X-Women Hockey’s Post-Season Recap

With the X-Women’s post-season coming to a close this past Saturday (March 16th), the team ended another season that exemplified the team’s top-notch grit, speed, and resilience. The post-season opened up on a pair of high notes for the club, as the team grabbed the top position in the AUS’s standings and multiple players racked up 2023-24 AUS major awards. The X-Women bested the UNB Reds by one point in the final word of the regular season, finishing with a 21-5-2 tally. Their first-place finish awarded them a buy through the first round of the AUS playoffs. On the individual side of things, Rookie Ireland McCloskey concluded a near-historic inaugural season by taking home Rookie of the Year, Most Sportsmanlike Player, and a spot on the All-Rookie Team. Ending the season at an almost point-per-game pace, she is the 6th X-Women named the AUS’s Rookie of the Year. Her Fellow freshman Mackenzie Lothian was also named to the All-Rookie Team, and X-Women captain Maggy Burbidge secured a place on the league’s Second All-Star Team.

The X-Women kicked off the story of their playoffs with their 5-game series against the St. Thomas Tommies, who were the fourth seed going into the playoffs. St. Thomas proved to be a formidable opponent for the X-Women, as the series needed all five games to arrive at a verdict. At the end of those five games, however, the X-Women’s resiliency and tenacity were the determining factors. The team battled back each time the Tommies got ahead, securing wins in both games 2 and 4 after they went 1-0 and 2-1, respectively. One thousand eighty-eight fans were present at the Charles V. Keating Centre for game 5, where the X-Women’s speed and grit overwhelmed their opponents in a 4-0 victory. The win confirmed their place in the AUS championship series, and it also sent them to the national USPORTS championship.

The AUS championship was an instance of two arch-rivals clashing with their very best efforts and one coming out on top due to the fortuity of a split second. The X-Women and the UNB Reds have been the AUS's two premier Women's hockey clubs this decade, but UNB has prevailed against StFX when it matters most in the last two years. This year's three-game series saw the Reds take the first game 2-0, where UNB's star goaltender Kendra Woodland unmistakably showcased her skills. The X-Women captured the spark that elevated them to the top of the AUS this year in game 2, forcing the game to double overtime. However, UNB's Sydney Oitomen vanquished X fans' dreams by netting the game-winner in that frame. This year's USPORTS championship at the University of Saskatchewan would be the X-Women's final chance to bring home some hardware to the school.

The X-Women, unfortunately, could not find the magic in Saskatoon that propelled them all season long. They fell 6-1 to the Waterloo Warriors in the quarterfinal, with Ireland McCloskey potting X’s lone goal. Head coach Berthiaume was quoted saying that the team simply ran out of gas in the third, yielding five goals in the span of that 20 minutes. Neither did the consolation game on Saturday produce the desired outcome, as the home team Saskatchewan Huskies outscored the X-Women 3-1.

While X-Women did not live up to their standards on the ice this past weekend, they did exemplify their characteristic Xaverian spirit that duly represents our school. They bonded with the U9 Comet Defenders team throughout the trip, who cheered them on from the stands brandishing “Go X Go” signs that would make Father Stan proud. After their consolation loss, the team rallied by donating their leftover gameday snacks to the Saskatoon Food Bank. In the coming years, the teams that follow this X-Women team will not inherit this team’s underperformance at the USPORTS championship but the culture that has allowed them to outperform their competition all year. Congratulations to the players, coaches, and staff for this outstanding season.