Waikato Herald

Cool opportunit­y for Anjali

Ice skater heading for world champs in South Africa

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Hamilton police fingerprin­t officer trainee Anjali Mulari (nee Thakker), 29, is taking on the world on ice skates, having been selected to represent New Zealand at the ice hockey world championsh­ips in South Africa this month.

Anjali has been playing ice hockey since she was 16 and already attended eight world championsh­ip tournament­s.

Together with the Ice Ferns, she will play in the IIHF (Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation) Women’s World Ice Hockey Championsh­ips Div IIB 2023 against Australia, Turkey, South Africa, Belgium and Croatia.

Anjali, a Hamilton local, started playing inline hockey for the Hamilton Devils in 2005. Moving to ice hockey meant travelling to Auckland each week for training and games.

She made her World Champs debut with the Ice Fernz in Iceland in 2011 and won the Best Player for New Zealand award in 2016 and Best forward of the IIHF World Championsh­ip Div IIB in 2017.

“I love the creativity and pace in ice and inline hockey. They are both fast sports that get the adrenaline pumping.”

In 2019, Anjali put her hockey career on ice for a few years to start a family with her husband Setti, whom she met - where else - at a hockey rink.

They have two kids, a three-yearold daughter, Maija, and a one-yearold son Mikko.

“I’ve just returned from a five-day training camp with the team in Dunedin.

It’s tough coming back after two kids but I’m determined to get back to where I was.”

Anjali is a true wahine toa: Apart from acing it on the ice and being a mum-of-two, she has a busy career with the New Zealand police, currently training to become a fingerprin­t officer.

She says: “I am in year two of five. I am based at Hamilton Central Police Station and I absolutely love my job.”

Anjali started with the police in 2016 as an emergency communicat­or answering 111 calls at the Northern Emergency Communicat­ions Centre

while completing a postgradua­te diploma in Forensic Science.

“An opportunit­y came up at Midlands Forensic Fingerprin­t Services while I was on parental leave with my first baby.” She applied and got the job. Anjali admits that it’s tough to balance work, study, family and

hockey.

“But I wouldn’t have it any other way.”

She says her husband’s support

allowed her to keep up with the training schedule.

“Setti is taking on all of the responsibi­lities at home while I train and travel away.”

To find out more about Anjali visit her website. The Ice Fernz will depart for South Africa on February 13. New Zealand’s world ranking in ice hockey has fluctuated between 24 and 31.

Ice hockey is a minor sport in New Zealand and is self-funded. However, the sport has been played in New Zealand since 1937 when a tournament was held at Opawa in South Canterbury.

To find out more about ice hockey in New Zealand visit the website of the New Zealand Ice Hockey Federation.

 ?? Photos / Supplied ?? Anjali in her New Zealand ice hockey jersey and at work with colleague and mentor Prem Singh.
Photos / Supplied Anjali in her New Zealand ice hockey jersey and at work with colleague and mentor Prem Singh.
 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Anjali Mulari in action.
Photo / Supplied Anjali Mulari in action.

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