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Carla MacLeod

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Position
  
Name
  
Carla MacLeod

Career end
  
2010

Playing career
  
2003–2010

Career start
  
2003


National team
  
Canada

Height
  
1.63 m

Shot
  
Right

Role
  
Ice hockey player

Weight
  
60 kg

Carla MacLeod wwwfaceoffcomcmsbinary2404684jpgsize620x400

Born
  
June 16, 1982 (age 42) Spruce Grove, AB, CAN (
1982-06-16
)

WCHA teamCWHL team
  
Wisconsin BadgersCalgary Oval X-Treme

Education
  
Bishop Carroll High School, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Similar People
  
Becky Kellar‑Duke, Gina Kingsbury, Meaghan Mikkelson, Cherie Piper, Jennifer Botterill

2015 inductee carla macleod


Carla Rae MacLeod (born June 16, 1982 in Spruce Grove, Alberta) is a retired member of the Canadian national women's hockey team. Through her paternal grandmother, MacLeod is related to former Montreal Canadiens legend Maurice Richard.

Contents

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Playing career

Carla MacLeod Legal studies alumna wins second gold medal in Olympics

For high school, she attended Bishop Carroll High School in Calgary, Alberta. [1]

Carla MacLeod Meet a Hero Carla MacLeod39s Classroom Experience YouTube

Carla MacLeod represented Team Alberta at the National Championships in 1999 and 2001. On both occasions, MacLeod would win the Abby Hoffman Cup.

Wisconsin Badgers

Carla MacLeod Karoliina Rantamaki and Carla MacLeod Photos Photos Zimbio

She played with the Wisconsin Badgers women's ice hockey program in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association for four years, serving as captain for the 03-04 and 04-05 seasons. She played for United States women’s Olympic team coach Mark Johnson at Wisconsin, where he likened her leadership to that of a second coach.

While at Wisconsin, MacLeod was bestowed with the University of Wisconsin Big Ten Medal of Honor (in recognition of athletic and academic achievement). In her senior year at Wisconsin, Macleod served as one of two undergraduate assistant coaches. The other undergrad coach was Olympian Molly Engstrom. Macleod and Engstrom assisted coach Mark Johnson with analysis of game footage.

Hockey Canada

Her career as a defenseman for the national team began in 2003 with a silver win in the Four Nations Cup. In 2004, she played to a gold medal in the Four Nations Cup. In 2005, MacLeod made her world championship debut in 2005. She had been cut from the world championship team for two consecutive years before that. MacLeod would win silver at the 2005 IIHF Women's World Hockey Championship. In 2006, she played in the Winter Olympics in Turin, where she was named as a tournament all-star, and in the 2006 Four Nations Cup, where Canada won gold. In 2007, she played in the IIHF Women's World Hockey Championship, where Canada won its ninth world's gold medal. Prior to joining the national women's team, MacLeod was on the National Under-22 team from 1999-2003.

Coaching career

In the fall of 2010, she became an assistant coach with Mount Royal University. During the 2011–12 Canada women's national ice hockey team season, MacLeod was an assistant coach for the National Under 18 team that participated in a three-game series vs. the USA in August 2011. Since February, 2012 she has been serving as an assistant coach for the Japanese national team. In February, 2013 the Japanese national women's hockey team qualified for the first time for the 2014 winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. Japanese media praise her coaching skills, her likable personality as well as her tactical understanding of the game which has been much needed for this team. They say she has given the players a hockey mentality and a style of play which puts pressure on opposing teams.

Retirement

On September 14, 2010, Hockey Canada announced that MacLeod, along with three other players retired from international hockey. After her retirement, she took a public relations job with the Royal Bank of Canada.

Awards and honors

  • 2004-05 USCHO.com Defensive Player of the Year
  • References

    Carla MacLeod Wikipedia


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