100.1 GO FM - We're Your Feel Good Pop Station

Canada Winter Games: NWT hockey girls defeat Yukon

Team NWT’s female hockey players defeated their Yukon counterparts as the round-robin stage at the Canada Winter Games concluded on Monday.

NWT beat the Yukon 7-2, Aklavik’s Davina McLeod scoring twice alongside goals from Sarah Fleming (Yellowknife), Teala Gonzalez (Yellowknife), Dakota Earle (Yellowknife), Bryn Hill (Hay River) and Shannon Baetz (Inuvik).

Goaltender Emily Paddock (Yellowknife) faced 15 shots.

Both teams had earlier lost heavily at the hands of New Brunswick and Newfoundland.

New Brunswick beat the NWT 14-0 on Saturday, then the territory lost 7-0 to Newfoundland a day later. The Yukon has scored one and conceded 28 in games against the two provinces.

NWT coach Allison Kincaid, speaking to Moose FM from Prince George before the game, had said her team was “pumped up” to face the Yukon.

Download: NWT 7-2 Yukon full gamesheet (pdf)

Photos: Team NWT at the Canada Winter Games opening ceremony

Kincaid described how the coaching staff worked hard to pick up the team following Saturday’s opening double-digit defeat by New Brunswick.

“The girls were very nervous. For many of them it’s their first time at an event of this magnitude,” she said.

“We likened that game to getting punched in the face and knocked down, but the nice thing was they all got back up. We got hit as hard as we’re going to get hit at this tournament and we’re all still standing, so let’s come back from that, and use that anger, disappointment and frustration to make us better in the next game.

“Against Newfoundland the girls played phenomenal, they played a much, much better game all over the ice. We made some changes and it worked very well, the girls responded very well and played a much more solid game.

“We had a few lapses, which we’re working on correcting, but the third period was our best by far. We dominated the third period. We left the third period tied 0-0 and we outshot them in the third, which was something we really wanted to achieve.”

Schedule and results: Team NWT at the Canada Winter Games

Live webcasts: Canada Games TV

Classification matches follow the round-robin stage, where it’s likely the NWT and Yukon teams will meet again.

Elsewhere at the weekend, Fort Simpson’s Madison Pilling reached the semi-finals of the women’s 1500m short track speed skating event, placing 18th overall with Lauren Eggenberger 25th, Ali Fleming 28th, Kristin Chapman 32nd and Camille Rourke 40th.

In the men’s 1500m, Alex Robertson placed 32nd and Jack Christie 48th.

Andrew Lirette, the Hay River biathlete who carried the NWT flag at Friday’s opening ceremony, came 16th in a 42-man field in his opening event, the 15km individual race on Sunday. Kjel Crook and Clell Crook finished 40th and 41st respectively.

The territory’s male curlers lost their two opening games, going down 11-5 to Newfoundland and Labrador before a 10-2 defeat at the hands of Manitoba.

Ollie Williams
Ollie Williams
Hello! I'm the one with the British accent. Thanks for supporting CJCD. To contact me, you can email me, find me on Twitter or call (867) 920-4663.

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Mourning the loss of Elder Angelina “Angie” Hazel Crerar

Elder Angelina “Angie” Hazel Crerar, a respected Métis leader and community advocate was born in Fort Resolution, N.W.T., on July 3, 1936, and died on Jan. 9, 2026, at age 89. She moved to Grande Prairie in 1966 with her children. Shannon Dunfield, a longtime friend, said Crerar took many people under her wing and was widely respected. “She was well known in a lot of places because of who she was,” Dunfield said. “Her loss is being felt all over.”

Wekweètì under precautionary boil water advisory

The GNWT’s Chief Environmental Health Officer has issued a boil water advisory for the community of Wekweètì following "freezing damage" to the water treatment plant. “This advisory is precautionary in nature and is due to freezing damage to infrastructure in the community water treatment plant associated with an extended recent power outage. The treatment plant currently cannot properly treat the water,” read a statement released on behalf of Dr. Chirag Rohit this afternoon.

Power fully restored to community of Wekweètì

Power has now been fully restored to the community of Wekweeti following an outage that began yesterday afternoon. This morning, Vic Barr, Manager, Naka Power Utilities reported electricity had been restored to about approximately 75 per cent of the community. Barr said the outage was caused by a mechanical issue with two of the community’s three generation units. Crews remain on site and are working to restore full power. Temperatures in the region are currently in the minus 35 zone.

GNWT launches AI scribe pilot for health-care providers

The Government of the Northwest Territories has launched a one-year pilot program using Mika AI Scribe to help health-care providers with note taking and record keeping.

Chief Envrnmt Officer says it’s beyond “one single issue” or “single situation”

Chief Environmental Health Officer Chirag Rohit says the growing list of active water advisories in the NWT, with the latest one active in Wrigley, are caused by a host of issues, including aging infrastructure and climate change. “These are not related to one single issue or one single situation,” says the Chief Environmental Health Officer.