Ottawa Citizen

Gosling cousins set to don Canada jerseys this week

NCAA competitor­s will be teammates as women's world championsh­ip begins

- DONNA SPENCER

Julia and Nicole Gosling like playing with each other a lot more than playing against each other.

The cousins from London, Ont., have done both in their hockey careers. They've gone head to head in high school and college.

Since winning a 2019 provincial club title together with the London Devilettes, the national women's program has occasional­ly reunited them.

Julia, a forward, and Nicole, a defender, will make their world championsh­ip debuts together in Utica, N.Y., where the Canadian team opens the 10-country tournament Thursday against Finland.

“It's pretty rare to do something this extravagan­t with your cousin,” said Julia, 23. “I'm super proud of her and where we've come from. It's also realizing how good we've got together even just playing with each other and against each other.”

“To do it together too is special, more so beyond us,” said Nicole, 21. “It's special for our families to be able to see both of us make it at this level.”

The Goslings are coming off their senior years with their respective NCCA teams. Nicole and Clarkson were ousted in the women's Frozen Four semifinal by eventual champion Ohio State, while Julia captained St. Lawrence to the final eight. Clarkson and St. Lawrence are in the same conference, which meant Julia trying to beat her cousin to the net and Nicole trying to stop her.

“I'd rather her be on my team than playing against her for sure,” Nicole said. “It's hard. She's a big presence out there. She has a good shot, good hands, so you know she's going to be a threat offensivel­y. As a defenceman, I've got to be aware that she's on the ice and try and shut her down.”

“She's good at that,” Julia chimed in. “I don't think I got around her this year at all. Her gap is really good. It's hard to beat her on any move because she's right there and she can block shots too.

“She's always ready for the rush. In the offensive zone, she has a really good shot. She ended up scoring all the time against us.

“It makes me proud being her cousin even though it sucked getting scored against. Definitely wished she was on my team instead.”

Their fathers and twin brothers Paul and Peter, who didn't play hockey but are University of Windsor football alumni, also prefer their daughters on the same side.

“We're very fortunate, Peter and I,” said Paul, who is Julia's dad. “It's always great sharing the game, sharing the pre-game nerves, the excitement of the game itself and talking about it afterwards.”

Nicole's father, Peter, admits feeling torn when his daughter and niece squared off against each other in college.

“It's not fun. Well, it is fun. You want to see who is going to win this battle on this shift,” Peter said. “To me, it was stressful because both want to do well.

“It was always not the best time in the schedule, but at least now we're rooting for both girls. You just hope they do their part defensivel­y and offensivel­y to be successful for Canada.”

Paul believes the cousins elevate each other's game.

“If one scores, the other one wants to score,” he said. “Watching them play together, they've got a connection. They have a chemistry. Don't know if it's just the Gosling in them or what, but they just know how to find each other.”

Julia and Nicole were teammates on the Canadian team that won gold in the 2019 women's world under-18 hockey championsh­ip.

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