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Marie-Philip Poulin
Marie-Philip-Poulin
Position Forward
Shoots Left
Height
Weight
5 ft 6 in (1.68 m)
Collègial AA
Hockey East Team
Dawson Blues
Boston University
Born (1991-03-28)March 28, 1991,
Beaceville, QC
Pro Career 2007 – present


Medal record
Competitor for Flag of Canada Canada
Women's ice hockey
Olympic games
Gold 2010 Vancouver Tournament
IIHF World Women Championships
Silver 2009 Finland Tournament
Gold 2012 United States Tournament
IIHF U18 Womens Worlds
Silver 2008 Canada 2008 Tournament
Silver 2009 Germany 2009 Tournament

Marie-Philip Poulin (born March 28, 1991, in Beauceville, Quebec) is a Canadian ice hockey forward, currently playing for the Boston University Terriers. Poulin was a member of the 2009–10 Hockey Canada national women's team that won the gold medal at the 2010 Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver, and had previously played for the Dawson College Blues. She has been referred to as the Sidney Crosby of women's hockey for her high level of achievement at a young

[1]

Playing career[]

Montreal Stars[]

Poulin spent 2007-08 with the Montreal Stars of the Canadian Women's Hockey League. She appeared in only 16 games, but managed to lead all rookies in scoring with 22 goals and 21 assists. So dominant was she in half a season as a 16-year old rookie that she finished runner up in the CWHL Most Valuable Player vote by club captains. She was a recipient of the Montreal Canadiens scholarship program in January 2008.[2] In 2008-09, she played with her school team (Dawson Blues women's ice hockey), but also played as an associate player with the Stars. At year's end, she helped the Stars win the Clarkson Cup over the Minnesota Whitecaps in Kingston, Ontario in March 2009.

Poulin Gainey

January 2008: Poulin with Canadiens GM Bob Gainey accepting a scholarship

Hockey Canada[]

File::MariePhilipPoulin_OPeeCheeCard.jpg|thumb|2009-10 O-Pee-Chee hockey card]] At the age of sixteen years old, she made her Team Canada debut with the Under-18 national team during a three-game exhibition series in Prince George, BC between Canada and the U.S. in the fall of 2007. Playing for Canada Red, Poulin racked up four goals and one assist in two games against Sweden's national women's team, the 2006 Olympic silver medalists. Her 2.5 points per game put her atop the all-time list for the national women's team.[3]

She participated at the 2008 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship in Calgary and was Canada's leading scorer. She was part of the team that won a silver medal. She finished the tournament with eight goals and six assists in five games.[4] In two seasons with Canada's national women's under-18 team, Poulin became the all-time leading scorer in U18 team history with 31 points in 17 games. She helped Canada to back-to-back silver medals at the IIHF World Women's Under-18 Championship in 2008 and 2009. She was one of four players from Quebec, (along with Melodie Daoust, Roxanne Douville, Laurie Kingsbury), that represented Canada at the 2009 IIHF World Women’s Under-18 Championship in Germany.[5]

She made her debut on the Canadian senior national team, earning silver at the 2009 World Championship in Hameenlinna, Finland.[4]

Poulin scored both goals during Team Canada's 2-0 win in the gold medal game against the United States at the 2010 Winter Olympics. At the end of the tournament, Poulin was named to the tournament all-star team.[6]

By claiming the gold medal at the 2012 IIHF Women's World Championship, Poulin (along with Catherine Ward) became the sixth and seventh members of the (not yet recognized by the IIHF) Triple Gold Club for Women (having won gold in the Olympic Games, the IIHF World Championships, and the Clarkson Cup). In August 2012, Poulin was named the captain of the Canadian Under-22 team that competed in an exhibition series versus the United States Under-22 squad in Calgary, Alberta.[7]

Boston University[]

Poulin debuted with the Boston University Terriers women's ice hockey program during the 2010–11 season. On October 2, 2010, she scored the first goal of her NCAA career, during a 5-4 loss at North Dakota.[8] With her third shorthanded goal of the season on October 15, 2010, she tied BU’s single-season record for shorthanded tallies in just four games. She led all NCAA freshmen in goals (9) and points per game (2.00) during October 2010. In addition, she led all Hockey East freshmen in goals, assists and points, and ranked during the month. She was ranked first among all Hockey East players in shorthanded goals with three. In the first seven games of her NCAA career, she had a seven-game point-scoring streak consisting of nine goals and seven assists. [9] On January 22, 2011, Poulin recorded a hat trick, including two power play goals as BU prevailed over Vermont in a 4-0 win. The win was the Terriers 100th win in program history. Poulin broke BU’s single-season points record with her second goal of the game and later tied the single-season goals record with her third marker=[10]

Career stats[]

Hockey Canada[]

Event Games Goals Assists Points PIM
2007 National Fall Festival 6 7 2 9 2

Awards and honors[]

Dawsonretirednumbers

Marie-Philip Poulin and Catherine Ward get their numbers retired from Dawson College.

CWHL[]

  • CWHL Outstanding Rookie (2007-08, unanimous selection)
  • CWHL All-Rookie Team (2007-08)
  • CWHL Eastern All Stars (2007-08)
  • CWHL Monthly Top Scorer (October 2007)

NCAA[]

  • Hockey East Pure Hockey Player of the Week (Week of October 18, 2010)[11]
  • Hockey East Rookie of the Month (October 2010)[12]
  • Hockey Pro Ambitions Rookie of the Week (Week of December 13, 2010) [13]
  • Hockey East Pro Ambitions Rookie of the Week, (Week of January 3, 2011)[14]
  • Runner-Up, Hockey East Pro Ambitions Rookie of the Month (December 2010)[15]
  • Hockey East Pro Ambitions Rookie of the Week (Week of January 24, 2011) [16]

IIHF and Olympics[]

CanadianOlyRings 2010

June 2010: (Left to right) Caroline Ouellette, Kim St. Pierre, Marie-Philip Poulin, Gina Kingsbury, Carla MacLeod and Haley Irwin proudly display their Olympic rings.

  • IIHF Women's World Hockey Championship silver medallist (2008, 2009)[17]
  • 2008 IIHF Under-18 World Championship, Top Forward
  • 4 Nations Cup gold medallist (2009)
  • Vancouver 2010 Olympics, Media All-Star Team[18]

References[]

This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Marie-Philip Poulin. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Ice Hockey Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License 3.0 (Unported) (CC-BY-SA).


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