Monday, October 20, 2014

A not-so Golden moment for WLU Hawks alumna



Occasionally even the good girls get written up.

Prior to a two-year playing career at Wilfrid Laurier University, Kristen Lipscombe was a midget champion with her hometown Kingston Kodiaks, and arguably one of the best two female youth defencemen in her region, in the late 90’s.

The prototypical girl next door who rarely – if ever – got into trouble as a kid, she earned a 92% average at Kingston Collegiate and Vocational Institute, winning a pair of hockey scholarships to attend her eventual alma mater.

If you have ever been charmed by the warmth and congeniality of the former Hockey Canada coordinator of media relations, you might be surprised to hear that her collegiate stint with the Lady Golden Hawks inauspiciously started with – a suspension.

Really Lippy, you’d ask her if you called her by her popular nickname. How does that happen?

A physical rearguard who prided herself on a style of play that was rugged, but not dirty, Lipscombe got a bit overzealous in protecting her goaltender in an exhibition game, at least in the eyes of the referee.

“I was the last man back, I chased a player into the corner and there was another opponent in front of the net,” she remembers of the game against Brock University. “Somebody was going to take a shot from the point. So I had to rush from the corner to the front of the net, and push that player so that our goalie could see the shot. But I pushed her from the wrong angle, used a little bit too much body, and I ended up getting called for hitting from behind.

I had never gotten that before, and I remember in that moment I felt pretty guilty. But afterwards, when my coach Bill Bowker reassured me that I had made the right move, it became a funny story.”

Had the whistled infraction occurred within the first fifty minutes of the game, the worst indignity would have been an ejection and an early shower. But based on Rule 6I of the OUA rulebook, any player receiving a game misconduct in the last ten minutes of the third period means a trip to the woodshed.

So, instead of joining her teammates on the Waterloo Arena ice on November 3, 1999 versus Toronto to make her scheduled rookie debut, she was on the outside looking in, watching the game in street clothes instead of donning the purple and gold colours of her team.

“My coach told me that I made the right call, so I didn’t feel bad or apologetic. I felt I was doing my job as a stay-at-home defenceman,” she reflected from her home in Halifax where she now works as a sportswriter for Metro News. “If I had to sit out a little bit to do my job, I had no problem with that. At that point I was just happy to make the team. My coaches believed in me, so I felt fine about it.”

The first time offender missed just the one game. And while the classy lady would never be confused for a Lady Byng winner, the disciplinary action arising from that trip to St. Catharines was a blip on the radar.

For two seasons, Lipscombe was a mainstay on the Lady Hawks blueline, becoming a CIAU (now CIS) Academic All-Star. Laurier finished third and second respectively in Ontario over that two-year stretch. Most of the gamesheet entries in Lippy’s name were in the penalties column, but she made the most of her only career goal, a game-winner against Guelph that earned her a well-deserved celebratory water bucket dousing from her teammates.

And despite the occasional roughing and tripping calls that resulted in two-minute visits to the sin bin, Lippy never received another major penalty or suspension. After she hung up her skates, she worked media relations for the Golden Hawks for one year, a season that saw Laurier crowned as OUA champions in 2001-02, coming within one game of a CIS title. That edition of the team is enshrined into the school’s athletic hall of fame.

Reminiscing on her Hawks days fifteen years later, Lipscombe has no regrets about the suspension, shrugging it off as part what she was tasked to do to help prevent goals. However, she does wish she could change one thing: the removal of her first-year photo that still exists on the university’s athletic website, even a decade and a half after the fact, would make her very happy.

“I’ve always been a smart player, and if the result is one suspension in my lifetime, I can handle that,” she said. “But I don’t like clicking Google images and seeing that picture. That was the first year we were doing headshots, and I was laughing as it was taken. I haven’t liked that photo since day one, and I’ve asked them to take it down several times with no luck!”


(Official gamesheet from Nov. 3, 1999: WLU vs. Toronto.  Checking from behind - that's a paddlin')



(Here's how a rookie card for Lippy might look. I won't actually post the photo that she doesn't like, lest I feel the wrath of her hockey stick!)