It was a full circle moment for Shakita Jensen when she stepped on the bench
as head coach of Team Northwest Territories at the 2024 Arctic Winter Games.
In 2014, she played in the tournament in Alaska. A decade later, she
returned to Alaska to coach.
“I felt a lot of emotions,” says Jensen, the national
BFL CANADA Women in Coaching Award winner in the Competitive category.
Jensen, from the Tahltan First Nation, started as an on-ice volunteer with
the Yellowknife Minor Hockey Association in 2014. Since then, her passion
for giving back has driven her to continue her coaching journey.
“The hockey community has given me so much that I felt an obligation to want
to give back to the hockey community in any way I could,” Jensen says. “When
I got back from school, I was like, ‘I should probably try coaching, see if
I like it.’ And of course I liked it right away.”
In addition to giving back, a few impactful women who coached Jensen growing
up opened her eyes to her own potential journey.
“Having my first female head coach was super cool, and that made me want to
get into coaching,” she says. “Growing up, being sometimes the only girl on
my hockey teams, not really many women coaching, and then having my first
few female coaches thinking, ‘Wow they’re so cool, I want to be like them
one day.’”
The position of being a role model and a leader for youth in her community
was also a driving factor in wanting to become a coach.
“I’ve had so many influential coaches in my own playing career. [There are]
everlasting impacts they can have on their players, not only on the ice, but
off the ice as people as well, what you can teach your players as a coach. I
felt that I had lots to offer [as a head coach] and I wanted to be there for
kids.”
Jensen was in the right place at the right time to get her first head
coaching position. There was a shortage of coaches in her association, so
they asked Jensen—who initially applied to be an on-ice helper—if she wanted
to be a head coach.
“It was a lot of quick learning and kind of being thrown into it, but I felt
confident in myself the whole time,” the 26-year-old explains. “I just tried
to network with past coaches as much as I could to have a successful season,
which I think I did.”
Early in her career, Jensen decided to apply to be a part of the 2023 Canada
Winter Games coaching staff for Team NWT, but she wasn’t selected. However,
one of the coaches recommended she apply for the Aboriginal Apprentice Coach
program with the
Aboriginal Sports Circle.
“They chose one woman and one man from the territory, and it could be from
any sport, so I knew that it was a bit of a long shot, but when I heard I
got in for hockey, I was super excited.”
Through the apprenticeship program, Jensen was able to attend last year’s
Canada Winter Games on Prince Edward Island and work with Team NWT leading
up to the event. Afterwards, she became an assistant coach for Team NWT for
the 2023 Arctic Winter Games before being promoted to head coach for the
2024 tournament.
“I think that definitely opened a lot of doors,” she says. “It was cool to
see the progression and to allow me to gain all the tools and resources that
I needed to prepare my team.”
As head coach of Team NWT, the location of each player’s hometowns can often
be difficult to navigate—sometimes resulting in very few full team practices
before an event.
“It was definitely a challenge wanting to build your team culture and work
on your strategies and trying to prepare for a high-performance, short-term
competition when your team is scattered all over the territories, in some
places that are fly in/fly out or just a lot of money barriers,” she
explains. “I think one thing that was super helpful was our ability to
connect online leading up to the Games.”
Another huge opportunity for Jensen’s team this year was February’s
One For All event in Yellowknife. With more than 300 participants over four days, the
event celebrated women’s and girls’ hockey with Try Hockey events, on-ice
skills, coaching clinics and more.
Team Northwest Territories and Team Nunavut gathered to practice and face
off in an exhibition game.
“It was an overwhelming successful weekend—players putting on their hockey
gear for the first time and then other players who were about to be
graduating minor hockey,” says Jensen, who volunteered with the event. “It
felt super to contribute to that program, give back and hopefully keep that
program on a yearly basis here.”
When Jensen found out she was the BFL CANADA Women in Coaching Award winner
for Hockey North in the Competitive category, she was shocked.
“I was so surprised, kind of caught off guard. I felt so much pride and
gratitude.”
Jensen was unsure if she would be able to compete with the great provincial
and territorial candidates across the country. But when she saw Cassie
Campbell-Pascall on a video call congratulating her for winning the national
award, she was in disbelief all over again.
“There are really no words,” she says of winning the national award. “There
are so many influential coaches who go unrecognized sometimes for all the
work they do. [I’m] really feeling proud of myself, but also feeling proud
of everyone else across Canada who’s doing so much for the women’s game.”