National Post

Szabados’ return means a lot to Team Canada

- Michael Traikos mtraikos@postmedia.com Twitter.com/Michael_ Traikos

Even now, af t er 25 years of sharing the same dressing room, Shannon Szabados still gets asked the same questions.

A reporter will come to a game in the Southern Profession­al Hockey League and ask the goalie with the dark curly hair spilling out of the back of her mask what it’s like to play with the boys? Is it strange? Does she get treated differentl­y?

Szabados always laughs. On the surface, they might seem like valid questions. But for the Edmonton native, playing with men was never the strange part. Rather, it was always the other way around.

“I al ways ge t asked, ‘ What’s it like playing with the boys?’ ” she said. “And my answer is, ‘ It would be more accurate if you’d ask me what’s it like playing with the girls, because that’s what I’m not used to.’”

Szabados has spent her career playing on men’s teams, whether it was for the Western Hockey League’s Tri- City Americans or the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology. Along the way, she’s also won two Olympic gold medals with Canada’s national women’s team.

After a three- year hiatus from the national team, dur- ing which Szabados joined the Columbus Cottonmout­hs and became the first woman to play in the SPHL, the 30- year- old is back for her fifth women’s World Hockey Championsh­ip and hopes to compete for a third consecutiv­e Olympic gold medal in PyeongChan­g next year.

“With me being back here, it’s my way of letting them know I’d like to go to one more Olympics,” she said. “I’m just focused on playing well here first.”

In Tuesday’s quarterf i nals, Finland blanked Sweden 4- 0 and will face Canada in Thursday’s semifinals.

Russia and Germany met in a later quarter-final Tuesday. The winner faces defending championsh­ip U. S. in the semifinals.

The medal games are Friday.

Based on her performanc­e at this year’s world championsh­ip — in two games, Szabados has allowed two goals on 44 shots — Canada’s net should belong to Szabados in South Korea.

“Having her back there provides us with that calmness,” head coach Laura Schuler said.

Szabados, whom teammate Meghan Agosta calls “the best goalie in the world,” first started playing the position when she was five.

“No one wanted to go in net but I just loved it,” she said. “At that age, I don’t even think we had goalie gear. You just gave a player a stick and they wanted you to lie across the goal-line.”

Her style has improved significan­tly since then. A smallish goalie by NHL standards — she is 5- foot- 8 — Szabados relies on her quick reflexes and technical precision to stop the puck. But there’s also a fearlessne­ss to her game.

Szabados has always challenged herself, whether it’s playing against boys, playing up a level or playing in a southern part of the United States where hockey — never mind women’s hockey — is still a foreign concept.

It helps, of course, that she’s so darn good.

“She has that aura,” Team Canada forward Bailey Bram said. “I remember saying to ( teammate) Sarah ( Davis), when I’m going down to shoot on Shannon I feel like the worst player because she’s so good in the net. You doubt yourself that you’re going to score. She gets in your head before you even shoot.”

Part of that is her resume. Szabados has not only spent her life playing against men, but has excelled against them. She was named the top goalie in the Alberta Junior Hockey League and set the record for shutouts in a season en route to a collegiate championsh­ip.

While most of Team Canada’s members play profession­ally in the Canadian Women’s Hockey League or the National Women’s Hockey League, Szabados followed in Hayley Wickenheis­er’s footsteps by playing in a men’s league. The SPHL might be three rungs below the NHL, but it is still a competitiv­e league, having graduated Chicago Blackhawks goalie Scott Darling.

“My first two years, I had an absolute blast,” Szabados said. “The league was good and I got a lot of playing time and I think I developed a lot as a person and as a goalie there. It was fun. It was just a different style.

“Obviously, guys are built a little bigger and stronger so there was a little bit of a shot difference. But some of the hardest shots here (at the world championsh­ips) are equal to some of the guys. With that aside, it’s more of the way they release the puck on either side. It makes tracking as a goalie harder because it comes off the stick differentl­y.”

Szabados went 15-9-1 with a 3.12 goals- against average in her first full season in Columbus. But she struggled the following year, posting a 5-11- 5 record and a 3.63 goals-against average.

She began this season with the Peoria Rivermen, but was released — along with the team’s other goalie — after the team was outscored 11- 2 in the opening two games.

“I played like 40 minutes,” said Szabados, hinting it was more than just her play that led to the decision. “I think it was probably the coaching. I don’t know what his thought process was, but it didn’t work out for whatever reason.”

Though being released after just one weekend was something Szabados is still struggling to understand, there is a positive to it. For the first time in a while, she’s able to devote her full attention to the women’s program — a fact not lost on her teammates.

“I t ell her every day, ‘ Thank you so much for coming back,’” Agosta said. “When she’s in t he net, there’s not much to worry about.”

(SZABADOS) GETS IN YOUR HEAD BEFORE YOU EVEN SHOOT

 ?? JASON KRYK / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? While most of Team Canada’s players play in pro women’s leagues, Canada goaltender Shannon Szabados has been playing with the men in the Southern Profession­al Hockey League the last two seasons.
JASON KRYK / THE CANADIAN PRESS While most of Team Canada’s players play in pro women’s leagues, Canada goaltender Shannon Szabados has been playing with the men in the Southern Profession­al Hockey League the last two seasons.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada