Medicine Hat News

China-based team in Clarkson Cup final Sunday

- DONNA SPENCER

Jessica Wong wasn’t seeing a Clarkson Cup championsh­ip team when she arrived in China last fall to play for Kunlun Red Star.

A few months later, the defender from Baddeck, N.S., feels Red Star is capable of winning the Canadian Women’s Hockey League trophy in its first season.

The Red Star face the Markham Thunder in the Clarkson Cup final Sunday at Toronto’s Ricoh Coliseum.

Half of Kunlun’s roster is Chinese and the other half is North Americans and Europeans. Wong, 26, is one of two Canadians in the lineup.

“We’re going to bring everything we have on Sunday,” Wong told The Canadian Press.

“As a team, we’ve grown so much together over the course of the year and you have to. We’re coming together at the right time.”

The former Calgary Inferno defender, who played for Canada’s under-18 and under-22 women’s teams, was essentiall­y retired prior to joining the Red Star.

Wong saw a chance be part of something bigger when she moved to Shenzen, China.

With Beijing the host city of the 2022 Winter Olympics, China is plowing resources into winter sport to have a competitiv­e host team.

China getting two teams into the CWHL — the Vanke Rays was the other expansion club — was done to develop female hockey players for 2022.

“Any woman you talk to, we’ve always wanted to grow the game internatio­nally,” Wong explained. “I’m just so happy I can help and give back to the game that’s given me so much.

“The way I’m doing that is trying to help these Chinese players achieve this goal that they’ve always dreamt about, and have the goal of medalling in 2022, especially in their country. What an unbelievab­le experience that would be for them.”

Wong’s paternal grandmothe­r is from the Shenzen area. But Wong doesn’t speak Mandarin and thus had to navigate a language barrier in China.

The travel schedule was also arduous. The Red Star flew to North America four times this winter for three-week stays to play games.

The Red Star posted a 21-6-1 record behind Les Canadienne­s de Montreal at 22-5-1. The Thunder, who relocated from Brampton to Markham prior to the season, went 14-7-7.

But Markham upset 2017 Clarkson Cup champion Montreal by winning a best-of-three semifinal in two straight games.

Kunlun had a more tense semifinal against the Inferno. The deciding third game went to triple overtime, with Red Star’s Alex Carpenter scoring the lone goal of the game.

The money from five-year licensing agreements that accompanie­d the Chinese teams helped the CWHL pay its players for the first time this season.

Players were paid between $2,000 and $10,000 with teams’ general managers determinin­g compensati­on under a salary cap.

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