'Electric' atmosphere as Sudbury sees first all-girls football game - Action News
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Sudbury

'Electric' atmosphere as Sudbury sees first all-girls football game

Football fans in Sudbury got their first look at St. Benedict Secondary Schools all-girls team Wednesday afternoon, as the Bears hosted St. Mark Catholic School from Ottawa.

St. Ben's Bears play hard in 17-14 loss to Ottawa's St. Mark Lions

Players with St. Benedict Secondary School's all-girls tackle football team pose before Wednesday's game in Sudbury, Ont., against St. Mark Catholic School of Ottawa. (Instagram:@stbensud)

Football fans in Sudbury got their first look at St. Benedict Secondary School's all-girls team Wednesday afternoon, as the Bears hosted St. Mark Catholic Schoolfrom Ottawa.

Organizers for the game are claiming it wasthe first official all-girls tackle football game in Canada.

Although the Bears lost 17-14 to the Lions, St. Ben's student Jasmine Howell said the feeling on the field was "truly electric" as the team made history by being the first girls'varsity tackle football team in Sudbury.

"Even though we did lose, to me and all the other girls, it didn't feel like a loss," Howell said. "We were a part of something so much bigger than ourselves and kind of paving the way for other girls in women's sports."

Howell, who'sfinishingGrade 12, said she embraced the role of mentor to the school's younger athletes.

"I wanted to make football maybe less scary for the younger girls, kind of be a little bit of a role model," she said. "I also wanted to get out there and hit somebody, get up there and make contact just like the boys."

Although several high school teams in the region have fielded flag football teams, the Bears managed to put together a roster for the full-contact version of the game.

The risk of injury, and the thought of bruising physical contact, didn't phase Howell. Coach Junior Labrosse said despite its reputation for hard-hitting play, proper teaching and coaching have made the sport relatively on par with other sports, as far as injuries are concerned.

"The way that football is taught today is nothing like it was taught when I played," Labrosse said. "There's safe contact, heads-up football, they call it. We try to take the element of the injury out of it, but a girl or a boy can get hurt playing soccer.

"The biggest thing I think is we need to get young people moving, especially when they see an obesity problem," he said. "The only way to get rid of it is to get kids active."

As for the future of the girls' team, Howell said she's certain Wednesday's game made a positive impact on the student body, and on girls, especially.

Coach Junior Labrosse says Wednesday's game between St. Ben's and St. Mark Catholic School gave the girls 'lasting memories. They will never forget this game. They'll be telling it to their kids, their grandkids.' (Instagram:@stbensud)

"This was so important to me," Howell said. "It taught me a lot about leadership. It taught me a lot about teamwork.

"I think it's such a unique sport and seeing how it works, like a well-oiled machine. Everybody's doing their part. Everybody has a specific job that they need to be doing."

"It all brought us together," she added. "I didn't have a lot in common with some of the girls when we started, but we had football in common, and it really created a sisterhood."