January 18, 2002
Stars on ice
Iqaluits Nanooks
shine on Ottawa rink
MIRIAM
HILL
Some of the players on
the Iqaluit Nanooks Pee Wee hockey team have never been on an airplane
and certainly have never been to the South. So when the team travelled to Ottawa
earlier this month to compete in a tournament, many found it difficult to concentrate
on hockey.
But as the 22 players,
aged 11 to 14, stepped inside the Ottawa airport on Jan. 4, they were immediately
reminded why they were there. The team was met by a crowd of host families from
nearby Blackburn, Ontario, holding up bright red jerseys with each childs
name.
The Nanooks did themselves
proud over the two days of hockey. They lost their first two games 3-2 and tied
their third game 4-all.
"They were definitely
in it. It was evenly matched hockey," said Glen Higgins, president of the
Iqaluit Hockey Association, which funded the trip. "They played well and
raised eyebrows down there. Theres a lot of natural skill in these kids."
The Ottawa Citizen newspaper
featured the teams efforts on the front page of its sports section and
a local paper also covered their games. Higgins, somewhat surprised by the media
interest, was more taken aback by the spirit the team showed, both on and off
the ice.
"The one thing that
really impressed me about the kids was that after each of the two games they
had lost, they came off the ice not looking down, but slapping each other on
the back. They had big smiles on their faces as if they had won a game. That
told me all I needed to know about these kids," he said.
Off the ice, many of the
kids were wowed by the big city. "Shopping was a big attraction
Canadian Tire and Wal-Mart," Higgins said, chuckling. "Some went to
the mall, some got into the sports stores, bought themselves some new sticks
and equipment, which was a big thrill for them. They were on overdrive the whole
weekend."
A group of players at one
house was reportedly up talking quietly at 3 a.m. the second night, too excited
to sleep.
The Nanooks provided a
few thrills of their own. Besides being dubbed the most polite kids the hosts
had ever seen, hockey fans were suitably impressed with the skills of one particular
player. Olivia Kovic, 14, the only girl on the team, plays centre.
"It was a big thrill
for the people down there when they found out that this excellent guy was actually
a girl," Higgins said. "She had some excellent skills out there, people
couldnt believe it was a girl."
At a Pee Wee practice in
Iqaluit earlier this week, players glide around the rink, shooting pucks. Some
are dressed in the teams white Nanook jerseys, emblazoned with the teams
crest, others wearing their red Stingers garb.
Coach Sheldon Clouter skates
over and heaps praise on the team. "We should have won the whole tournament,"
he says. The Nanooks are used to half an hour warm-up time before games, he
explains, but in Blackburn they were only given 15 minutes.
Clouter calls Olivia Kovic
to the boards. Clad in layers of hockey gear its not hard to understand
why some people in Ontario mistook her for another male player. But when she
gets closer, a shy smile peeks out from behind the grill of her mask.
A quiet girl wearing number
11, Kovic shrugs humbly when asked what it is like to play in the tournament.
"It was good different," she says. "I learned some new
stuff."
Kovic also plays on the
womens hockey team in Iqaluit which means shes on the ice
five times a week. But she says she enjoys Nanook practice because the drills
are better.
The drills have paid off
Kovic scored one of the goals at the weekend hockey tournament. "Yeah,
it felt good," she says after some thought. Clearly anxious to get back
on the ice, she hops out of the visitors box and is promptly given a friendly
shove by another player. The smile can be seen from far away this time.
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