Fans of hockey? Eskasoni 'breathes and lives' it - Action News
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Nova ScotiaEskasoni Community Bureau

Fans of hockey? Eskasoni 'breathes and lives' it

Decades after its first established hockey team, the sport continues to grow in Eskasoni First Nation.

At least 250 children are inminor hockey or after-school programs

Two teams from Eskasoni, N.S., recently competed against each other at the Wallace Bernard Memorial Native Youth Hockey Tournament in Cape Breton. (Erin Pottie/CBC)

This story is part of a series fromCBC's Eskasoni Community Bureau, based out of the Sarah Denny Cultural Centre. This series comes from weeks of conversations with community members about what they feel is important to see, hear and read on CBC's platforms.

Hockeyflags can be foundon cars, clothing andneighbourhood windows. And biting banter about last night's game swirls at a coffee shop in Eskasoni, N.S.

"Eskasoni just breathes and lives it," said hockey coach Levi Denny, someone who has dedicated his life to improving the sport in his community.

Levi Denny of Eskasoni, N.S., has devoted much of his life to improving the sport of hockey for all Indigenous athletes. (Erin Pottie/CBC)

Growing the game

Denny said NHL gamesare the talk of the town. During the Stanley Cup playoffs,old rivalries are reignited.

"It's an interesting time of year," Dennysaid."You can be somebody's best friend, but you play against them. It's a bit of a hard time.

"There's always friendly wagers that are happening and intense fun conversations and analyzing."

In recent years, the sporthas taken off in Nova Scotia's largest Mi'kmaw community, which has roughly 5,000 people.

At least 250 children are inminor hockey or after-school programs, and there are now five times the number of female players compared to just a few years ago.

But just why the community is so passionate about the game is difficult to pinpoint.

Community role models

Roger Daniel Stevens started playing hockey in Eskasoni when he 15. Since that time, he's helped grow the sport in the community. (Erin Pottie/CBC)

Denny guesses ithas something to do with thehigh-calibre players who've lived in the community.

Among them is Roger Stevens.

The 75-year-old beganplaying hockey as a teenager on afrozen inlet near his home. Stevens helped grow thenumber of hockeyteams in Eskasoni, and many refer to him as a Mi'kmaw hockey legend.

"My family, they think of me as maybe Wayne Gretzky," he said. "And they follow me. They want to do what I do."

'Natural setting for hockey'

Many hockey players in Eskasoni, N.S., got their start playing on Crane Cove. (Erin Pottie/CBC)

Back in 1960s and 70s, Stevens said afrozen piece of the Bras d'Or Lake called to him.

"It was just a natural setting for hockey," he said.

"There's not too many boys that grew up in Crane Cove that never played hockey. Maybe just a handful. If the ice was good, I'd be on it at 7 o'clock in the morning because you'd just be looking at it. And we'd build a bonfire and play all night."

Stevens said Eskasoni's first hockey team was created in the 1940s, before his arrival.

They were known as the Eskasoni Eagles and the teampractised outdoors in winter with no lights and no lines painted on the ice. Hisfather, Dan K. Stevens, was a semi-professionalplayer who spent 12years on the Eagles.

Mi'kmaw game play

"You had to be good to play," Stevens said.

"My father, he played against all the people that he knew in Millbrook you know, his brother was on the other team but Eskasoni and Membertou was a big rivalry."

Stevens said Mi'kmaw players from around the Maritimes travelled to compete against each other.

In Nova Scotia, they'd meet at rinks in Truro or North Sydney. He would eventually join theEagles, but he wasn't happy with his ice time so hecreated a team known as the Eskasoni Red Devils in 1959.

"We never won championships, but we had fun," hesaid.

"There's a couple of guys with the Eagles that played junior hockey, or senior hockey, but we didn't [go very far] because we couldn't afford it."

Indoor rink

Hundreds of people regularly flock to games played at Eskasoni's indoor rink. The arena bears the name of Stevens's father, the late Dan K. Stevens. (Erin Pottie/CBC)

Dan K. Stevens would become chief of Eskasoni in the late 1960s, and compelled his family to begin afundraising drivefor an indoor rink.

The project wasn't completed under his leadership, but the rinkwould open in 2005 as his namesake.

During the regular hockey season, hundreds of fansnow flock to the Dan K. Stevens arena for games played by local teams.

Inthe2018-2019 season, a newEskasoni Eagles squad beganplayingwithin theNova Scotia Junior Hockey League, featuring amix of Indigenous and non-Indigenous players.

Denny said he hopes Eskasoni'shockey fanswillenjoy games for decades to come.

"It's a life-changing thing no matter the level you play at being part of a team, and enjoying being at a rink is just a phenomenal feeling."