OTTAWA — Nearly 6,000 miles away from her hometown in Hokkaido, Japan, Akane Shiga was being requested about the climate.
Mike Hirshfeld, normal supervisor of Ottawa’s PWHL workforce, was sitting with Shiga and coach Carla MacLeod in the workforce workplace at TD Place Arena, talking to the 22-year-old ahead and Japanese nationwide workforce member via her interpreter.
“She’s looking at me like, ‘What is he talking about?’” Hirshfeld stated about the playful preamble to an necessary bit of stories forward of the PWHL’s ultimate roster deadline.
Because what Hirshfeld actually needed to know was how Shiga felt about spending the winter in Ottawa, as a member of the latest professional workforce in Canada’s capital.
When he informed Shiga that she’d made the workforce, “her face just lit up,” Hirshfeld stated.
“I feel very honored to be given this opportunity,” Shiga informed The Athletic via her interpreter, Madoka Suzuki.
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The second was the end result of a hockey journey that noticed Shiga journey throughout the world for her probability to play skilled hockey in North America. Despite her credentials — an Olympian and four-time member of Japan’s World Championship workforce — she was not chosen in the 15-round PWHL Draft in September. Unswayed, Shiga flew to Ottawa alone in November, with no assure of a contract, to check out for the workforce.
Her skating means, fast launch and hockey IQ impressed Ottawa’s braintrust and earned Shiga a one-year contract.
Now, she is a historic player in a historic league embarking on a singular path: Shiga is the youngest player in the PWHL and the solely Japanese-born player.
This season Shiga is adjusting to her first 12 months as a skilled hockey player, and concurrently adapting to life in a new nation and studying a new language.
“To know the courage it took for her to fly over here on her own and walk into an environment where she didn’t speak the language and she didn’t know anyone,” MacLeod stated. “To know at that moment that she had gambled on herself and she earned her opportunity — that’s what sport is all about.”
Where Shiga grew up in Hokkaido — the northernmost and second-largest island in Japan — hockey is, at the very least, an possibility. Some may name it Japan’s hockey hotbed, with most of the nationwide workforce gamers coming from the northern area.
“If you want to play hockey, it’s accessible,” Shiga stated via her interpreter. “But it’s not a sport that everyone picks to play like it is in Canada.”
In Tokyo, on the different hand, the place Suzuki — who was employed to function Shiga’s interpreter in November and performs hockey at Carleton University in Ottawa — is from, “you’re kind of a weirdo if you’re playing hockey,” he stated with a giggle.
According to the IIHF, there are just one,281 registered feminine hockey gamers in Japan, with a nationwide inhabitants of about 124 million. There are extra indoor rinks in Canada (2,860) and registered feminine gamers in the state of Florida (1,517).
Shiga, although, discovered hockey skating on an outside rink together with her sister, Aoi, when she was six years previous and she “never looked back.” When she was 13, in 2014, Shiga watched a Japanese ladies’s hockey workforce play at the Olympics for the first time in her life — and for the first time since Japan was the host nation in 1998. “It had a big impact on my career,” she stated.
MacLeod, now Shiga’s coach in Ottawa, was an assistant coach for Japan at the time.
“I know what ’98 meant to me as a young Canadian kid when I saw those women on TV and I knew that that dream could then be mine,” stated MacLeod, who went on to win two Olympic gold medals with Team Canada. “To know that a piece of that moment is within her and helping her to inspire that next group and helping her to achieve her dreams is pretty special.”
Shiga’s dream was realized just one 12 months later when she made the Japanese under-18 workforce for the 2015-16 Division 1 world championships. She was one among the youngest gamers at the match and scored two objectives and 4 factors to lead Japan to a gold medal, and promotion to the prime tier U18 world championships in 2016-17.
“I didn’t think I was ready to make the jump that soon,” Shiga stated. “But I was very excited to get the news.”
She’s been a member of the Japanese nationwide program ever since, enjoying on 4 under-18 groups, 4 senior world championships and qualifying for the 2022 Olympics. In 2019, Shiga made the change from protection to ahead as a result of her coach, Yuji Iizuka thought she might assist present extra offense for the workforce.
And he was proper.
In 2021, Shiga was one among the breakout stars of the ladies’s world championships in Calgary, Alta. She scored the opening objective in opposition to Hungary in a vital 4-1 win for Japan to make it to the quarterfinals. She grew to become the first Japanese player ever to rating in opposition to Team USA — and she did it twice. Then, she scored the game-winning objective in opposition to Czechia to safe Japan’s greatest end (sixth) at ladies’s worlds. Her 4 objectives tied for fifth amongst North American stars like Natalie Spooner and Hilary Knight. It was another than Canada’s Captain Marie-Philip Poulin had in the match.
“She’s a very important part of the team’s success,” Iizuka informed IIHF.com “Our teams have always had trouble scoring, so to find someone who can put the puck in the net is very important.”
After years of including to her popularity as one among the most gifted gamers outdoors North America — together with a journey to the 2022 Beijing Olympics — it was solely pure that Shiga’s identify popped up when the PWHL Ottawa entrance workplace determined to prioritize bringing in worldwide expertise.
“Obviously there’s a natural tether for me to the international game, and I’ve been lucky to see how talented these players are around the world. So for us it was an easy decision to say, Let’s bring in some international players and see how they do,” MacLeod stated. “If they can make it, great. And if they don’t, at least we know that too. But we didn’t want to leave that uncertainty.”
According to Shiga, Ottawa was the solely workforce to name when PWHL free company opened in September.
At coaching camp, Shiga shortly impressed.
“I would say two days in, we knew we had something,” Hirshfeld stated. “Her skating is off the charts. So is her hockey IQ. I remember Claude Julien (the former NHL coach) was here one day and he was like, ‘Who is that?’”
“Her skill with the puck catches everyone’s attention because she can maneuver things in a small space that a lot of people can’t,” MacLeod defined. “The puck comes off her stick faster than you anticipate and with a velocity that you’re not sure where that’s all coming from because she’s such a petite player. And she can do it in a phone booth.”
There was chatter amongst the Ottawa gamers forward of camp about a player from Japan attempting out for the workforce. Some nationwide workforce gamers would have been acquainted with Shiga’s sport from world championships or the Olympics. But others, like defender Zoe Boyd, have been being launched to her for the first time.
She remembers a second early into coaching camp the place Shiga danced round in the offensive zone and despatched a slapshot zinging previous her face, bardown and in.
“Holy crap, this girl is legit,” Boyd thought at the time. “She’s the real deal.”
“Surprised isn’t the right word to describe it,” she defined. “We’re just amazed by Akane, her play, and what an amazing person she is — in spite of not being able to fluently speak English.”
When Madoka Suzuki answered the telephone on a Thursday afternoon, he was in the automobile taking Shiga house from one among their errands.
“Had to do some banking,” he stated. “Applying for credit cards and stuff.”
Bringing Shiga to Ottawa launched the subject of the language barrier. The PWHL has 14 gamers from abroad — hailing from nations comparable to France, Hungary, and Czechia — however most of these gamers communicate no less than some English. Shiga didn’t, so Ottawa knew they’d want an interpreter to make her really feel extra snug and assured at tryouts.
The workforce began with a name to the Japanese Embassy, who supplied a record of names, however these interpreters would value round $300 per hour. “No one can afford that,” Hirshfeld stated, laughing.
The workforce tried calling the universities in the metropolis and related with Stacey Colarossi, the coach of Carleton’s ladies’s hockey workforce, who referred Hirshfeld to Suzuki, a 24-year-old from Japan and a ahead on the males’s hockey workforce.
As it turned out, Suzuki’s sister, Chihiro, performed on the nationwide workforce with Shiga final 12 months and had already alerted her brother that Shiga had made the transfer to Ottawa and may want a pal on the town. So, when Hirshfeld made the name with a job supply, Suzuki shortly accepted.
The day Shiga arrived in Ottawa, Suzuki was at the airport to decide her up and deliver her to the workforce resort. When the workforce skates, Suzuki is on the ice translating directions for drills, or messages from the teaching workers. He attends workforce conferences and video games, too, as his schedule permits. If Suzuki has class — he’s a psychology main at Carleton — or is on the street together with his hockey workforce, he’ll be a part of conferences or interviews over the telephone.
“He understands the teachings from the coaching side and obviously as he’s translating, is giving her information that’s helping her grow and fit within the team side of things,” MacLeod stated. “He’s really invaluable when it comes to Akane and Akane feeling included.”
“We love having Madoka around,” stated defender Jincy Roese (née Dunne). “I feel like he’s just one of the girls — as much part of this team as any one of us.”
Suzuki’s work with Shiga goes past the rink. After Shiga made the Ottawa workforce, she had to fly to Hungary to play in the 4 Nations match for Team Japan. While she was there, Suzuki discovered a realtor to begin on the lookout for residences for Shiga and bought all the paperwork carried out in order that when she returned they might discover her a place to stay as shortly as doable. He’ll take her to the financial institution to get an account or bank card arrange, or to Ikea to purchase furnishings, or to get meals at a restaurant or grocery retailer.
“A lot of the ‘work’ I’m doing is more as a friend than anything,” he stated. “She’s made it super easy on me too. She’s very enjoyable to work with.”
Suzuki moved to Canada from Japan together with his mother and sister in 2014, when he was 14 years previous. He spoke English and had household with him, however he nonetheless remembers the troublesome adjustment to a new place and new tradition.
“I’m glad I could help her out this way, because otherwise it’s quite the journey to get your feet going up here,” he stated.
Shiga has been utilizing the Duolingo app to be taught English. Her teammates have been serving to her be taught, too. Suzuki will typically step again and simply let Shiga attempt to speak without having the translation. If he’s not round, teammates will use Google Translate if Shiga wants assist.
“She’s really quiet right now, but that’s to be expected,” stated Roese. “But you see it there, she’ll speak a little more, she’ll get a little more involved in conversation. You can tell she’s starting to follow along more.”
Roese has discovered some Japanese to assist break the language barrier the place she will be able to. And MacLeod nonetheless is aware of a few phrases from her time as an assistant coach with Team Japan.
“I know the word ‘koko’ (which means here in Japanese), or I know the word hurry or no hesitation,” she stated. “There’s certainly something small, small nuggets that obviously I was fortunate enough to pick up when I worked with them for two years. Not enough to actually be smart, but enough to maybe help in moments.”
Shiga’s teammates “love her,” Hirshfeld stated. And a number of have taken her below their wing to make her really feel snug and included on the workforce.
Boyd and her roommate Kristin Della Rovere will drive Shiga house from the rink, or take her to a teammate’s home if there’s a get-together. They’ve gone for bubble tea and have promised to have Shiga over as soon as she’s settled in so she will be able to see Boyd’s cat, Sam.
Shiga loves cats and has two again house in Japan named Pickle and Churro. “I miss the cats more than anyone,” she stated with a giggle.
“I can’t imagine what it must be like to come to a country where nobody speaks your language,” Boyd stated. “So naturally I just wanted to make sure that she understands things — like everybody did.
“But Akane is hilarious. Even though she can’t speak English very well, she still makes the funniest jokes and gets her point across. It’s been a pleasure to hang out with her and be a teammate with her.”
On the ice, Shiga is nonetheless adjusting to her first skilled season. Through six video games, Shiga hasn’t registered a level but, however no person in Ottawa is the scoresheet.
“We’re not even worrying about that,” stated Hirshfeld. “She’s getting used to the speed and physicality of this league, but I know she’s got the hockey IQ to work through it. She’s a great skater, which I think is a great advantage in this league. We’re very optimistic.”
Shiga has impressed in video games together with her skating and palms in tight with the puck. MacLeod says she works onerous in follow and has already seen Shiga’s sport develop in Ottawa. It looks like solely a matter of time earlier than she scores her first PWHL objective.
“I’ve never seen somebody that can rip the puck like she can,” Roese stated. “Just bardown from anywhere.”
Shiga is additionally one among the hottest gamers in Ottawa. “I think she got the second loudest cheer after (Brianne) Jenner,” MacLeod stated about the home-opener intros.
The Ambassador of Japan to Canada attended Ottawa’s house opener. There have been a number of Shiga indicators noticed in the stands, and loads of fan mail despatched to her house — one thing Shiga says began after she performed in the Olympics.
“She’s 22 years old,” MacLeod stated. “Think of all the variables: youngest in the league, playing in a country, in a league that’s not native tongue to her, and she just keeps rising. What an incredible human being.”
Shiga hopes her sister, a 24-year-old defender enjoying in Switzerland, can be a part of the league subsequent season. The two have been signed to play along with the Buffalo Beauts in the PHF earlier than the league folded final season. More than something, she hopes extra gamers from Japan can observe in her footsteps.
“To be able to pave the path for younger players and give them someone to look up to — to say, you can be from Japan and play hockey — is a huge honor,” she stated. “And I’m just very excited for what the future holds.”
(Illustration: John Bradford / The Athletic; Photos: Courtesy of Madoka Suzuki; Minas Panagiotakis / Getty Images)
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