CBC Edition

'Everyone looks forward to this': fans, players fill rinks for Indigenous minor hockey tournament in Winnipeg

- Arturo Chang

Thousands of hockey play‐ ers and their supporters were in Winnipeg for the 34th Manitoba Indigenous Cultural Education Centre (MICEC) minor hockey tour‐ nament.

Sixty-eight teams from In‐ digenous communitie­s all across the province showed up to the Hockey for All Cen‐ tre for the three-day tourna‐ ment, which wraps up on Sunday.

Dennis Daniels, MICEC's executive director, says this year's event is bigger than the last, as the tournament continues to build back up attendance to pre-pandemic levels.

"It develops a lot of stuff for the younger kids in the way of self-esteem, self-con‐ sciousness, self-worth," Daniels said.

"I saw a lot of kids going on to better things and they with careers and all that.… Some of them even made it into AAA hockey and junior hockey and some of them even made it to the NHL."

It was hard to move around the packed arena at noon on Sunday as fans came to cheer for their teams.

On one rink, the Minegozi‐ ibe Warriors faced the Nor‐ way House North Stars' green team in the semi-finals of the U9 bracket.

"A goal was just scored for our team here, and then they scored a goal on us, and we scored another goal," said Minegoziib­e coach Harley Chartrand during the first couple minutes of the first period.

"Everybody was cheering and the fans are quite into it."

Chartrand said he played in the tournament himself two decades ago, so he knows what that feels like for his kids now.

"They're feeling pretty good you know. It builds a sense of community for our players to be here playing," he said.

"It's a good thing for us, right? It's something for them to look up to and it's memo‐ ries being made every time we're out here."

'Playing with new kids' Just before the Warriors and the North Stars took the ice, organizers were handing out participat­ion medals to U7 players from the Fisher River Hawks and Cross Lake Islanders.

Jeremy Wilson from Fisher River Cree Nation was there to support his daughter, Adaleith.

"It feels good to see my daughter be playing and learning more and playing with new kids. Yeah, she en‐ joys it, too. One of her favourite activities."

When asked what she likes most about it, six-yearold Adaleith - with some parental coaching - said one thing: "Scoring."

Across the arena on a dif‐ ferent rink, one of Cross Lake's U18 teams faced off against the Peguis Warriors White. Cross Lake had a com‐ manding 2-0 lead, but Peguis managed to tie it in the third period.

Goalie Clinton Agecoutay, 15, said this was his first hockey tournament in Win‐ nipeg, and that he was hav‐ ing fun even if he didn't have any time on the ice yet.

Agecoutay said his team would feel good about being there "win or lose anyway."

"My mom and my dad's here, and most of my friends from Cross Lake support us playing," he said.

"It's a ghost town back home right now," said Ursula

Ross.

"This is our last tourna‐ ment of the year and every‐ body comes out and every‐ body comes to watch and play ... everyone looks for‐ ward to this."

'These boys don't have enough ice time'

Ross was having a busy weekend, being on the coaching staff for more than a dozen teams from Cross Lake.

Two of her children were playing Sunday noon. Her daughter was also competing at the Stars Cup in the East End Arena this weekend, so she also had to make her way there after the game.

"There's not that many tournament­s up north … These boys don't have enough ice time, so they're doing a good job now be‐ cause they're so eager to play," Ross said.

"It's exciting. I've always followed them from squirts to midgets. It's not just them I look after: I also look after 40 other boys, and all these kids."

The tournament is spon‐ sored by CBC.

Anna Parenteau, MICEC operations manager, said it feels nice to see all the youth having a good time.

The kids "are going home with memories that are going to last them a lifetime," she said.

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