Manue Blais

Emmanuelle Blais was an ice hockey player for the Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs women’s ice hockey program. She leaves the program with 145 career points (73 goals and 72 assists). She ranks eighth place in all-time scoring.

NCAA
In its April 29, 2010, Sports Illustrated listed Emmanuelle Blais as one of its "Faces In The Crowd" Part of the recognition is attributed to Blais earning the 2010 NCAA Frozen Four's Most Outstanding Player award on March 21.

Blais was also a 2009-10 RBK First Team All-American. Her 1.59 points per game was the fifth highest total in the country. Her 32 goals led the NCAA, and she had a career high of 65 points. On April 12, Blais was a co-winner of the University of Minnesota Duluth's Outstanding Female Senior Athlete Award. The award was shared by four winners: the others being Jheri Booker (basketball), Clare Dahmen (soccer) and Kristin Danielson (softball).

Hockey Canada
In March 2011, she was invited to the Canadian national women's ice hockey team selection camp to determine the final roster for the 2011 IIHF Women's World Championships.

Awards and honors

 * 2010 Top-10 Patty Kazamier Award Finalist
 * 2010 All-WCHA First Team
 * 2010 Women's RBK Hockey Division I All-America First Team
 * 2010 WCHA Final Face-off tournament MVP.
 * 2010 WCHA Offensive Player of the Week (Week of October 26)
 * 2010 Frozen Four Most Outstanding Player
 * 2010 Frozen Four Tournament Team

Career stats

 * January 4: In a pre-tournament game for the 2010 MLP Cup, Blais had two assists for Canada as Canada bested Germany by a 5-1 mark. Despite icing only eight forwards and moving one defender from the blue line, Canada outshot the Germans 57-10.

Personal

 * Sports Illustrated listed Emmanuelle Blais as one of its "Faces In The Crowd" (in its April 19, 2010 issue).
 * On September 13, 2010, Blais and her Bulldogs teammates were part of a group of NCAA sporting champions that visited the White House in Washington, D.C. and listended to United States president Barack Obama congratulate them on their victory.