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Getty Images archive page for Hayley Wickenheiser
Getty’s archive page offers a broad visual catalog of Wickenheiser across her international hockey career.
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Professional Hockey Player
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At eight years old, Hayley Wickenheiser was spending three to four hours a day at the rink in Shaunavon, Saskatchewan. She practiced signing autographs. She believed she would play professional hockey. She was not wrong about her ability. She grew up playing on boys' teams, which meant she changed her equipment in boiler rooms, in bathroom stalls, in the back of the family car, anywhere that wasn't a locker room, because the locker room wasn't for her. "When I got on the ice, I felt free," she would say decades later. "It was my safe place. I felt like I belonged." She was named to Canada's national team at fifteen, the youngest player on the roster, and she stayed for twenty-three years.
In 2003, Wickenheiser became the first woman to score a goal in a men's professional hockey league, playing for Salamat in Finland, not as a stunt but because she had gone there to get better. It was the same logic that drove everything she did: find the highest level available and compete at it. She finished as Canada's all-time career points leader with 168 goals and 211 assists in 276 games, won four Olympic gold medals and seven world championships, and was twice named Olympic tournament MVP and Best Forward. Between Winter Games she represented Canada in softball at the 2000 Sydney Summer Olympics, making her one of the rare athletes in history to compete at both, a competitor whose abilities simply exceeded the boundaries of any single sport.
When the Hockey Hall of Fame called to tell her she'd been inducted in her first year of eligibility in 2019, they couldn't reach her. She was in a code blue simulation, practicing resuscitating someone in cardiopulmonary arrest. She had earned a Bachelor of Kinesiology and a Master of Science from the University of Calgary, completed her MD there, and went on to train in both family and emergency medicine. "Every patient encounter is different," she said. "You have to think quickly, work in a team and be very good under pressure. It feels very much like a team sport." She is now the Toronto Maple Leafs' assistant general manager of player development. She played hockey at the highest level for twenty-three years, practiced medicine, and ran an NHL front office. The range of it is almost beside the point. She simply did what she set out to do.
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Getty Images archive page for Hayley Wickenheiser
Getty’s archive page offers a broad visual catalog of Wickenheiser across her international hockey career.
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