Wakatipu Wild

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Wakatipu Wild
Wakatipu Wild logo (2020).png
City Queenstown, Otago
League New Zealand Women's Ice Hockey League
Founded September 2020 (September 2020)
Operated 2020–present
Home arena Queenstown Ice Arena
Franchise history
2020–present Wakatipu Wild

main

The Wakatipu Wild is a New Zealand amateur ice hockey team from Queenstown, Otago, New Zealand. Founded in 2020, the Wild are a member of the New Zealand Women's Ice Hockey League (NZWIHL). The Wild are based at Queenstown Ice Arena, located at Queenstown Gardens. Wakatipu are one time NZWIHL champions and premiers.

History

The Wakatipu Wild was founded in 2020 and applied and joined the New Zealand Women's Ice Hockey League (NZWIHL). The Wild was established to bring women of all ages and nationalities together to further the development of woman's ice hockey locally in central Otago and nationally in New Zealand.[1] Wakatipu appointed Rebecca Dobson as their maiden general manager and former Skycity Stampede player Colin McIntosh as head coach.[1] The Wild's first ever game was played on 16 October 2020 against Otago rivals Dunedin Thunder on the road at Dunedin Ice Stadium. Young kiwi forward, Tallulah Bryant, scored the first ever goals for the Wild in the first period against Dunedin. Wakatipu doubled their lead in the second period before the Thunder pulled one goal back in the third. That third period goal proved a simple consolation as the wild won the game 2–1, for their first ever victory.[2] Queenstown finished their first season in the NZWIHL in third place, qualifying for the bronze medal game in the NZWIHL Finals. The Wild won bronze in Finals on 1 November 2020 by defeating the Thunder 4–2. Wakatipu came from behind to claim their first Finals win, with American import and team captain, Kellye Nelson, scoring a hat-trick of goals over the course of the second and third periods.[3]

Half way through the 2021 NZWIHL season, the Wild's second season, the league was cancelled due to the lock-downs implemented by the New Zealand Government during the COVID-19 pandemic.[4][5] The team had started the season well with two wins from their first three games before the season cancellation.[6]

In 2022, the Wild had a breakout season in their second full NZWIHL season. Rather than tournament style weekends, the league moved to a proper round-robin format that the Wild players enjoyed.[7] Wakatipu almost went the entire season undefeated to finish top of the league standings a secure their first NZWIHL Premiership title.[8] Queenstown followed up this success in the NZWIHL Finals with a big 7–2 victory over the Thunder in the semi-finals before being crowned Champions of New Zealand and winning goal medals with a 2–0 win over Canterbury Inferno in the grand final.[9][10][11]

All-time record

Wakatipu Wild all-time record
Season Regular season Finals Top points scorer
P W T L OW OL GF GA GD Pts Finish P W L GF GA Result SF BF GF Name Points
2020 6 2 4 8 18 −10 6 3rd 1 1 4 2 Bronze Won Flag of United States Kellye Nelson 9
2021 2021 NZWIHL season was not completed and cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic1
2022 6 5 1 33 7 +26 16 1st 2 2 9 2 Champion Won Won Flag of United States Kellye Nelson 19
2023
Totals 12 7 4 0 1 41 25 +16 3 3 0 13 4
1 At the point of the 2021 season cancellation, the Wild had played three games, won twice, lost once, scored 15 goals and conceded eight goals.[6]
Champions Runners-up Third place

Championships

  • Championships
1 Champions (1): 2022
1 Runners-up (0):
  • Premierships
1 Premiers (1): 2022
1 Runner-up (0):


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Wakatipu Wild". New Zealand Women's Ice Hockey League. https://www.nzwihl.com/wakatipu-wild/. 
  2. "Game Summary". New Zealand Ice Hockey Federation. 16 October 2020. https://stats.iihf.com/NZIHF/98/IHW098901_74_1_0.pdf. 
  3. "Game Summary NZWIHL Play-offs Game 13". New Zealand Ice Hockey Federation. 1 November 2020. https://stats.iihf.com/NZIHF/98/IHW098113_74_1_0.pdf. 
  4. "NZIHF COVID-19 Announcement". New Zealand Ice Hockey Federation. 20 August 2021. https://www.nzicehockey.co.nz/nzihf-covid-19-announcement-20-august-2021/. 
  5. "NZWIHL Round 2 Cancellation". New Zealand Ice Hockey Federation. 10 November 2021. https://www.nzicehockey.co.nz/nzwihl-round-2-cancellation/. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 "NZWIHL 2021 season". New Zealand Ice Hockey Federation. https://stats.iihf.com/NZIHF/112/index.html. 
  7. "Wakatipu Wild Reflect on 2022 NZWIHL Season". New Zealand Women's Ice Hockey League. 24 October 2022. https://www.nzwihl.com/2022/10/24/wakatipu-wild-reflect-on-2022-nzwihl-season/. 
  8. "NZWIHL Schedule and Results: Season 2022". New Zealand Women's Ice Hockey League. https://www.nzwihl.com/schedule/?cdate=2022. 
  9. Wormald, Lucy (29 September 2022). "Wild makes history". Mountain Scene. https://www.scene.co.nz/sport-scene/ice-hockey/wild-makes-history/. 
  10. Meikle, Hayden (26 September 2022). "Wild wins league trophy for first time". Otago Daily Times. https://www.odt.co.nz/sport/ice-hockey/wild-wins-league-trophy-first-time. 
  11. "2022 Season Recap". New Zealand Women's Ice Hockey League. 14 October 2022. https://www.nzwihl.com/2022/10/14/2022-season-recap/. 

External links

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