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Angela James

Angela Diane James OC[1] (born December 22, 1964) is a Canadian former ice hockey player who played at the highest levels of senior hockey between 1980 and 2000. She was a member of numerous teams in the Central Ontario Women's Hockey League (COWHL) from its founding in 1980 until 1998 and finished her career in the National Women's Hockey League (NWHL). She was named her league's most valuable player six times. James is also a certified referee in Canada, and a coach. She lives in Richmond Hill, Ontario.

Angela James
Hockey Hall of Fame, 2010
James as a student athlete at Seneca College, c. 1983
Born (1964-12-22) December 22, 1964 (age 58)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Height 5 ft 6 in (168 cm)
Weight 155 lb (70 kg; 11 st 1 lb)
Position Centre
Defence
Shot Right
Played for Seneca College
North York Aeros
Toronto Red Wings
Newtonbrook Panthers
Beatrice Aeros
National team  Canada
Playing career 1980–2000

Internationally, James played in the first women's world championship, a 1987 tournament that was unsanctioned. She played with Team Canada in the first IIHF World Women's Championship in 1990, setting a scoring record of 11 goals and leading Canada to the gold medal. She played in three additional world championships, winning gold medals in 1992, 1994 and 1997. Controversially, she was left off the team for the first women's Olympic hockey tournament in 1998. She played in her final international tournament in 1999.

Considered the first superstar of modern women's ice hockey, James has been honoured by numerous halls of fame. She was one of the first three women inducted into the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) Hockey Hall of Fame in 2008 and one of the first two inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2010.[2] She was inducted into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 2009. James was named to the Order of Hockey in Canada in 2021.

As of 2022, James serves as co-owner of & General Manager for the Toronto Six of the Premier Hockey Federation, as well as the Senior Sports Coordinator at Seneca College in Toronto.

Early life

James was born on December 22, 1964, in Toronto, Ontario.[3] She is the daughter of Donna Barrato, a white Canadian from Toronto,[4] and Leo James, a Black American from Mississippi who came to Canada to escape racial segregation.[5] She has two half-brothers and two half-sisters on her mother's side.[6] Her father, who was involved with a Toronto nightclub, estimates she has at least nine half-siblings by him, though Angela believes the number is closer to 15.[5] Among them is National Hockey League (NHL) player Theo Peckham.[7]

A single mother, Donna raised Angela and her two half-sisters with the help of government assistance. They lived in a subsidized townhouse in the Flemingdon Park neighbourhood of Toronto.[6] Donna worked as a bookkeeper and at the concession stand of the local arena.[8] She battled depression and mental illness and her eldest daughter, Cindy, worked two part-time jobs at the age of 16 to help the family meet financial obligations. Angela was closest to her sister Kym, though the two often fought as children.[9] Her father never had a consistent place in her life growing up and did not provide financial support to the family, but was available if she needed him.[10] As one of few Black children in Flemingdon Park, Angela often faced insults, particularly over the fact that she was a mixed-race child with a white mother and sisters.[11] She often got into fights over the slurs, forming a combative attitude she carried into the game of hockey.[12] Her maternal grandparents never accepted Angela as a child, though they treated her sisters well.[13]

James quickly developed an interest in sports. Her godfather gave her a baseball bat and glove to celebrate her first holy communion.[14] She excelled at hockey, baseball, and synchronized swimming as a young child.[15] Her mother wanted her to focus on swimming due to the lack of opportunities for girls in hockey in the 1970s.[16] Her passion was for hockey, however, and she was constantly playing ball hockey with the neighbourhood boys from the time she was in kindergarten.[8] James first played organized hockey in a Flemingdon Park boys house league at the age of eight, and then only after her mother threatened legal action as officials opposed her inclusion.[16]

James dominated the Flemingdon Park league. She started in the novice (7–8 year old) age group, but her skill level was so much higher than her peers that she was moved up to atom and then peewee (11 and 12-year-olds). [17] James's participation in the Flemingdon Park league ended partway through her second year due to jealousy from the parents of the boys in the league. The president's son was on James's team, and was particularly offended that his boy was being overshadowed by a girl. He ordered a change in the league's policy to forbid girls from playing.[18]

The only feasible option James had for a girls league was at Annunciation, a Catholic organization in the Don Mills district. Lacking a vehicle to drive to the games, her mother would take her to and from games at various rinks via the bus.[18] The girls' hockey program was small, requiring that teams be made up of players from all age groups in order to field complete rosters.[19] Skipping the bantam age group entirely, James first played senior hockey with the Newtonbrook Saints. She was 13 at the time, playing against women 16 and older.[19] The Saints were a Senior C team, the fourth-highest level of women's hockey in the Toronto area at the time.[20]

Playing career

College

Focused on hockey, exposed to drugs and alcohol, and frequently getting into fights, James paid little attention to her education and nearly dropped out of school. A vice-principal at Valley Park Middle School, Ross Dixon, encouraged her to pay greater attention to her studies, allowing her to graduate from Overlea High School, now named Marc Garneau Collegiate Institute, and move on to Seneca College in Toronto.[21] James struggled academically in her first year at Seneca, partially because she had rarely been held accountable for failing in her studies in the past, and partly because she was playing two sports at both the college and community level while working part-time jobs to help pay the family's bills. Seneca's hockey coach Lee Trempe had several arguments with James before she began to take her studies seriously.[22]

James was a two-sport star for the Seneca Scouts. She joined the softball team in 1983, playing the outfield and batting cleanup. She was an Ontario Colleges Athletic Association (OCAA) All-Star and led her school to the inaugural OCAA women's softball championship.[23] She was named an OCAA All-Star again in 1984 and 1985, leading Seneca to another provincial championship and a silver medal finish.[24]

Though James always played forward in her community hockey leagues, Trempe converted her to defence so that she could set up the plays and incorporate her teammates into the offensive systems the team used.[23] Despite the change in position, James still led the league in scoring in 1982–83, recording 15 goals and 10 assists in an 8-game season. She was named the OCAA's most valuable player, but Seneca settled for the silver medal after losing the OCAA finals.[25] Leading the OCAA with 30 points in 10 games in 1983–84, James carried Seneca College to its first championship.[26] She was named an All-Star on defence, and again voted the most valuable player. James won both awards again the following season.[27] Seneca repeated as champions in 1984–85 while James dominated the OCAA. She again led the league in scoring, setting school and association records with 50 goals and 73 points in just 14 games. Her scoring exploits led a Toronto reporter to call James "the Wayne Gretzky of women's hockey".[26]

The OCAA named James its athlete of the year in both 1984 and 1985 for her exploits in hockey and softball.[28] She set OCAA career hockey records of 80 goals and 128 points,[29] which stood through to 1989 when the OCAA disbanded its women's hockey program due to a lack of competing teams.[30] Seneca College retired her jersey number 8 in 2001,[28] she was inducted into the Seneca Varsity Hall of Fame in 1985[31] and in 2004, received the Seneca College Distinguished Alumni Award.[32]

Senior

After one year of Senior C hockey, James moved up to the Toronto Islanders in 1980, a Senior AA team in the newly founded Central Ontario Women's Hockey League (COWHL).[33] The league was at the highest level of women's hockey in southern Ontario at the time,[34] and James established herself as one of the league's stars within a year.[20] She played in the first women's national championship in 1982, scoring the tying goal in the third period en route to a 3–2 overtime victory over Team Alberta to win the McTeer Cup.[35]

When the Islanders folded in 1982, James moved to a team in Burlington, where she stayed for three seasons.[36] In 1983, she led her new team to the national title as Burlington captured the inaugural Abby Hoffman Cup. For James, appearances in the women's nationals were nearly an annual event, as she played in 12 national championship tournaments.[37]

James changed teams frequently, moving for a variety of reasons. She often changed teams to follow friends or if she did not agree with the coach's philosophy. Sometimes she moved out of necessity, such as if a team ceased operations.[24] She left Burlington in 1984–85 to join Lee Trempe with the Agincourt Canadians for one season, then played with the Brampton Canadettes for another.[38] In 1986–87 she again followed Trempe to the Mississauga Warriors, where she stayed for three seasons. James won her first of seven consecutive COWHL scoring titles that season, then was loaned to the Hamilton Golden Hawks for the 1987 Women's Nationals and helped lead that team to victory.[39]

Changing teams again, James joined the Toronto Aeros in 1989. The Aeros had formed in 1974 as an outgrowth of the Annunciation team she played with as a child.[40] She led the team to two national championships, in 1991 and 1993.[27] In the first, she scored the only goal, against future national team teammate Manon Rhéaume, in a 1–0 victory over Team Quebec.[41] In the 1993–94 season James scored 40 goals and 70 points in 28 games.[27] She continued to switch teams, joining the Toronto Red Wings/Newtonbrook Panthers franchise for a couple of seasons before rejoining the Aeros in 1997. She remained with the team when it was rebranded the Beatrice Aeros in 1998 and joined the newly formed National Women's Hockey League (NWHL).[42] James scored 38 goals and 55 points in the inaugural NWHL season of 1998–99 and was named the league's most valuable player.[27] The following season, she was named the Western Division's best forward and on its First All-Star team.[43] The Aeros won their first NWHL title dominating the Sainte-Julie Pantheres in the finals.[44] Also OWHA champions,[45] the Aeros captured the women's nationals against Team Quebec.[46] Once the season was over, James retired from competitive hockey in 2000.[42]

International

The Ontario Women's Hockey Association (OWHA) hosted the first women's world championship in 1987. The event, which was not sanctioned by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF), featured six participating teams while several nations sent observers.[39] Team Canada was represented by the national champion Hamilton Golden Hawks, with whom James had played in the national tournament, while "Team Ontario" was represented by her usual club team in Mississauga. While she was eligible to play with either team in the tournament, James suited up for her usual Mississauga team. She led Team Ontario throughout, and after a 5–2 semi-final win over the United States, played for the title against Team Canada.[47] Team Canada defeated James's Team Ontario, 4–0 in the final.[48]

The IIHF sanctioned the first official Women's World Championship, held in 1990 and played in Ottawa.[49] Canada and the United States easily dispatched their European rivals to reach the gold medal final, which Canada won by a 5–2 score.[50] James scored the first goal in the tournament's history,[51] and 11 overall. She tied American Cindy Curley for the tournament lead which, along with USA's Krissy Wendell in 2000, stands as the record for most goals by one player in one tournament, through 2012.[52]

James appeared in three additional Women's World Championships, all three of which were won by Canada over the United States. She was named an All-Star at forward in the 1992 tournament in Tampere, Finland,[53] where Canada won the gold medal with an 8–0 victory.[54] The Americans provided a stronger challenge at the 1994 tournament in Lake Placid, New York.[55] James scored two goals and was named the game's most valuable player in the final, a 6–3 victory.[56] She won her fourth, and final, World Championship in 1997, a 4–3 overtime victory.[57]

Reflecting the growth of the game, the 1998 Nagano Games featured the first women's Olympic hockey tournament.[58] The announcement of Canada's first Olympic team on December 9, 1997, brought a storm of controversy. Head coach Shannon Miller left James off the roster, telling the press that the 32-year-old James was a "defensive liability" and suggesting she was not a team player.[59] James was devastated at being cut and enraged by Miller's explanations.[60] Stating she had been "treated like a dog" and "set up and cheated" by Miller, she appealed the decision to Hockey Canada. James also argued Miller's criticisms were unjustified and that the coach had previously maintained she was playing well.[61] She was the national team's leading goal scorer in preliminary games that led up to the national team camp.[62]

At the time of the appeal, rumours surfaced that Miller was having an affair with one of her players. While the allegations were unfounded, their timing resulted in James being falsely accused of being their source. Hockey Canada officials determined that the rumours were started by a third party attempting to create controversy. They also rejected James's appeal, ending her Olympic dream.[63] Neither her teammates nor her opponents could understand how she was left off the team.[64] Canada and the United States met in the final, as expected, but it was the Americans who emerged victorious. Having already defeated Canada 7–4 in the preliminary round, the Americans won the gold medal with a 3–1 victory.[65] Former teammates argued that James could have made a difference for Canada had she been included.[62]

At the time, James was suffering from the effects of undiagnosed Graves' disease, a thyroid condition that resulted suffering weight loss and fatigue throughout that camp. She learned of and was treated for her condition following the Olympics, recovering lost weight and strength.[66] The national team, under a new coach, added James back to its roster for the 1999 3 Nations Cup.[67] She was used sparingly, but accepted her diminished role with the team. During the tournament, James made the decision that it would be her last.[68] James's international career ended in storybook fashion as the championship game, against the United States, went to a shootout. Selected as the first shooter, she scored the winning goal to lead Canada to a 3–2 victory.[69] James played in 50 games for Team Canada, scoring 33 goals and 21 assists.[27]

Playing style

James was a dominant player in the OWHA.[70] Women's hockey historian Elizabeth Etue attributed James's success to her skating strength and "dynamic, bullet-like shot".[36] She was a physical player who helped the women's game overcome a reputation that it was not a sport where the players were willing to play a "gritty," tough style. Opponents claimed running into James was like "hitting steel".[71] Canadian Broadcasting Corporation commentator Robin Brown, who played against James in the OWHA, said of her: "She could do it all. She had end-to-end speed, she had finesse as a stick handler and her slap shot was harder and more accurate than any female player I have ever seen. She was a pure goal scorer like Mike Bossy and aggressive like Mark Messier. In her prime, she was referred to as the 'Wayne Gretzky of women's hockey'."[27] Capable of playing any position, James was primarily a centre during her senior career, but excelled on defence. In one game where her team was without a goaltender, she played the position and recorded a shutout.[28]

Coaching and officiating

James has been active in many areas of the sport. She gained accreditation as a referee in Canada in 1980,[72] and has been an active official since.[73] As a referee in a Senior D women's game in 1986, James was involved in an altercation with a player that resulted in the player becoming the first woman banned for life from the OWHA. The player became upset at a penalty James assessed, shoved a linesman and punched her.[74] James ultimately gained level IV certification through Hockey Canada and has served as the OWHA's Referee-in-Chief.[28]

Upon her graduation from Seneca College, James took up coaching. Serving first as an assistant coach, she helped Seneca win the Ontario College Championship, its third consecutive title. The school repeated as champions in 1987 with James as its head coach.[26] She has coached at all age levels of the game, including the national championship. She was an assistant with the gold medal winning Team Ontario at the 1999 Canada Winter Games, and led Ontario to a gold medal at the 2001 under-18 national championship.[28] Prior to the 2010-11 CWHL season, she was named Brampton Thunder head coach,[75] but, finding the responsibilities too time consuming, she stepped down in December 2010.[76] She believes she can offer the most at the grassroots level of the sport,[77] and has operated both her own hockey school and directed one organized through Seneca College.[78]

PHF

On June 24, 2021, the Toronto Six of the Premier Hockey Federation (PHF) added James to their coaching staff as an assistant coach and she served in that role for the 2021–22 PHF season.[79]

Sports executive & owner

On March 7, 2022, James became a co-owner of the Toronto Six of the Premier Hockey Federation after joining an ownership group comprising BIPOC Canadian hockey leaders including herself, Anthony Stewart, Bernice Carnegie, & Ted Nolan.[80]

On May 31, 2022, James was named as General Manager of the Six, succeeding Krysti Clarke. Her new role with the team involves "manag(ing) player activities, team operations and logistics, as well as game day event management", including "selling tickets, which she will take charge of and report to the team’s new ownership group.[81]

Honours and legacy

"She is a women's hockey hero who continues to inspire young players across the country. For me, she will always be the Wayne Gretzky of women's hockey"

Bob Nicholson, President and CEO of Hockey Canada[82]

James has been called "the first superstar of modern women's hockey",[83] and has been hailed as a pioneer who brought the women's game into the mainstream. Longtime women's hockey administrator Fran Rider stated that James brought credibility, without which the women's game would never have gained recognition as an Olympic sport.[82]

An eight-time scoring champion and six-time most valuable player during her senior career, James has been honoured by several organizations. She was named Toronto's Youth of the Year in 1985 and was presented the city's Women in Sport Enhancement Award in 1992. Hockey Canada named her the 2005 recipient of its Female Hockey Breakthrough Award.[28] The Flemingdon Park arena was renamed the Angela James Arena in 2009,[84] and the Canadian Women's Hockey League presents the Angela James Bowl to its leading scorer each season.[85] She has been inducted into several Halls of Fame, including the Ontario Colleges Athletic Association Hall of Fame in 2005, and the Black Hockey and Sports Hall of Fame in 2006.[27]

Reflecting her role as a pioneer of the sport, James was one of the first three women, along with Geraldine Heaney and Cammi Granato, to be inducted into the IIHF Hall of Fame. They were enshrined in 2008 as part of the IIHF's 100th anniversary celebrations.[86] Canada's Sports Hall of Fame hailed James as a role model upon inducting her in 2009.[3] One year later, she joined Granato as the first two women inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.[87] James described being informed of her election as a day she never thought would happen, adding: "I'm really honoured to represent the female hockey players from all over the world".[88]

On February 26, 2021, James was named to the Order of Hockey in Canada by Hockey Canada, in recognition of her career and contributions to the game in Canada.[89]

Personal life

After earning a diploma in Recreation Facilities Management from Seneca College,[22] James was hired by the school as a sports programmer in 1985.[26] She continues to work for Seneca and is now a senior sports coordinator at its King campus.[90]

James realized as a teen that she is lesbian.[91] She met her partner, Ange, in 1994,[92] and the couple formalized their relationship in a commitment ceremony two years later.[93] They have three children. Ange carried their first child, Christian, in 1999,[94] and then gave birth to fraternal twins, son Michael and daughter Toni, in 2004.[95]

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Note: Complete statistics unavailable
    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1982–83 Seneca College OCAA 8 15 10 25
1983–84 Seneca College OCAA 10 15 15 30
1984–85 Seneca College OCAA 14 50 23 73
1992–93 North York Aeros COWHL 23 16 18 34 67
1993–94 North York Aeros COWHL 28 30 40 70 41
1995–96 Toronto Red Wings COWHL 29 35 35 70 37
1996–97 Newtonbrook Panthers COWHL 28 29 29 58 57
1997–98 North York Aeros COWHL 9 6 3 9 19
1997–98 Canadian National Team 15 7 1 8 4
1998–99 Beatrice Aeros NWHL 31 36 19 55 30
1999–00 Beatrice Aeros NWHL 27 22 22 44 10
OCAA totals 32 80 48 128 NA
COWHL totals 117 116 125 241 76
NWHL totals 58 58 41 99 40

International

Year Team Comp   GP G A Pts PIM
1990 Canada WC 5 11 2 13 10
1992 Canada WC 5 5 2 7 2
1994 Canada WC 5 4 5 9 2
1996 Canada PRC 5 3 4 7 2
1996 Canada 3NC 5 1 2 3 2
1997 Canada WC 5 2 3 5 2
1998 Canada 3NC 3 0 2 2 0
1999 Canada 3NC 2 0 0 0 0
Totals 35 26 20 46 20

References

General
  • Avery, Joanna; Stevens, Julie (1997), Too Many Men on the Ice: Women's Hockey in North America, Vancouver, BC: Polestar Book Publishers, ISBN 1-896095-33-X
  • Bartsiokas, Tom; Long, Corey (2012), Angela James: The First Superstar of Women's Hockey, Toronto, ON: Women's Press Literary, ISBN 978-0-9866388-8-6
  • Duplacey, James; Zweig, Eric (2010), Official Guide to the Players of the Hockey Hall of Fame, Richmond Hill, ON: Firefly Books, ISBN 978-1-55407-662-8
  • Ferguson, Bob (2005), Who's Who in Canadian Sport, Fourth edition, Markham, ON: Fitzhenry and Whiteside Ltd., ISBN 1-55041-855-6
  • Podnieks, Andrew (2009), Canada's Olympic Hockey History 1920–2010, Toronto, ON: Fenn Publishing Company, Ltd., ISBN 978-1-55168-323-2
  • Podnieks, Andrew, ed. (2011), IIHF Guide & Record Book 2012, Toronto, ON: International Ice Hockey Federation, ISBN 978-0-7710-9598-6
  • Russell, Scott (2000), Ice Time: A Canadian Hockey Journey, Toronto, ON: Penguin Books Canada, ISBN 0-670-88520-7
Career statistics
  • Duplacey, James; Zweig, Eric (2010), Official Guide to the Players of the Hockey Hall of Fame, Richmond Hill, ON: Firefly Books, p. 261, ISBN 978-1-55407-662-8
Footnotes
  1. ^ "Order of Canada appointees - June 2022". June 21, 2022. from the original on June 29, 2022. Retrieved June 29, 2022.
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  3. ^ a b , Canada's Sports Hall of Fame, archived from the original on January 4, 2012, retrieved October 20, 2012
  4. ^ Bartsiokas & Long 2012, p. 11
  5. ^ a b Bartsiokas & Long 2012, p. 13
  6. ^ a b Bartsiokas & Long 2012, p. 9
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  70. ^ Shea, Kevin (February 14, 2012). "One on one with Angela James". Hockey Hall of Fame. from the original on October 28, 2012. Retrieved November 17, 2012.
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  72. ^ Avery & Stevens 1997, p. 229
  73. ^ Bartsiokas & Long 2012, p. 139
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  80. ^ Levine, Justin (March 7, 2022). "First-Place Toronto Six Announce Change in Ownership". PremierHockeyFederation.com. from the original on June 1, 2022. Retrieved June 1, 2022.
  81. ^ Levine, Justin (May 31, 2022). "Hockey Hall of Famer Angela James Named General Manager of the Toronto Six". PremierHockeyFederation.com. from the original on May 31, 2022. Retrieved May 31, 2022.
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  95. ^ Bartsiokas & Long 2012, p. 133

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angela, james, angela, diane, james, born, december, 1964, canadian, former, hockey, player, played, highest, levels, senior, hockey, between, 1980, 2000, member, numerous, teams, central, ontario, women, hockey, league, cowhl, from, founding, 1980, until, 199. Angela Diane James OC 1 born December 22 1964 is a Canadian former ice hockey player who played at the highest levels of senior hockey between 1980 and 2000 She was a member of numerous teams in the Central Ontario Women s Hockey League COWHL from its founding in 1980 until 1998 and finished her career in the National Women s Hockey League NWHL She was named her league s most valuable player six times James is also a certified referee in Canada and a coach She lives in Richmond Hill Ontario Angela JamesHockey Hall of Fame 2010James as a student athlete at Seneca College c 1983Born 1964 12 22 December 22 1964 age 58 Toronto Ontario CanadaHeight5 ft 6 in 168 cm Weight155 lb 70 kg 11 st 1 lb PositionCentreDefenceShotRightPlayed forSeneca CollegeNorth York AerosToronto Red WingsNewtonbrook PanthersBeatrice AerosNational team CanadaPlaying career1980 2000Internationally James played in the first women s world championship a 1987 tournament that was unsanctioned She played with Team Canada in the first IIHF World Women s Championship in 1990 setting a scoring record of 11 goals and leading Canada to the gold medal She played in three additional world championships winning gold medals in 1992 1994 and 1997 Controversially she was left off the team for the first women s Olympic hockey tournament in 1998 She played in her final international tournament in 1999 Considered the first superstar of modern women s ice hockey James has been honoured by numerous halls of fame She was one of the first three women inducted into the International Ice Hockey Federation IIHF Hockey Hall of Fame in 2008 and one of the first two inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2010 2 She was inducted into Canada s Sports Hall of Fame in 2009 James was named to the Order of Hockey in Canada in 2021 As of 2022 James serves as co owner of amp General Manager for the Toronto Six of the Premier Hockey Federation as well as the Senior Sports Coordinator at Seneca College in Toronto Contents 1 Early life 2 Playing career 2 1 College 2 2 Senior 2 3 International 3 Playing style 4 Coaching and officiating 4 1 PHF 5 Sports executive amp owner 6 Honours and legacy 7 Personal life 8 Career statistics 8 1 Regular season and playoffs 8 2 International 9 References 10 External linksEarly life EditJames was born on December 22 1964 in Toronto Ontario 3 She is the daughter of Donna Barrato a white Canadian from Toronto 4 and Leo James a Black American from Mississippi who came to Canada to escape racial segregation 5 She has two half brothers and two half sisters on her mother s side 6 Her father who was involved with a Toronto nightclub estimates she has at least nine half siblings by him though Angela believes the number is closer to 15 5 Among them is National Hockey League NHL player Theo Peckham 7 A single mother Donna raised Angela and her two half sisters with the help of government assistance They lived in a subsidized townhouse in the Flemingdon Park neighbourhood of Toronto 6 Donna worked as a bookkeeper and at the concession stand of the local arena 8 She battled depression and mental illness and her eldest daughter Cindy worked two part time jobs at the age of 16 to help the family meet financial obligations Angela was closest to her sister Kym though the two often fought as children 9 Her father never had a consistent place in her life growing up and did not provide financial support to the family but was available if she needed him 10 As one of few Black children in Flemingdon Park Angela often faced insults particularly over the fact that she was a mixed race child with a white mother and sisters 11 She often got into fights over the slurs forming a combative attitude she carried into the game of hockey 12 Her maternal grandparents never accepted Angela as a child though they treated her sisters well 13 James quickly developed an interest in sports Her godfather gave her a baseball bat and glove to celebrate her first holy communion 14 She excelled at hockey baseball and synchronized swimming as a young child 15 Her mother wanted her to focus on swimming due to the lack of opportunities for girls in hockey in the 1970s 16 Her passion was for hockey however and she was constantly playing ball hockey with the neighbourhood boys from the time she was in kindergarten 8 James first played organized hockey in a Flemingdon Park boys house league at the age of eight and then only after her mother threatened legal action as officials opposed her inclusion 16 James dominated the Flemingdon Park league She started in the novice 7 8 year old age group but her skill level was so much higher than her peers that she was moved up to atom and then peewee 11 and 12 year olds 17 James s participation in the Flemingdon Park league ended partway through her second year due to jealousy from the parents of the boys in the league The president s son was on James s team and was particularly offended that his boy was being overshadowed by a girl He ordered a change in the league s policy to forbid girls from playing 18 The only feasible option James had for a girls league was at Annunciation a Catholic organization in the Don Mills district Lacking a vehicle to drive to the games her mother would take her to and from games at various rinks via the bus 18 The girls hockey program was small requiring that teams be made up of players from all age groups in order to field complete rosters 19 Skipping the bantam age group entirely James first played senior hockey with the Newtonbrook Saints She was 13 at the time playing against women 16 and older 19 The Saints were a Senior C team the fourth highest level of women s hockey in the Toronto area at the time 20 Playing career EditCollege Edit Focused on hockey exposed to drugs and alcohol and frequently getting into fights James paid little attention to her education and nearly dropped out of school A vice principal at Valley Park Middle School Ross Dixon encouraged her to pay greater attention to her studies allowing her to graduate from Overlea High School now named Marc Garneau Collegiate Institute and move on to Seneca College in Toronto 21 James struggled academically in her first year at Seneca partially because she had rarely been held accountable for failing in her studies in the past and partly because she was playing two sports at both the college and community level while working part time jobs to help pay the family s bills Seneca s hockey coach Lee Trempe had several arguments with James before she began to take her studies seriously 22 James was a two sport star for the Seneca Scouts She joined the softball team in 1983 playing the outfield and batting cleanup She was an Ontario Colleges Athletic Association OCAA All Star and led her school to the inaugural OCAA women s softball championship 23 She was named an OCAA All Star again in 1984 and 1985 leading Seneca to another provincial championship and a silver medal finish 24 Though James always played forward in her community hockey leagues Trempe converted her to defence so that she could set up the plays and incorporate her teammates into the offensive systems the team used 23 Despite the change in position James still led the league in scoring in 1982 83 recording 15 goals and 10 assists in an 8 game season She was named the OCAA s most valuable player but Seneca settled for the silver medal after losing the OCAA finals 25 Leading the OCAA with 30 points in 10 games in 1983 84 James carried Seneca College to its first championship 26 She was named an All Star on defence and again voted the most valuable player James won both awards again the following season 27 Seneca repeated as champions in 1984 85 while James dominated the OCAA She again led the league in scoring setting school and association records with 50 goals and 73 points in just 14 games Her scoring exploits led a Toronto reporter to call James the Wayne Gretzky of women s hockey 26 The OCAA named James its athlete of the year in both 1984 and 1985 for her exploits in hockey and softball 28 She set OCAA career hockey records of 80 goals and 128 points 29 which stood through to 1989 when the OCAA disbanded its women s hockey program due to a lack of competing teams 30 Seneca College retired her jersey number 8 in 2001 28 she was inducted into the Seneca Varsity Hall of Fame in 1985 31 and in 2004 received the Seneca College Distinguished Alumni Award 32 Senior Edit After one year of Senior C hockey James moved up to the Toronto Islanders in 1980 a Senior AA team in the newly founded Central Ontario Women s Hockey League COWHL 33 The league was at the highest level of women s hockey in southern Ontario at the time 34 and James established herself as one of the league s stars within a year 20 She played in the first women s national championship in 1982 scoring the tying goal in the third period en route to a 3 2 overtime victory over Team Alberta to win the McTeer Cup 35 When the Islanders folded in 1982 James moved to a team in Burlington where she stayed for three seasons 36 In 1983 she led her new team to the national title as Burlington captured the inaugural Abby Hoffman Cup For James appearances in the women s nationals were nearly an annual event as she played in 12 national championship tournaments 37 James changed teams frequently moving for a variety of reasons She often changed teams to follow friends or if she did not agree with the coach s philosophy Sometimes she moved out of necessity such as if a team ceased operations 24 She left Burlington in 1984 85 to join Lee Trempe with the Agincourt Canadians for one season then played with the Brampton Canadettes for another 38 In 1986 87 she again followed Trempe to the Mississauga Warriors where she stayed for three seasons James won her first of seven consecutive COWHL scoring titles that season then was loaned to the Hamilton Golden Hawks for the 1987 Women s Nationals and helped lead that team to victory 39 Changing teams again James joined the Toronto Aeros in 1989 The Aeros had formed in 1974 as an outgrowth of the Annunciation team she played with as a child 40 She led the team to two national championships in 1991 and 1993 27 In the first she scored the only goal against future national team teammate Manon Rheaume in a 1 0 victory over Team Quebec 41 In the 1993 94 season James scored 40 goals and 70 points in 28 games 27 She continued to switch teams joining the Toronto Red Wings Newtonbrook Panthers franchise for a couple of seasons before rejoining the Aeros in 1997 She remained with the team when it was rebranded the Beatrice Aeros in 1998 and joined the newly formed National Women s Hockey League NWHL 42 James scored 38 goals and 55 points in the inaugural NWHL season of 1998 99 and was named the league s most valuable player 27 The following season she was named the Western Division s best forward and on its First All Star team 43 The Aeros won their first NWHL title dominating the Sainte Julie Pantheres in the finals 44 Also OWHA champions 45 the Aeros captured the women s nationals against Team Quebec 46 Once the season was over James retired from competitive hockey in 2000 42 International Edit Medal recordWomen s ice hockeyWorld Championship 1990 Ottawa Ontario Canada 1992 Tampere Finland 1994 Lake Placid USA 1997 Kitchener Canada3 Nations Cup 1996 Ontario New York 1999 QuebecIIHF Women s Pacific Rim Championship 1996 Vancouver British Columbia CanadaThe Ontario Women s Hockey Association OWHA hosted the first women s world championship in 1987 The event which was not sanctioned by the International Ice Hockey Federation IIHF featured six participating teams while several nations sent observers 39 Team Canada was represented by the national champion Hamilton Golden Hawks with whom James had played in the national tournament while Team Ontario was represented by her usual club team in Mississauga While she was eligible to play with either team in the tournament James suited up for her usual Mississauga team She led Team Ontario throughout and after a 5 2 semi final win over the United States played for the title against Team Canada 47 Team Canada defeated James s Team Ontario 4 0 in the final 48 The IIHF sanctioned the first official Women s World Championship held in 1990 and played in Ottawa 49 Canada and the United States easily dispatched their European rivals to reach the gold medal final which Canada won by a 5 2 score 50 James scored the first goal in the tournament s history 51 and 11 overall She tied American Cindy Curley for the tournament lead which along with USA s Krissy Wendell in 2000 stands as the record for most goals by one player in one tournament through 2012 52 James appeared in three additional Women s World Championships all three of which were won by Canada over the United States She was named an All Star at forward in the 1992 tournament in Tampere Finland 53 where Canada won the gold medal with an 8 0 victory 54 The Americans provided a stronger challenge at the 1994 tournament in Lake Placid New York 55 James scored two goals and was named the game s most valuable player in the final a 6 3 victory 56 She won her fourth and final World Championship in 1997 a 4 3 overtime victory 57 Reflecting the growth of the game the 1998 Nagano Games featured the first women s Olympic hockey tournament 58 The announcement of Canada s first Olympic team on December 9 1997 brought a storm of controversy Head coach Shannon Miller left James off the roster telling the press that the 32 year old James was a defensive liability and suggesting she was not a team player 59 James was devastated at being cut and enraged by Miller s explanations 60 Stating she had been treated like a dog and set up and cheated by Miller she appealed the decision to Hockey Canada James also argued Miller s criticisms were unjustified and that the coach had previously maintained she was playing well 61 She was the national team s leading goal scorer in preliminary games that led up to the national team camp 62 At the time of the appeal rumours surfaced that Miller was having an affair with one of her players While the allegations were unfounded their timing resulted in James being falsely accused of being their source Hockey Canada officials determined that the rumours were started by a third party attempting to create controversy They also rejected James s appeal ending her Olympic dream 63 Neither her teammates nor her opponents could understand how she was left off the team 64 Canada and the United States met in the final as expected but it was the Americans who emerged victorious Having already defeated Canada 7 4 in the preliminary round the Americans won the gold medal with a 3 1 victory 65 Former teammates argued that James could have made a difference for Canada had she been included 62 At the time James was suffering from the effects of undiagnosed Graves disease a thyroid condition that resulted suffering weight loss and fatigue throughout that camp She learned of and was treated for her condition following the Olympics recovering lost weight and strength 66 The national team under a new coach added James back to its roster for the 1999 3 Nations Cup 67 She was used sparingly but accepted her diminished role with the team During the tournament James made the decision that it would be her last 68 James s international career ended in storybook fashion as the championship game against the United States went to a shootout Selected as the first shooter she scored the winning goal to lead Canada to a 3 2 victory 69 James played in 50 games for Team Canada scoring 33 goals and 21 assists 27 Playing style EditJames was a dominant player in the OWHA 70 Women s hockey historian Elizabeth Etue attributed James s success to her skating strength and dynamic bullet like shot 36 She was a physical player who helped the women s game overcome a reputation that it was not a sport where the players were willing to play a gritty tough style Opponents claimed running into James was like hitting steel 71 Canadian Broadcasting Corporation commentator Robin Brown who played against James in the OWHA said of her She could do it all She had end to end speed she had finesse as a stick handler and her slap shot was harder and more accurate than any female player I have ever seen She was a pure goal scorer like Mike Bossy and aggressive like Mark Messier In her prime she was referred to as the Wayne Gretzky of women s hockey 27 Capable of playing any position James was primarily a centre during her senior career but excelled on defence In one game where her team was without a goaltender she played the position and recorded a shutout 28 Coaching and officiating EditJames has been active in many areas of the sport She gained accreditation as a referee in Canada in 1980 72 and has been an active official since 73 As a referee in a Senior D women s game in 1986 James was involved in an altercation with a player that resulted in the player becoming the first woman banned for life from the OWHA The player became upset at a penalty James assessed shoved a linesman and punched her 74 James ultimately gained level IV certification through Hockey Canada and has served as the OWHA s Referee in Chief 28 Upon her graduation from Seneca College James took up coaching Serving first as an assistant coach she helped Seneca win the Ontario College Championship its third consecutive title The school repeated as champions in 1987 with James as its head coach 26 She has coached at all age levels of the game including the national championship She was an assistant with the gold medal winning Team Ontario at the 1999 Canada Winter Games and led Ontario to a gold medal at the 2001 under 18 national championship 28 Prior to the 2010 11 CWHL season she was named Brampton Thunder head coach 75 but finding the responsibilities too time consuming she stepped down in December 2010 76 She believes she can offer the most at the grassroots level of the sport 77 and has operated both her own hockey school and directed one organized through Seneca College 78 PHF Edit On June 24 2021 the Toronto Six of the Premier Hockey Federation PHF added James to their coaching staff as an assistant coach and she served in that role for the 2021 22 PHF season 79 Sports executive amp owner EditOn March 7 2022 James became a co owner of the Toronto Six of the Premier Hockey Federation after joining an ownership group comprising BIPOC Canadian hockey leaders including herself Anthony Stewart Bernice Carnegie amp Ted Nolan 80 On May 31 2022 James was named as General Manager of the Six succeeding Krysti Clarke Her new role with the team involves manag ing player activities team operations and logistics as well as game day event management including selling tickets which she will take charge of and report to the team s new ownership group 81 Honours and legacy Edit She is a women s hockey hero who continues to inspire young players across the country For me she will always be the Wayne Gretzky of women s hockey Bob Nicholson President and CEO of Hockey Canada 82 James has been called the first superstar of modern women s hockey 83 and has been hailed as a pioneer who brought the women s game into the mainstream Longtime women s hockey administrator Fran Rider stated that James brought credibility without which the women s game would never have gained recognition as an Olympic sport 82 An eight time scoring champion and six time most valuable player during her senior career James has been honoured by several organizations She was named Toronto s Youth of the Year in 1985 and was presented the city s Women in Sport Enhancement Award in 1992 Hockey Canada named her the 2005 recipient of its Female Hockey Breakthrough Award 28 The Flemingdon Park arena was renamed the Angela James Arena in 2009 84 and the Canadian Women s Hockey League presents the Angela James Bowl to its leading scorer each season 85 She has been inducted into several Halls of Fame including the Ontario Colleges Athletic Association Hall of Fame in 2005 and the Black Hockey and Sports Hall of Fame in 2006 27 Reflecting her role as a pioneer of the sport James was one of the first three women along with Geraldine Heaney and Cammi Granato to be inducted into the IIHF Hall of Fame They were enshrined in 2008 as part of the IIHF s 100th anniversary celebrations 86 Canada s Sports Hall of Fame hailed James as a role model upon inducting her in 2009 3 One year later she joined Granato as the first two women inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame 87 James described being informed of her election as a day she never thought would happen adding I m really honoured to represent the female hockey players from all over the world 88 On February 26 2021 James was named to the Order of Hockey in Canada by Hockey Canada in recognition of her career and contributions to the game in Canada 89 Personal life EditAfter earning a diploma in Recreation Facilities Management from Seneca College 22 James was hired by the school as a sports programmer in 1985 26 She continues to work for Seneca and is now a senior sports coordinator at its King campus 90 James realized as a teen that she is lesbian 91 She met her partner Ange in 1994 92 and the couple formalized their relationship in a commitment ceremony two years later 93 They have three children Ange carried their first child Christian in 1999 94 and then gave birth to fraternal twins son Michael and daughter Toni in 2004 95 Career statistics EditRegular season and playoffs Edit Note Complete statistics unavailable Regular season PlayoffsSeason Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM1982 83 Seneca College OCAA 8 15 10 25 1983 84 Seneca College OCAA 10 15 15 30 1984 85 Seneca College OCAA 14 50 23 73 1992 93 North York Aeros COWHL 23 16 18 34 671993 94 North York Aeros COWHL 28 30 40 70 411995 96 Toronto Red Wings COWHL 29 35 35 70 371996 97 Newtonbrook Panthers COWHL 28 29 29 58 571997 98 North York Aeros COWHL 9 6 3 9 191997 98 Canadian National Team 15 7 1 8 41998 99 Beatrice Aeros NWHL 31 36 19 55 301999 00 Beatrice Aeros NWHL 27 22 22 44 10OCAA totals 32 80 48 128 NACOWHL totals 117 116 125 241 76NWHL totals 58 58 41 99 40International Edit Year Team Comp GP G A Pts PIM1990 Canada WC 5 11 2 13 101992 Canada WC 5 5 2 7 21994 Canada WC 5 4 5 9 21996 Canada PRC 5 3 4 7 21996 Canada 3NC 5 1 2 3 21997 Canada WC 5 2 3 5 21998 Canada 3NC 3 0 2 2 01999 Canada 3NC 2 0 0 0 0Totals 35 26 20 46 20References EditGeneralAvery Joanna Stevens Julie 1997 Too Many Men on the Ice Women s Hockey in North America Vancouver BC Polestar Book Publishers ISBN 1 896095 33 X Bartsiokas Tom Long Corey 2012 Angela James The First Superstar of Women s Hockey Toronto ON Women s Press Literary ISBN 978 0 9866388 8 6 Duplacey James Zweig Eric 2010 Official Guide to the Players of the Hockey Hall of Fame Richmond Hill ON Firefly Books ISBN 978 1 55407 662 8 Ferguson Bob 2005 Who s Who in Canadian Sport Fourth edition Markham ON Fitzhenry and Whiteside Ltd ISBN 1 55041 855 6 Podnieks Andrew 2009 Canada s Olympic Hockey History 1920 2010 Toronto ON Fenn Publishing Company Ltd ISBN 978 1 55168 323 2 Podnieks Andrew ed 2011 IIHF Guide amp Record Book 2012 Toronto ON International Ice Hockey Federation ISBN 978 0 7710 9598 6 Russell Scott 2000 Ice Time A Canadian Hockey Journey Toronto ON Penguin Books Canada ISBN 0 670 88520 7Career statisticsDuplacey James Zweig Eric 2010 Official Guide to the Players of the Hockey Hall of Fame Richmond Hill ON Firefly Books p 261 ISBN 978 1 55407 662 8Footnotes Order of Canada appointees June 2022 June 21 2022 Archived from the original on June 29 2022 Retrieved June 29 2022 Legends of Hockey Induction Showcase Angela James The Official Site of the Hockey Hall of Fame Archived from the original on December 29 2021 Retrieved December 29 2021 a b Honoured members Angela James Canada s Sports Hall of Fame archived from the original on January 4 2012 retrieved October 20 2012 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 11 a b Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 13 a b Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 9 Ireland Joanne November 9 2010 Peckham salutes sister Angela James Edmonton Journal archived from the original on January 22 2013 retrieved October 20 2012 a b Russell 2000 p 145 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 16 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 14 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 20 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 26 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 12 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 10 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 19 a b Russell 2000 p 146 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 pp 34 35 a b Russell 2000 p 147 a b Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 37 a b Russell 2000 p 148 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 38 a b Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 46 a b Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 44 a b Avery amp Stevens 1997 p 228 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 45 a b c d Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 48 a b c d e f g Duplacey amp Zweig 2010 p 261 a b c d e f 2005 Hockey Canada Female Hockey Breakthrough Award PDF Hockey Canada 2005 Archived from the original PDF on February 9 2012 Retrieved October 25 2012 Russell 2000 p 149 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 49 1984 1985 Angela James Seneca Sting Archived from the original on December 6 2007 Retrieved January 5 2013 Seneca College s Angela James among first females to be inducted into Hockey Hall of Fame Seneca College of Applied Arts and Technology June 22 2010 Archived from the original on June 28 2012 Retrieved October 25 2012 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 53 Avery amp Stevens 1997 p 227 Toronto women win hockey title Montreal Gazette p E3 April 1 1982 archived from the original on November 6 2020 retrieved October 27 2012 a b Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 54 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 56 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 57 a b Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 58 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 62 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 64 a b Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 130 NWHL Announces All Star Team DGP archived from the original on September 27 2011 retrieved January 10 2013 Beatrice Aeros Capture First NWHL Title DGP archived from the original on September 27 2011 retrieved January 10 2013 Aeros Capture OWHA Provincial Championship DGP archived from the original on September 27 2011 retrieved January 10 2013 2000 Esso Women s Nationals Hockey Canada archived from the original on November 24 2012 retrieved January 10 2013 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 59 Burns John F April 27 1987 A game of finesse with hard hitting New York Times archived from the original on May 24 2015 retrieved October 27 2012 Laskaris Sam January 11 1990 Women hockey players vie for national team Toronto Star p N8 retrieved October 28 2012 subscription required IIHF starts the World Women s Championship International Ice Hockey Federation archived from the original on September 26 2013 retrieved October 28 2012 Russell 2000 p 156 Podnieks 2011 p 352 Podnieks 2011 p 38 Russell 2000 p 157 Russell 2000 p 158 Russell 2000 p 159 Russell 2000 p 160 Podnieks 2009 p 182 Podnieks 2009 p 188 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 110 Casey Tom December 17 1991 James appeals Olympic cut Canadian Hockey looking into surprising dismissal of women s team stalwart Toronto Star p C1 retrieved October 28 2012 subscription required a b LeBrun Pierre November 4 2010 James takes rightful place in Hall ESPN archived from the original on January 2 2011 retrieved October 28 2012 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 112 Simmons Steve November 8 2010 Bittersweet day for Hall of Famer Angela James London Free Press archived from the original on August 12 2016 retrieved October 28 2012 Russell 2000 p 164 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 121 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 123 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 124 Russell 2000 p 139 Shea Kevin February 14 2012 One on one with Angela James Hockey Hall of Fame Archived from the original on October 28 2012 Retrieved November 17 2012 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 61 Avery amp Stevens 1997 p 229 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 139 Windsor woman barred from hockey for life after punching referee Ottawa Citizen p D3 April 29 1986 archived from the original on February 10 2023 retrieved October 29 2012 Juzenas Frank September 9 2010 Hockey Hall of Famer set to lead Thunder into battle Brampton Guardian archived from the original on February 10 2023 retrieved January 5 2013 2010 The year in sports Brampton Guardian December 29 2010 archived from the original on February 10 2023 retrieved January 5 2013 Russell 2000 p 168 Hockey Hall of Fame 2010 Ontario Women s Hockey Association archived from the original on April 21 2013 retrieved October 29 2012 Six hire Hockey Hall of Famer James as assistant coach tsn ca June 24 2021 Archived from the original on July 27 2021 Retrieved July 27 2021 Levine Justin March 7 2022 First Place Toronto Six Announce Change in Ownership PremierHockeyFederation com Archived from the original on June 1 2022 Retrieved June 1 2022 Levine Justin May 31 2022 Hockey Hall of Famer Angela James Named General Manager of the Toronto Six PremierHockeyFederation com Archived from the original on May 31 2022 Retrieved May 31 2022 a b Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 160 James Heaney and Granato first women inducted into IIHF Hall of Fame Canadian Press December 21 2007 archived from the original on January 20 2013 retrieved November 3 2012 Lu Vanessa June 5 2009 City to rename arena for Angela James tomorrow Toronto Star archived from the original on February 4 2013 retrieved November 3 2012 Stars down Whitecaps to capture Clarkson Cup The Sports Network March 21 2009 archived from the original on January 20 2013 retrieved November 3 2012 First women players inducted to IIHF Hall of Fame Canadian Broadcasting Corporation May 15 2008 archived from the original on March 1 2010 retrieved November 3 2012 Women s player James also elected ESPN June 22 2010 archived from the original on March 2 2013 retrieved November 3 2012 Hockey Hall calls 1st women Ciccarelli Canadian Broadcasting Corporation June 22 2010 archived from the original on June 25 2010 retrieved November 3 2012 Canadian Press February 26 2021 Hall of Famers James Lowe Hay named to Order of Hockey in Canada Toronto Star Toronto Ontario Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved February 26 2021 Athletics and recreation at Seneca College Seneca College archived from the original on January 1 2013 retrieved November 3 2012 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 41 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 99 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 100 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 129 Bartsiokas amp Long 2012 p 133External links EditAngela James at Canada s Sports Hall of Fame Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Angela James amp oldid 1140177499, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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