Ditidaht First Nation hockey player's Harvard Crimson career on hold due to COVID-19 - Action News
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British Columbia

Ditidaht First Nation hockey player's Harvard Crimson career on hold due to COVID-19

Maryna Macdonald, originally from Bamfield, B.C., may not be able to return to Boston this year but she is able to spend time in Port Alberni, where she herself first skated on real ice, teaching other island girls the love of the game.

Maryna Macdonald is using this time to teach other Vancouver Island girls the game

Maryna Macdonald, a defensive player from Bamfield, B.C., played in all 33 games the Harvard Crimson suited up for last year. (Gil Talbot/Harvard Athletics)

Harvard Crimson defensive hockey player Maryna Macdonald had never even skatedon real ice before she developed a deep love for the game.

Macdonald, a member of theDitidaht First Nation, grew up in Bamfield, B.C., a remote community on the west coast of Vancouver Island, until she was eight. There was no recreation centre or ice rink, but Macdonald logged a lot of hours playing road hockeyand when her family decided tomoveto Port Alberni, she was ready for the real thing.

A little over a decade later, and Macdonald hadtwo seasons at Harvardunder her belt and her eyes set on making it pro.

Then the pandemic hit.

Unable to travel to Boston, Macdonald is in Port Alberni waiting to hear if the season will start up in January. In the meantime, she will be coaching young players at local hockey camps, including two girls Macdonald says have never played the sport before.

Maryna Macdonald would be starting her junior year on campus at Harvard College in Boston this September if not for the COVID-19 pandemic. (Facebook/Maryna Macdonald)

"I still vividly remember that first practice. The feeling I got the first time I stepped on that ice I had finally made it," Macdonald said Monday on The Early Edition.

Macdonald, chuckling at the memory of her younger self, said she probably took to the ice that first time withoversized gear and dull skates and without any sense of balance on her blades. What she did havewas a dream.

Her cousin,Connor Logan, older by four years, had been her inspiration at a young age. Logan, who now plays hockeyfor the University of Windsor, had played alongside Macdonald in the driveway and went on before her to play in organized leagues.

She said travelling with her family to rinks around Vancouver Island to watch Logan play made her realize she wanted to do the same.

"The energy in the rink drew me there," said Macdonald.If nothing else, she said, travelling out of Bamfield seemed like a good enough reason to play league hockey. That and the concession food.

By her second year of playing, Macdonald had set her sights on joining rep teams, and by the time she was in Grade 10, according to The Harvard Gazette, she had already been scouted bythe ivy league school.

"Growing up in Port, Iloving going to the rink everyday, I didn't aspire to go to Harvard growing up, I just played for the fun of it," she said.

And while she is hoping to pass on that passion forplay to the kids she will becoaching this year, Macdonald also said it made a difference to her when she was young and first encountered female coaches at camps who had played professionally or for college teams.

"That changed my whole outlook," said Macdonald, who is excited to foster female talent in Port Alberni and showcase what opportunities may be out there for young island girls even if they haven't set foot on the ice yet.

To hear Maryna Macdonald speak with Stephen Quinn, host ofThe Early Edition, tap here.

With files from The Early Edition