Web Notifications

SaltWire.com would like to send you notifications for breaking news alerts.

Activate notifications?

Lunenburg teen ready to play hockey in Japan

Madison Beck, 17, will play goalie for Canada’s National Women’s Under-18 Team


Madison Beck says there’s nothing like the rush after a save and she likes playing the crucial role in whether her team wins or loses.
Madison Beck says there’s nothing like the rush after a save and she likes playing the crucial role in whether her team wins or loses.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THESE SALTWIRE VIDEOS

Sustainable Wines for Earth Day | SaltWire #reels #EarthDay #shorts

Watch on YouTube: "Sustainable Wines for Earth Day | SaltWire #reels #EarthDay #shorts"

Madison Beck is excitedly packing her bags, looking forward to representing the South Shore at one of the world’s most important hockey tournaments.

The 17-year-old Lunenburg teen will head to Japan in January for the 2019 IIHF U18 Women’s World Championship, where she’ll play goalie for Canada’s National Women’s Under-18 Team.

Beck tried out for Canada’s National Women’s Under-18 Team last summer in Calgary and stayed for a special session where she played against the U.S. But it wasn’t until Dec. 10 that she finally received an answer, and Beck says it was nerve wracking waiting for that phone call.

“They started to say ‘Congratulations’ but I just cut them off and said ‘Oh my gosh, are you serious?!’” says Beck. “I called my parents right away, and they were so shocked, they started crying.”

She will fly out of Halifax on Dec. 28 and spend a few days training in B.C. before leaving for Japan on Jan. 1. The U18 women’s worlds are scheduled for Jan. 6 to 13 in Obihiro, a city on the Japanese island of Hokkaido.

“I’m really excited to see all of the culture. You don’t get to travel somewhere like Japan very often,” says Beck. “I can’t wait to soak everything in.”

Canada is set to open the 2019 IIHF U18 Women’s World Championship against Sweden on Jan. 5. The schedule also has Canada matching up against the United States and Russia to round out the preliminary round on Jan. 7 and 8, before the tournament wraps up with the gold medal game on Sunday, Jan. 13.

If the Canadian team wins, it will be its first gold medal at the IIHF U18 Women’s World Championship since 2014 — having won bronze in 2018.

Beck started playing hockey when she was six years old in an attempt to copy her hockey-playing brother, who was 11. She could barely skate at first, but powered through and insisted she wanted to be a goalie just a year and half into her hockey career.

“They put me in for one game and we lost 21-0,” laughs Beck.

“My parents thought I’d come off the ice crying and saying I hated it, but I had a huge smile.

“I loved it.”

Beck says there’s nothing like the rush after a save and she likes playing the crucial role in whether her team wins or loses.

“If you can keep the puck out, you’re giving your team a really good chance of winning,” says Beck. “There’s a lot of pressure in big games or breakaways or shootouts, but you just have to take a deep breath and be as confident as you can.”

She was just 14 years old when she moved to New Brunswick to attend Rothesay Netherwood School and play hockey in the North American Prep Hockey Association.

“I jumped at the chance because going away to play hockey was something on the list of hockey goals I’d made when I was eight,” says Beck. “It was hard to leave my family, but it helped to be able to see them every day on FaceTime.”

She stayed in New Brunswick for two years, and is now halfway through her second year at St. Paul’s School in New Hampshire. She’s currently in Grade 11 and plays on St. Paul’s varsity girls hockey team, but will be excused from classes while she’s on the other side of the world working for a gold medal.

“This was a huge dream I’d put out there when I was a kid, so to be able to achieve it feels incredible. I’m so honoured to be able to represent Canada, Nova Scotia and Lunenburg,” says Beck. “Lunenburg is my home. It’s where I grew up and started playing hockey, so this just means the world to me.”

Share story:
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT