Gold Medal Diary
Inside the World’s Greatest Sports Event
Speaker Hayley Wickenheiser was Canada’s official flag-bearer for the Opening Ceremonies of the 2014 Sochi Olympic Winter Games, where she won a gold medal as part of the Canadian women’s hockey team. She is regarded as one of the best female hockey players in the world. But that’s not all. She’s also a community leader, mentor to aspiring athletes, a student, and an inspiring businesswoman.
Chosen for the Canadian Women’s National Team at the age of 15, renowned keynote speaker Hayley Wickenheiser has since led the squad to six gold medals and three silver medals at the Women’s World Hockey Championships. As an Olympian, she earned a silver medal at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan and has won a gold medal in four consecutive Olympics, including one at home at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver and one at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. At the Sochi Games, she was elected to represent Canada as a member of the International Olympic Committee’s athletes commission. Her book about her experience in Vancouver, Gold Medal Diary: Inside the World’s Greatest Sports Event, profiles what it was like to live through the pressure. If all the hardware wasn’t enough, she was also named the tournament MVP in her victorious Olympic runs in 2002 and 2006, as well as in numerous Esso Women’s Hockey Championships.
Wickenheiser has proven to be an elite athlete time and time again. Sports Illustrated recently named her number 20 of the Top 25 Toughest Athletes in the World. She is also a two-time finalist for the Women’s Sports Foundation Team Athlete of The Year. In the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, her performance impressed Team Canada General Manager Bobby Clarke so much, he invited her to participate in the Philadelphia Flyers rookie camp. She made hockey history in January 2003 when she became the first female hockey player to notch a point in a men’s professional game with the Kirkkonummen Salamat of the Finnish second division. Wickenheiser also played in Eskilstuna, Sweden with a men’s professional division-one hockey team for the 08-09 season.
But it’s not just her lethal slap shot that is respected by her teammates, fans and peers. Wickenheiser’s passion for sport is paralleled by her drive to give back to the community in several ways, particularly to organizations with a commitment to children such as KidSport, Right To Play, Dreams Take Flight, Clean Air Champions, and Spread The Net. Wickenheiser has led numerous projects with the goal of raising the profile of women’s hockey around the world. As a leadership speaker on and off the ice, she works to provide mentoring opportunities for young athletes, including founding the Wickenheiser International Women’s Hockey Festival in Burnaby, BC. She was recently appointed to the Order of Canada “for her achievements as an athlete and for her contributions to the growth of women’s hockey.”
Wickenheiser retired as the country’s all-time leading scorer in January 2017 after 23 years on the Canadian women’s team and almost a dozen Olympic and world championship gold medals.