back then, in Cape Breton, there were only a handful of females playing."

Madison Gould is the head coach of an all-female, all-Indigenous team based out of the Dan K. Stevens Memorial Arena. (Erin Pottie/CBC)

There are five times as many women and girls playing the sport in Eskasoni than there were just three years ago. The majority belong to the Cape Breton Female Blizzard Hockey Association, which has traveling repand house league teams for girls aged five-18.

Gould said roughly 90 women and girls from Eskasoni are competing in organized hockey, up from just 15 to 18 players when she first started coaching.

"Like I tell people it's a dream come true," Gould said. "I would have loved to have played in my own community,in my own backyard, instead of driving to Sydney or 30 minutes away.I would have killed to have a team, but now I'm coaching it. And more girls want to try it."

'Hockey is just my therapy'

Rhyan Paul,a member of an under-11 team in Eskasoni coached by Gould, said having ice times in her hometown has allowed her to make friends from across the Cape Breton Regional Municipality.

"If I'm 90 years old, I'm still going to play hockey," said the 10-year-old. "I'll never choose anything over hockey. Hockey is justmy therapy."

Ten-year-old Rhyan Paul, right, waits for the puck to drop during a game against the Cape Breton Blizzard Hockey Association's orange team. (Submitted by Khea Paul )

Her mother, Khea Paul, said playing in their hometown provides an atmosphere where Rhyan can feel safe and build confidence.She's thankful most of her daughter's hockey time is spent at a rink located onlythree minutes down the road.

"It's really beneficial in cold, winter, stormy days," Paul said. "[It's] a very wonderful commitment on part the committee of the rink and everybody who is involved. But we do travel outside [Eskasoni] mostly for league games."

A woman smiles as she stands on the ice in a an arena
Christina Lamey is president of the Cape Breton Blizzard Female Hockey Association. (Matthew Moore/CBC)

Christina Lamey, president of Blizzard Hockey, said there has been significant growth in the sport following Hockey Nova Scotia's decision to allow girls' hockeyassociations in 2015.

Lamey said 300 players currently make up the Blizzard Association at least 30 per cent of whom are Indigenous, Black or people of colour.

"We actually wish that all of the girls around CBRM would embrace hockey the way they have in Eskasoni," said Lamey. "It's a very popular sport there, tons of girls are playing it. They're getting a lot out of it."

Gould and Lamey said there are still a few hurdles left to overcome within women's organized hockey in Nova Scotia,including the need for female coaches and dressing rooms.

Both expect those gaps will be filled over timeas the popularity of the sport continue to grow.