News and Announcements

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Published: Friday, 26 March 2021 06:00
Written by David Zammit

Another member of the Swift Current Innovation Credit Union Wildcats leadership group has committed to a U Sports school.

Back on March 12, the AAA female club made the announcement on Twitter that forward Ava Metzger will be headed to Calgary’s Mount Royal University to play for the Cougars in the 2022-23 season.

“I actually toured it in grade nine,” Metzger said by phone Wednesday night. “It was a nice campus, a good rink, they also have a very good coach and they’ve built up a winning culture so all of that drew me in.”

The commitment is an early one, as the Moosomin product still has a year remaining of eligibility at the Saskatchewan Female U18 AAA Hockey League level.

“Just with the uncertainty due to COVID and all of that and not knowing if we’ll be able to play games,” she said. “And it was a good opportunity so I didn’t want to pass it up.”

Metzger will return to the Wildcats for the 2021-22 season, her second with the club and fourth campaign in the league. She previously spent time with the Saskatoon Stars (2019-20) and the Melville Prairie Fire (2018-19).

“I definitely have a big spot to fill next year, I will be one of the oldest on the team,” she said. “I’m just looking to continue to put up some points and just compete day in and day out and do what I can to help the team.”

In five games with Swift Current this past year, she netted a pair of goals and added a trio of assists.

While the current grade 11 student still has one more year of high school studies, she’s looking at courses in the medical field with potential aspirations of becoming a chiropractor, doctor or nurse.

She might not be the lone Wildcat on the Cougars either as currently Kate Scidmore is on the team’s roster and she played in Swift Current from 2013 to 2016.

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Glenn MacDonald (gmacdonald@herald.ca)
The Chronicle Herald
March 21, 2021

For an 18-year-old rookie blue-liner who wasn’t even supposed to be at Saint Mary’s this season, Maddy McCleary has made an impression with her Huskies teammates and her head coach.

“I’m not sure if it’s right to say this but she’s the stereotypical, low-maintenance, hard-working Prairie girl,” SMU bench boss Chris Larade said. “We’re so lucky to have her and from what I’ve seen she’s just as impressive off the ice and in the classroom. I’m blown away by her maturity.”

The captain of her under-18 AAA team in Swift Current, Sask., last season, McCleary had committed to the University of Lethbridge and was expected to join the Pronghorns in the fall for her freshman year.

But in April, she was notified that the school was eliminating several sports from its budget, including women’s hockey.

“When I found out Lethbridge got cancelled, it was pretty scary,” McCleary recalled. “I thought that was going to be the end of my hockey career.”

But life happens fast.

Larade, who had recruited McCleary earlier that season, reached out to her and, by May, she committed to Saint Mary’s.
What did she know about SMU?

“Nothing,” she answered.

“I didn’t know Saint Mary’s existed before Chris reached out. It was definitely an eye-opener to come out here but I’m really glad I did.

“It was a real blessing that I got to play here. It felt like home right away and everyone made it inviting.”

With COVID-19 restrictions in place, the transition wasn’t the easiest for someone who had never been to the east coast.

She didn’t even get a chance to tour the south-end Halifax campus when she arrived. Her first two weeks were spent in her apartment.

“When I arrived here, I went straight from the airport to my room and spent two weeks in quarantine,” McCleary explained.

“It was tough, it was really tough. When I first got to my room during Day 1 of quarantine, I was really questioning my decision. As the days went by, I was quick to learn there was a real family-like scenario. The girls were really supportive. They were always in contact but it definitely was a struggle for the first two weeks.

“When your family is 4,000 miles away and being a rookie you really have to rely on the rest of the team and they really stepped up to that role. It’s a real blessing.”

“She came in here and isolated for 14 days and I only got to meet her by delivering food to her apartment,” added Larade, in his 10th season with the Huskies.

“She never complained and always had a smile on her face.”

Perhaps that fortitude was passed down from her father.

Trent McCleary played 192 games in the NHL with the Ottawa Senators, Boston Bruins and Montreal Canadiens. But it was in his 192nd game with Montreal on Jan. 29, 2000, that not only ended his career but he nearly took his life.

During a game at the Bell Centre versus the Philadelphia Flyers, McCleary had skated toward his own blue-line and dropped to the ice to block a Chris Therien slap shot.
The shot caught him in the throat, fracturing his larynx and resulting in a collapsed lung. Losing air, McCleary rushed to the Canadiens’ bench and off the ice where he collapsed. Medical staff had to dislocate his jaw and perform a tracheotomy to open his airway which ultimately saved his life.

McCleary retired from hockey the following fall and became a certified financial planner. He coached Maddy in minor hockey and instilled in her to "play every shift like it’s your last”

“Because you never know what’s around the corner, an injury or what’s happening with COVID right now,” the younger McCleary said.

“He obviously didn’t have the easiest road in hockey. But he’s been an inspiration to have him as a dad and someone to look up to. His style of play is very similar to mine, just go every shift, give your absolute all and play like it’s your last time you’ll ever step on the ice.”
While the pandemic has shut down all Canadian university sports this season, the women’s hockey teams from Saint Mary’s and the Dalhousie Tigers have managed to play a handful of exhibition games under strict safety protocols.

“The atmosphere here is unreal right now,” McCleary said following their game March 13 at the Dauphinee Centre. She scored her first goal in a SMU hockey sweater late in the third period.

“Everyone is so ready to play. It’s been over a year so anything we can get is just a blessing and an honour to play.”

McCleary will return home to southwestern Saskatchewan for the summer and train for what’s hopefully an actual season in 2021-22.

“There better be a season,” she said with a laugh.

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The Innovation Credit Union U18AAA Wildcats are pleased to announce, assistant captain, Ava Metzger has committed to attend school and play hockey at Mount Royal University in Calgary, Alberta for the Cougars. The grade eleven student, a product of Moosomin, Saskatchewan is in her first season with the Wildcats. 

In seven games this season, Metzer accumulated 2 goals, 5 assists and 10 penalty minutes.  In 68 Saskatchewan Female U18 AAA Hockey League games, Metzger has 12 goals, 20 assists and 80 penalty minutes.  Metzger was named to the Top 29 SaskFirst U18 program, vying for a spot on Team Saskatchewan, that was scheduled to compete at the 2020 Canadian U18 Female National Championships before being canceled due to COVID-19. 

Metzger will join former Innovation Credit Union Wildcat, Kate Scidmore, on the Mount Royal Cougars roster.

The Innovation Credit Union U18AAA Wildcats would like to congratulate her on her commitment and look forward to having her back in a Wildcat jersey next season.

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BY STEVEN MAH -March 8, 2021

Gull Lake’s Taylor Kirwan helped the Colgate University Raiders to their first ECAC Hockey Tournament championship after defeating St. Lawrence 3-2 on home ice on Sunday afternoon.

The Raiders entered the weekend ranked sixth in the country and now have a 15-6-1 record and have earned an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The Raiders had defeated #10 Quinnipiac 2-1 in the semi-final on Friday.

The Raiders will be one of eight teams at the NCAA Tournament, which will be held over two weekends in Erie, PA.

Kirwan is a Junior defenseman in her second season with Colgate after playing for Lindenwood University during her Freshman season.

Kirwan leads the Raiders with a +18 rating this season and has chipped in one goal and four assists in 22 games.

Kirwan played five seasons with the Swift Current Innovation Credit Union Wildcats from 2013-18, registering 66 points in 105 regular season games and adding 19 points in 28 post-season games. She was named the Saskatchewan Female U18 AAA Hockey League Colleen Sostorics Top Defenseman during her final season 2017-18.

She also represented Canada at the IIHF U18 World Women’s Hockey Championships in Russia in 2018.

Wildcats Skating South of the Border

Posted by SWIFT CURRENT WILDCATS at Feb 17, 2021 3:24PM PST
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BY STEVEN MAH -February 15, 2021

Four former members of the Swift Current Innovation Credit Union Female U18 AAA Wildcats are currently skating for post-secondary women’s hockey teams south of the border this season.

Gull Lake’s Taylor Kirwan is currently a pillar on the Colgate University Raiders blueline.

The Raiders are the fifth ranked team in the country and Kirwan leads the team with a plus-12 rating. The Junior defenseman has one goal and three assists in 16 games during her second season at Colgate.

The Raiders have an 11-4-1 record overall and an ECAC leading 6-2 record.

The Raiders will play a home-and-away series against the St. Lawrence University Saints this weekend.

Shaunavon’s Taylor Lind is in the midst of a breakout season with the St. Cloud State Huskies. The 5’7’’ Sophomore forward is third on the team with four goals and tied for the team lead with five assists in 15 games this season.

Lind totalled two goals and six assists in 33 games during her rookie season in 2019-20.

The Huskies (4-12-1) will head to Columbus this weekend to visit the Ohio State Buckeyes (11-5-0) for two games.

Brownlee’s Alex Gray is currently in her third season with the University of Vermont Catamounts.

Gray has one assist in eight games with the Catamounts this season. She had one assist in 24 games last season after being held without a point in her rookie season.

The Catamounts have a 6-2 record to sit third in the Hockey East Power Index.

Gray skated for the Wildcats for two seasons from 2014-2016 before finishing her minor hockey career with Stanstead College in Quebec.

Moose Jaw’s Crystal Wale is a part of the first women’s ice hockey team at Dakota College at Bottineau. The Ladyjacks have been limited to a couple of games against North Dakota State University due to the pandemic.

Wale played three seasons with the Wildcats from 2017-20.