International Ice Hockey Federation

The many hats of Hayley

The many hats of Hayley

Wickenheiser a mentor, ambassador, but still a player first

Published 28.03.2013 03:53 GMT-5 | Author Risto Pakarinen
The many hats of Hayley
Hayley Wickenheiser has seen it all in her long career in hockey. Photo: Andre Ringuette / HHOF-IIHF Images
Almost every day during the IIHF High Performance Camp, Hayley Wickenheiser hit the ice at 6am to work out and skate because she’s a world-class player, and intends to stay at the top of her game.

However, during the camp she was also the athlete ambassador mentor, working with the six athlete ambassadors, other top players themselves, who are assigned to each of the six teams at the camp.

“First and foremost, I consider myself a player and I’m not ready not to be a player anytime soon,” she said, laughing.

“I’m responsible for the athlete ambassadors. I’ll share our experiences, speak on different topics, and then spend some time on the ice with different groups. We're developing and helping the athletes to understand what it’s like to compete at the next level,” she added.

And she should know. As she told the participants of the camp’s Observer Program during her presentation about promoting girls’ hockey, “I’ve seen it all”.

Her career spans over 15 years, in different leagues, in several countries, including Finland and Sweden where she played in men’s leagues. She’s won three Olympic gold medals, and seven Women’s World Championship medals.

No wonder that when she speaks, people listen. Hayley Wickenheiser is a true ambassador of women’s hockey.

“I think I understood around the Salt Lake Olympics in 2002 that while it’s important to compete for your nation and try to win gold medals, to drive the development of the sport, you have to share the knowledge. In Canada, we do have the resources and the money, but other countries don’t have it,” Wickenheiser said.

That’s why she went to Vierumäki, Finland, last summer. That’s why she poses for photos with everybody who asks – and the lines get long – and that’s why in November, there’s the annual Wickenheiser International Female Hockey Festival in Burnaby, BC, Canada.

Continue reading

“Playing in Finland and Sweden inspired me to keep helping, because when you live in another country you understand their culture a little better and where they’re coming from. Then you know better how to help,” she added.

Women’s hockey has taken several steps forward since 1994 when Wickenheiser – who played on a boys’ team – first made the Canadian national team as a 15-year-old, but there’s still a lot of work to be done.

“The level of play varies at the camp, each team has a bottom level and a top level of players, but I think, generally speaking, that it’s higher than the year before,” she said about the High Performance Camp. “There’s a lot of room to learn the little details of the game.

“The key is what the players do when they go back home, if they implement everything they’ve learned here, great. If not, it’s sort of a lost cause.”

The camp’s focus was on the fundamentals, even for the elite players attending the camp. According to Wickenheiser, one sure-fire way to improve the game is to make the players fitter.

Even if the flow of the knowledge is mostly from North America to the rest of the world, the camp gave something to everyone.

“A Canadian kid can learn just as much from a kid playing hockey in Turkey as the other way around. Camps like this are good for all players, everybody gets something out of it,” she said.

Even Hayley Wickenheiser.

“I see it as one package. When I share knowledge and try to inspire others, it makes me better. I learn from people here, and I like hearing the other girls’ stories from, say, South Africa. Sometimes you can get a little down on the game, and that’s when these positive memories fill my tank again,” she said.

At the end of her talk to the participants of the observer program, she reminded the coaches and other leaders in the audience of their role as ambassadors of the women’s game.

“Sometimes, you’ll have to speak for the players. There are still people who think that women should stay in the kitchen, cooking. That’s a reality and I think it’s OK to talk about it. But these athletes deserve the same respect as the men,” she said.

Everybody nodded.

 

Back to Overview