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Experiencing a Dream: British Columbia's Maggie Shykula-Ross on How Hockey Canada Helped Turn Her National Championship Hockey Dream Into Reality

Kristen Lipscombe
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U18.002.11
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October 31, 2011
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When Maggie Shykula-Ross pulls that blue, red and white British Columbia jersey over her head and steps onto the ice in Saguenay, Que., this month, she’ll truly be “experiencing a dream.”

But while this may be the 17-year-old forward’s first time representing her province in women’s hockey, it won’t be her first time feeling the thrill of skating in front of an enthusiastic crowd, and even accepting a medal, at the National Women’s Under-18 Championship.

That’s because six years ago, at age 11, Maggie was chosen to take part in Hockey Canada’s Experience A Dream program, which gave her and a small handful of other lucky young girls the chance to become an official member of one of eight teams competing for gold at the 2005 National Women’s Under-18 Championship in her hometown, Salmon Arm, B.C.

“I got to go on the ice for the opening ceremonies,” Maggie recalls of those special moments she spent as a Peewee player in November 2005, learning from the older girls on Québec’s team, whether she was warming up with them before games or filling their water bottles for the bench. “They (even) gave me a medal.”

Québec claimed silver that year, which meant Maggie ended up in the midst of the medal ceremony, simultaneously witnessing a tough defeat for her team and a satisfying victory for Ontario Red. Win or lose, she experienced a small piece of what it would be like to play in the final game of a national championship.

“I remember wishing that I was on the team, and wanting to be able to play at that level,” Maggie said. “It showed me how hard you have to work – it doesn’t come as easy as they make it look.”

With memories from Experience A Dream never far from her mind, hard work is exactly what Maggie has put into her hockey game ever since, and it paid off earlier this season, when she found out she had cracked British Columbia’s lineup for the 2011 National Women’s Under-18 Championship.

“It was a pretty proud moment … when they made the announcement,” father Brent Ross said of the important milestone in Maggie’s blossoming hockey career. “I don’t think I’ve seen a bigger smile, (as) someone ran across the parking lot to the truck, to tell us that she’d made the team.”

The fact that this year’s tournament takes place in Quebec holds special meaning for Maggie, considering it was players on that team who opened up both their dressing room, and their hearts, to her six years ago.

“We had interviews and they asked me how my French was – that’s how they told me!” Maggie said with a chuckle of finding out she was headed for Saguenay, in a province she’s never before seen but has always wanted to visit. “It’s really ironic that it’s in Quebec.”

Brent, who coached his daughter up until Peewee, said Maggie’s opportunity to Experience A Dream with Quebec at the 2005 National Women’s Under-18 Championship has helped her dream big and make those dreams come true – including representing B.C. in Saguenay.

“It was a positive role model experience,” he said. “It was inspiring for her to see what these girls could do, not only with their sport, but with their education – they can do anything they want to do.”

With continued “hard work and determination,” so too can Maggie and her fellow participants at this year’s tournament, he emphasized.

“One of my goals is to do well and help Team B.C. with its performance,” Maggie said of her short-term goals for this year’s national championship. “I’m hoping to play well, so maybe it will lead to scholarship opportunities.”

Looking further down the road, Maggie hopes to play university hockey while earning a kinesiology degree, eventually study sports medicine and perhaps one day even pull a red and white jersey over her head. “Representing your country, not only your province but your country, would be unreal.”

As lofty as that Team Canada goal might seem, one of the most important lessons she learned while “experiencing a dream” with Québec six years ago, and one she plans to pass on to the young girls who “experience a dream” with Maggie and her teammates on British Columbia this year, is “if you want something, go for it.”

“Set your goals as high as you want, because you can reach them,” she said. “Anything is possible, especially if you have a passion for it.”

For more information on the Experience A Dream program at the 2011 National Women’s Under-18 Championship, please contact Trina Radcliffe, Hockey Canada’s manager of female development, at tradcliffe@hockeycanada.ca.

For more information:

Esther Madziya
Manager, Communications
Hockey Canada

(403) 284-6484 

emadziya@hockeycanada.ca 

Spencer Sharkey
Manager, Communications
Hockey Canada

(403) 777-4567

ssharkey@hockeycanada.ca

Jeremy Knight
Manager, Corporate Communications
Hockey Canada

(647) 251-9738

jknight@hockeycanada.ca

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