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Jenn Wakefield
Jenn Wakefield
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Jennifer Dorothy June Wakefield (born June 15, 1989) is a Canadian ice hockey player and coach, currently playing in the Swedish Women's Hockey League (SDHL) with MoDo Hockey Dam. She has served as an assistant coach to the Netherlands' women's national ice hockey team and the women's representative team of Almtuna IS in the Damettan. As a member of the Canadian national ice hockey team, she was a substitute for the roster that participated in 2010 Winter Olympics and played on the gold-medal winning team at the 2014 Winter Olympics, and the silver-medal winning team at the 2018 Winter Olympics.

Key Information

Playing career

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Junior years

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Wakefield won a gold medal with Team Ontario at the 2007 Canada Winter Games. She led the tournament in scoring with twenty points (twelve goals and eight assists). In a game versus Newfoundland at the Canada Winter Games (March 5, 2007), Wakefield was on a line with Mallory Deluce and Rebecca Johnston. The three combined for 12 points in a 19–0 victory.[1] She won a silver medal at the Ontario Women's Hockey Association provincial championships in 2006 with the Durham West Jr. Lightning of the PWHL. Wakefield played for Team Ontario Red at the 2005 National Women's Under-18 Championship and was part of the gold medal winning team.[2]

CWHL

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Wakefield played one season (2009–10) for the Vaughan Flames in the Canadian Women's Hockey League. Returning to the CWHL after graduating from Boston University, she would be the 12th overall selection by the Toronto Furies in the 2012 CWHL Draft. Wakefield made her CWHL debut on October 20, 2012, a 4–3 win at Brampton.[3] The following day, she scored the first two goals of her CWHL career. Assisted by Chaterine White, said goal was scored against Florence Schelling, who was in her CWHL debut.[4] In the third period, she would score her second goal of the game, assisted by Jenny Brine and Shannon Moulson. In addition, Wakefield was recognized as the Second Star of the Game. Her performance against Brampton marked the start of a five-game scoring streak, which culminated on November 18, 2012, versus Team Alberta.

In the aftermath of a 4–3 home loss against the Boston Blades on October 27, 2012, Wakefield was named Third Star of the Game, having scored a pair of goals in the third period.[5]

The first game-winning goal of her CWHL career was scored on November 24, 2012, a road contest against the Montreal Stars. Said goal was scored against Charline Labonté.[6] On January 12, 2013, Wakefield recorded her first career hat trick in CWHL play, including the game-winning goal, recording the feat against Brampton Thunder goaltender Liz Knox.[7]

Hockey Canada

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After being cut from the Olympic team in December 2009 due to a broken hand, Wakefield played for the Canadian Under 22 team that participated in the MLP Cup in 2010. She scored a goal in the Gold Medal win over Switzerland that was played on January 9, 2010.[8] She played in the 2014 Winter Olympics for Canada.[9]

NCAA

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University of New Hampshire

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Her freshman year was in 2007–08. Wakefield finished second in New Hampshire scoring, but led all New Hampshire freshmen in scoring. She helped New Hampshire reach the NCAA Frozen Four.[10] As a sophomore, Wakefield led New Hampshire in scoring. In addition, Wakefield led the Wildcats with 13 power play goals, four shorthanded goals and nine game-winning goals.

Boston University

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  • In January 2010, it was announced that Wakefield will play for the Boston University Terriers women's ice hockey program.[11]
  • December 7 and 10: In wins over Northeastern and Harvard, Wakefield recorded four points (2g, 2a) in wins over Northeastern and Harvard. On December 7, Wakefield had one goal and two assists as the Terriers defeated the Huskies by a 3–0 mark. She recorded 13 shots on goal in the two games.
  • In December 2010, Wakefield recorded seven points in just three games. She was part of the Terriers earning back-to-back Hockey East shutouts with three points, including a power-play and game-winning goal, in a 4–0 win against the Connecticut Huskies. In a 3–0 triumph over Northeastern, Wakefield scored a goal (in which she launched a game-high 11 shots). In the month's final game, Wakefield netted a goal and two assists as the Terriers defeated the Harvard Crimson for the first time in program history.[12]
  • On January 15 and 16, 2011, Wakefield recorded three goals and three assists in games against Boston College and Maine. In the win against Boston College, she had a four-point effort (2 goals, 2 assists) as she was part of all four points in a 4–0 win over the Eagles[13]
  • March 12, 2011: Wakefield scored two goals, including an empty net goal with twelve seconds left, as BU defeated Mercyhurst in the NCAA regional playoff.[14]
  • May 7, 2011: Wakefield was named captain of the Terriers for the 2011–12 season.[15]
  • November 2, 2011: In a 4–1 defeat of rival Boston College, Wakefield scored her 100th career goal. With the accomplishment, she became the first Hockey East women's player to reach the 100 goal mark. Wakefield scored 59 goals in two seasons at New Hampshire (59 goals) before transferring to Boston University, where she netted 41 goals to reach the milestone.[16]

Sweden

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  • In the 2013–14 season, she played with Munksund-Skuthamn SK in the Swedish Women's Hockey League (SDHL).
  • In 2014–15, she played with Linköping HC Dam in the SDHL and IK Guts in the men's Hockeytvåan.
  • In 2015–16, she continued with Linköping HC of the SDHL and played with Borås HC in the men's Hockeyettan.[17][18]
  • In the 2016–17 season, Wakefield played 30 regular season and five playoff games with Linköping HC in the SDHL and one game with the Nybro Flames of the Hockeytvåan.
  • In the 2017–18 season, she played six regular season and seven playoff games in the SDHL with Luleå HF/MSSK .
  • In the 2018–19 season, she played nine SDHL regular season games with Brynäs IF.
  • In the 2019–20 season, she played thirty regular season and four playoff games in the SDHL with Djurgårdens IF.
  • She is signed with Linköping HC for the 2020–21 SDHL season.
  • In the 2022-23 season, she played with Modo in the SDHL

Career statistics

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Season Team League GP G A Pts +/- PIM
2007–08 New Hampshire Wildcats NCAA 33 27 19 46 57
2008–09 New Hampshire Wildcats NCAA 31 32 17 49 44
2009–10 Vaughan Flames[19] CWHL
2010–11 Boston University Terriers NCAA 34 32 22 54 30
2011–12 Boston University Terriers NCAA 36 29 28 57 54[20]
2012–13 Toronto Furies CWHL 24 13 5 18 +5 34[21]
2013–14 Canada Centralization 32 10 8 18 N/A 34
2013–14 Canada OG 5 0 1 1 0
2014–15 Linkoping SDHL 15 18 4 22 +14 38
2015–16 Linkoping SDHL 18 38 17 55 +41 24
2016–17 Linkoping SDHL

Awards and honours

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  • 2008 Hockey East Rookie of the Year
  • 2008 Hockey East First All-Star Team
  • 2008 Hockey East All-Tournament Team
  • 2008 Hockey East All-Academic Team
  • Top-10 finalist for the 2009 Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award[22]
  • Hockey East Player of the Month in December 2008
  • Hockey East Player of the Month in April 2009
  • Hockey East Pure Hockey Player of the Week (Week of October 4, 2010)
  • Hockey East Pure Hockey Player of the Week (Week of December 13, 2010) [23]
  • Hockey East Pure Hockey Player of the Month (December 2010)[12]
  • Hockey East Pure Hockey Player of the Week (Week of January 17, 2011)
  • Hockey East Player of the Week (Week of October 3, 2011)[24]
  • 2011 Patty Kazmaier Award Nominee[25]
  • 2011 Hockey East All-Tournament team [26]
  • 2011 New England Women's Division I All-Star selection[27]
  • Hockey East Player of the Month (Month of October 2011)[28]
  • Hockey East Player of the Week (Week of January 23, 2012)[29]
  • Hockey East Player of the Month (Month of January 2012)[30]
  • Hockey East Player of the Week (Week of February 27, 2012)[31]
  • Hockey East Scoring Champion (2011–12)[32]
  • Hockey East 10th Anniversary Team selection[33]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
''Jenn Wakefield'' is a Canadian former ice hockey forward and current coach known for her decorated international career with Team Canada, including an Olympic gold medal in 2014 and silver in 2018, as well as her standout performances in collegiate hockey and the Swedish Women's Hockey League (SDHL). Born on June 15, 1989, in Scarborough, Ontario, Wakefield represented Canada internationally for over a decade, debuting at senior events in 2007 and competing in two Olympic Winter Games—contributing to the gold-medal win at Sochi 2014 and earning silver at PyeongChang 2018—along with six IIHF Women's World Championships that yielded gold in 2012 and multiple silver medals. She also excelled at the collegiate level, beginning at the University of New Hampshire where she was named Hockey East Rookie of the Year before transferring to Boston University, serving as captain in her senior year, reaching the NCAA championship game in 2011, and earning Patty Kazmaier Award finalist honors. Professionally, Wakefield played one season with the Toronto Furies in the Canadian Women's Hockey League before spending seven seasons in the SDHL, winning league titles with Linköping HC in 2015 and Luleå HF in 2018 while recording 164 goals and 259 points in 167 regular-season games. After retiring from professional play, she transitioned to coaching, including stints as an assistant with the Dutch national women's team from 2021 to 2025, co-head coach at the University of Ottawa in 2023–24, and various roles in Sweden, before joining Penn State University as an assistant coach for the women's ice hockey program, where she has helped lead the team to program-record wins and consecutive NCAA tournament appearances.

Early life

Birth and background

Jennifer Wakefield was born on June 15, 1989, in Scarborough, Ontario, Canada. Scarborough, a former municipality that has been part of the amalgamated city of Toronto since 1998, is her birthplace. She stands 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m) tall and weighs 176 lb (80 kg), shoots right, and plays as a forward. Her physical attributes have been listed across official hockey profiles, with minor variations in weight measurements. Wakefield grew up in Ontario. She was first put in figure skates by her parents but refused them because they hurt her feet, then tried hockey skates while her sisters continued with figure skates. After a learn-to-skate session, she mistook ringette for hockey, and her father promised to enroll her in hockey if she skated for one year.

Youth and junior hockey

Jennifer Wakefield played junior hockey for the Durham West Jr. Lightning in the Provincial Women's Hockey League (PWHL) from 2004 to 2007. With the team, she captured a silver medal at the 2006 Ontario Women's Hockey Association provincial championships. She was a member of Team Ontario Red that won gold at the 2005 National Women's Under-18 Championship, where the team defeated Quebec 2-1 in the final after outscoring opponents 19-1 across the tournament. Wakefield represented Team Ontario at the 2007 Canada Winter Games, leading the tournament in scoring with 20 points (12 goals and 8 assists) while helping secure the gold medal, including a goal in the 6-3 championship win over Manitoba.

College career

University of New Hampshire (2007–2009)

Jenn Wakefield played two seasons for the University of New Hampshire Wildcats from 2007 to 2009, emerging as one of the top forwards in Hockey East during that period. In the 2007-08 season, she appeared in 33 games, recording 27 goals, 19 assists, and 46 points while leading the team in goals and ranking second in points. Wakefield's freshman performance earned her the Hockey East Rookie of the Year award, the Hockey East Scoring Champion title, selection to the Hockey East All-Star First Team, and additional honors including the Hockey East All-Rookie Team, All-Tournament Team, and All-Academic Team. The Wildcats advanced to the NCAA Frozen Four that season. In the 2008-09 season, Wakefield led team scoring with 32 goals and 49 points overall. Her strong play resulted in a top-10 finalist nod for the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award and multiple selections as Hockey East Player of the Month.

Boston University (2010–2012)

Jenn Wakefield transferred to Boston University in January 2010. In her first full season with the Terriers (2010–11), she recorded 32 goals and 54 points, setting single-season program records for both categories while averaging 0.94 goals per game and tying for sixth nationally with six game-winning goals. She earned Hockey East First Team All-Star honors and was named to the New England Women's Division I All-Star team. Following the season, Wakefield was named team captain for 2011–12. On November 2, 2011, she became the first woman in Hockey East history to reach 100 career goals, scoring the milestone marker (her 41st at BU) in a 4–1 victory over Boston College. She received multiple Hockey East Player of the Month awards, including for October 2011 (when she led the conference with six goals and ten points) and December 2010. Wakefield was also a nominee for the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award. In 2011–12, Wakefield led the Terriers with 29 goals and 57 points, earning Hockey East Scoring Champion honors, First Team All-Star recognition, and Tournament MVP. She was also named a New England All-Star and shared team MVP honors with Marie-Philip Poulin.

Professional playing career

Canadian Women's Hockey League (2012–2013)

Jennifer Wakefield was selected by the Toronto Furies with the 12th overall pick in the 2012 CWHL Draft. In her lone season with the team during 2012–13, Wakefield played in all 24 regular season games, scoring 13 goals and recording 5 assists for 18 points. She scored her first CWHL goals on October 21, 2012, and notched her first hat trick on January 12, 2013. Her contributions helped the Furies qualify for the Clarkson Cup playoffs that season. Following the conclusion of the CWHL campaign, Wakefield transitioned to professional play in Sweden.

Swedish Women's Hockey League and other leagues (2013–2023)

Wakefield began her extended tenure in Sweden during the 2013–14 season with Munksund-Skuthamn SK in Riksserien (W), where she recorded 4 goals and 3 assists in 4 playoff games. In 2014–15, she joined Linköping HC in Riksserien (W), scoring 18 goals and 4 assists in 15 regular season games while helping the team capture the league championship, and concurrently played 15 games for IK Guts in Sweden's men's Division 3, tallying 5 goals and 8 assists. Returning to Linköping HC in 2015–16, Wakefield led Riksserien (W) with 38 goals in 18 regular season games, adding 17 assists for 55 points while also topping the league in short-handed goals and face-off percentage. She remained with Linköping for 2016–17 in the newly named SDHL (W), scoring a league-leading 34 goals in 30 games and posting the top face-off percentage. In 2017–18, Wakefield transferred to Luleå HF and contributed to the team's SDHL championship, recording 7 goals and 7 assists in 7 playoff games. She played for Brynäs IF in 2018–19, Djurgårdens IF in 2019–20, in the SDHL in 2020–21, and MoDo Hockey in 2022–23, with an additional stint at Skärblacka IF in Division 3 during 2021–22. Across her SDHL/Riksserien career, she compiled 167 games played, 164 goals, and 259 points. Wakefield also participated in limited men's lower-division play, including with IK Guts in 2014–15, Borås HC in 2015–16, Nybro Flames in 2016–17, and Skärblacka IF in 2021–22. Her final season as a player was 2022–23 with MoDo Hockey.

International career

Olympic participation

Jenn Wakefield represented Canada in women's ice hockey at the Winter Olympics in 2014 and 2018. Prior to her Olympic debut, Wakefield was centralized with the national team in preparation for the 2010 Vancouver Olympics but suffered a broken hand in December 2009 and was cut from the final roster, not participating. Wakefield made her Olympic playing debut at the 2014 Sochi Olympics, appearing in 5 games for Canada with 0 goals and 1 assist as the team captured the gold medal. At the 2018 PyeongChang Olympics, she appeared in 5 games with 2 goals and 0 assists as the team earned the silver medal.

World Championships and other tournaments

Jenn Wakefield represented Canada in six IIHF Women's World Championships from 2011 to 2017, earning one gold medal and five silver medals across those tournaments. She won gold at the 2012 championship and silver medals at the 2011, 2013, 2015, 2016, and 2017 events. In her 30 games played at these World Championships, Wakefield recorded 13 goals, 14 assists, and 27 points. She delivered a standout performance at the 2013 tournament, where she was selected to the All-Star Team and led all players with a face-off percentage of 76.36%. In addition to her senior World Championship appearances, Wakefield competed with Canada's National Women's Under-22 Team at the 2010 MLP Cup in Ravensburg, Germany, helping the team secure the gold medal.

Coaching career

Roles with national and university teams

Jenn Wakefield began her coaching career while still active as a player, taking on assistant coaching roles in 2021. She joined Almtuna IS as an assistant coach for the 2021–22 season in the NDHL (a lower-tier Swedish women's league). That same year, Wakefield was appointed assistant coach of the Netherlands women's national ice hockey team, a position she held from 2021 to 2025. In this role, she contributed to the team's campaigns in World Championship Division I Group A competitions, Olympic qualification events (including pre-Olympic in 2024 and final qualification in 2025), and served as head coach for the Dutch team at the 2024 Youth Olympic Games. Following her retirement from professional playing in 2023, Wakefield took on a co-head coaching position at the university level. She served as co-head coach of the University of Ottawa Gee-Gees women's ice hockey team in U SPORTS for the 2023–24 season. In 2024, she moved to the NCAA as an assistant coach for the Penn State Nittany Lions women's ice hockey team, with commitments through the 2024–25 and 2025–26 seasons.

Film and television appearances

Appearances as herself

Jenn Wakefield has made limited appearances as herself in film and television, primarily in documentary-style projects connected to her ice hockey career. In 2014, she appeared as herself in the short documentary Faith's Goal, directed by Elizabeth Lee. The film, which focuses on a young girl named Faith playing hockey on an otherwise all-boys team, includes an interview segment with Wakefield in her capacity as a 2014 Team Canada Olympian, where she discusses optimism about the future of women's hockey. That same year, Wakefield appeared as herself in one episode of the television mini-series Sochi 2014: XXII Olympic Winter Games, a broadcast coverage of the XXII Olympic Winter Games in Sochi, Russia, featuring competition footage and athletes including Wakefield during her participation in women's ice hockey.

Personal life

Known details and post-career notes

Jennifer Wakefield was born on June 15, 1989, in Scarborough, Ontario, Canada. She is the daughter of Tim and Suzanne Wakefield and has two sisters, Katelin and Alannah. Wakefield attended Dunbarton High School in Ontario before pursuing collegiate studies. She attended the University of New Hampshire from 2007 to 2009 and later transferred to Boston University, where she majored in psychology in the College of Arts and Sciences. Publicly available information about Wakefield's personal life is limited, with no confirmed details on relationships, current family circumstances beyond her parents and siblings, or pursuits outside of hockey and coaching. Wakefield concluded her playing career following the 2022–23 season and has since transitioned to coaching.

References

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