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Hayley Williams (ice hockey)

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Hayley Williams
Williams with SK Gorny in 2020
Born (1990-06-03) 3 June 1990 (age 34)
Crete, IL, USA
Height 5 ft 4 in (163 cm)
Weight 137 lb (62 kg; 9 st 11 lb)
Position Center
Shoots Right
ZhHL team
Former teams
SK Gorny
National team  United States
Playing career 2009–present
Medal record
Representing  United States
Women's ice hockey
Winter Universiade
Bronze medal – third place 2013 Italy Tournament

Hayley Williams (born June 3, 1990) is an American professional ice hockey player. She currently plays for SK Gorny of the Russian Women's Hockey League (ZhHL), and previously played in both the National Women's Hockey League (NWHL) for the Buffalo Beauts and in the Canadian Women's Hockey League for the Toronto Furies and Brampton Thunder. Williams is a three-time professional all-star, having been selected to the 2016 NWHL All-Star Game as well as the 2019 and 2020 contests in the ZhHL.[1][2]

Playing career

Youth hockey

Williams spent most of her youth career with Team Illinois, before finishing with the Chicago Mission as a 19U player. At the 2008 USA Hockey Girls 19U National Championships in West Chester, Pennsylvania, she scored the winning goal in triple overtime to help the Mission – a team also featuring future Olympians Megan Bozek and Kendall Coyne – down Little Caesars for the national title.[3][4]

College

Bemidji State (2009–10)

Williams signed to play NCAA Division I hockey for Bemidji State, and immediately contributed to a successful 2009–10 season. Despite going 3–22–3 overall in 2008–09 and being a unanimous WCHA last-place pick for 2009–10, the Beavers made history during the league playoffs. With Williams in the lineup for both wins, BSU rallied to defeat St. Cloud State in the best-of-three opening round of the WCHA tournament, snapping a 14-game playoff losing streak and advancing to the WCHA Final Face-Off for the first time in program history.[5][6]

However, her time with the Beavers was derailed by academic issues,[4][7] and Williams would ultimately only play 16 games at BSU.

Despite leaving the hockey team after 2009–10, Williams remained enrolled at Bemidji through the summer of 2012, including playing outfield for the Beavers softball team during the 2011 season.[8]

Robert Morris (2013–14)

By the fall of 2012, Williams had moved home to the Chicago area, and began volunteering for the USHL's Chicago Steel which, at the time, played its home games at Edge Ice Arena in Bensenville, Illinois. Through a chance meeting with a former teammate who went on to play for Robert Morris Illinois (which shared Edge with the Steel), Williams wound up enrolling at RMU and practicing with the team during the 2012–13 season.[7] She then joined the Eagles' full roster for 2013–14, marking an official return to college hockey after a three-and-a-half year absence.

Williams immediately found chemistry with one of the Eagles' established stars, Ramey Weaver. The pair would go on to form two-thirds of the ACHA's best line, as each earned a spot on the ACHA's first All-American team and the duo finished 1-2 among the national scoring leaders. Williams scored 34 goals and 73 points that season in route to winning the Zoë M. Harris Award as the ACHA's player of the year. Weaver, who wound up her career after 2013–14 as Robert Morris' all-time leading scorer, added 32 goals and 55 points.

The Eagles largely breezed through their regular season schedule. With Williams putting up nine games with four points or more (including one late-season stretch where she accomplished the feat four times in five games),[9] and delivering late winning goals against Colorado State and Adrian on two of the few occasions RMU was seriously challenged.[10][11] The Eagles were 22–5–4 during the regular season, good for second in the Central Collegiate Women's Hockey Association to Miami, and were ranked third or fourth in the ACHA throughout the entire year.

Things abruptly turned south at playoff time however, as RMU was eliminated in the pool round at both the CCWHA playoffs and the ACHA National Tournament. Williams, for her part, was named first team all-tournament at both events after posting 12 points in six games between the two.[12][13]

Miami (2014–15)

Williams transferred to Miami University in Oxford, Ohio for the 2014–15 season, adding even more firepower to a RedHawks team that had quickly risen to prominence to win both the CCWHA and ACHA titles in 2013–14.

With Miami, Williams largely picked up where she left off the year before, putting up 15 points in her first four games of the season as the RedHawks routed Lindenwood–Belleville and Midland. She got even better in November as the games got tougher, taking home the ACHA's Harrow Player of the Month award by scoring seven goals as Miami defeated a string of top teams including UMass (in a rematch of the 2014 national championship game), Adrian, Minnesota, and Liberty.[14] Williams then burned her old RMU team for a goal in each game of a sweep in December,[15][16] and delivered a two-goal, two assist effort in a 7–4 win over Rhode Island.

The RedHawks were the wire-to-wire number one team and only lost twice during the regular season, a January defeat at home to Penn State (Miami's first loss in more than one calendar year) and another the next month against Michigan State, although Williams and four other key RedHawks missed the latter contest while at the 2015 Winter Universiade tournament in Spain. The quintet then returned for the CCWHA playoffs, in time to help the team win a second consecutive league title with a 4–2 win over Michigan,[17] with Williams contributing a goal and an assist in the championship game.

During most of the ACHA National Tournament at York City Ice Arena in York, Pennsylvania, Miami looked like a safe bet to repeat its 2014 title. Despite a tie with Adrian, the RedHawks won Group B with wins over Minnesota and Michigan, then had little issue with Grand Valley State in a crossover semifinal. In the final however, Liberty scored three goals during one 64-second first-period stretch, outweighing Williams' second-period goal as the Flames won their first national championship by a 4–1 count.[18]

Despite the setback, and for the second straight year, Williams conducted a clean sweep of the major national honors. She was once again voted as the Zoë M. Harris Award winner after a combined total of 59 points, becoming just the second player at the Division 1 level to earn the award twice (another player has accomplished the feat since), while also winning first team all-season and all-tournament honors for both the ACHA and CCWHA.

Williams went on to complete her Bachelor of Science degree from Miami in Kinesiology, through the Sport Leadership and Management program with a Coaching concentration, in 2016 while playing professional hockey.[4]

International

Winter Universiade

Williams was selected as a member of the United States National University Team, which competes at the Winter Universiade, during both of her ACHA seasons, and also named an alternate captain each time.[19][20]

The 2013 edition of the tournament, played in Trentino, Italy resulted in a bronze medal for Williams and Team USA after a third-place game win over Japan - the first-ever podium finish for an American women's team at the event and the first for the U.S. men or women in USA Hockey's modern era of participation (since 2001). Williams' contributions to the success were significant – she assisted on a late clinching goal by Katie Augustine in the team's biggest win, a 4–2 victory over a Russia team featuring several Russia women's national ice hockey team members to open the tournament. In the bronze medal match against Japan, Williams again assisted Augustine for the go-ahead goal early in the third period, then scored in the waning moments of the 3–1 victory.

Although the 2015 version of the team was unable to follow up that success and was quickly knocked out of contention at the 2015 tournament in Granada, Spain, Williams did provide one of the squad's signature moments. During a match against Kazakhstan in the 5th through 7th place consolation round robin, Team USA found itself trailing 2–1 in the last three minutes of the game. Williams then scooped up a loose puck near center ice, carried in herself and scored from the bottom of the left circle with 2:37 remaining.[21] The U.S. went on to win in overtime, a result that eventually allowed the team to finish fifth. Williams scored a pair of goals and added four assists to tie for the team scoring lead.

Professional

NWHL (2015–16)

After learning of the launch of the National Women's Hockey League, a new women's professional circuit, Williams attended free agent camps during the summer of 2015 ahead of the NWHL's inaugural season, eventually earning a contract with the Buffalo Beauts.[22][23] By signing, she became the first former ACHA player to sign in the league (along with UMass alumna Paige Harrington, whose signing with the Beauts was announced at the same time), and the first in any North American women's professional league since the 2002–03 season.

Williams scored her first NWHL goal on November 22, 2015, burying to tie a game against the Connecticut Whale at 6–6 with 3:23 remaining in the second period, although the Whale would go on to win in a shootout.[24][25] She added four assists while playing in 17 of the Beauts' 18 regular season games.

A fan vote determined the last four participants in the 1st NWHL All-Star Game on January 24, 2016, and Williams was added to Team Knight (captained by United States women's national ice hockey team and then-Boston Pride player Hilary Knight) after receiving 6,384 votes. She went on to score Team Knight's only goal of the game in a blowout loss to Emily Pfalzer's Team Pfalzer.[26][27]

The 2015–16 Buffalo Beauts season, saw a third-place finish in the standings with a 5–9–4 record, and an appearance in the first-ever Isobel Cup Final after rallying to upset Connecticut in a best-of-three semifinal. However, the Beauts dropped the championship series to Boston.[28]

CWHL (2016–18)

After only being offered a "practice player" spot by the Beauts for the 2016–17 season (practice players are members of the team, but not permitted to play in games unless the team is otherwise shorthanded),[29] Williams crossed over to the Canadian Women's Hockey League and earned a roster spot with the Brampton Thunder through a tryout.[30][31] She played in 14 games for Brampton, helping the team to a 12–10–1–1 (W–L–OTL–SOL) record and a third-place finish, although they were quickly eliminated in the best-of-three semifinals by Les Canadiennes de Montréal.

The following season, the Thunder relocated to Markham, Ontario, which is located on the opposite side of Toronto from Brampton. Williams, who still lived in Buffalo dating to her time with the Beauts, negotiated a trade to the Toronto Furies (which played at the Mastercard Centre For Hockey Excellence in Toronto's western neighborhoods, a bit closer to Buffalo than Markham) and spent 2017–18 with the Thunder's archrival. Playing frequently with Jenna Dingeldein, Jess Vella, and Carolyne Prevost, Williams rediscovered her offensive touch with the Furies, finishing the year fourth on the team in scoring with 14 points. She scored her first CWHL goal on November 11, 2017 to help Toronto beat the Calgary Inferno in a shootout.[32] The next month, she assisted on Jessica Platt's first career goal on December 7,[33] then was named the Furies' player for the game for a two-assist effort in a loss to Calgary ten days later.[34] Late-season highlights included a Furies sweep of the perennially-contending Inferno on January 27 and 28 by 3–2 and 5–2 scores, with Williams scoring the winning goal in the first game on a 5-on-3 advantage with 3:21 remaining.[35] She also capped off the weekend by scoring an empty-net goal to seal victory in the second game, in front of a national television audience on Sportsnet.[36]

Despite those individual successes, the Furies uncharacteristically struggled throughout most the season, missing the playoffs with a 9–17–1–1 record and a sixth-place finish.[37]

ZhHL (2018–present)

Along with former Beauts teammate Tatiana Rafter, Williams jumped to the other side of the globe for the 2018–19 season as an import player in the Russian Women's Hockey League (abbreviated as "ZhHL" due to the romanized Russian name Zhenskaya Hokkeynaya Liga) for SK Gorny, announcing the transaction on Instagram.[38]

Williams arrived to find a team in something of a chaotic state. Originally known as Arktik-Universitet and operated in conjunction with Ukhta State Technical University, the organization was in the middle of a complete overhaul that would see it rebrand as SK Gorny for the start of the 2018–19 season, then relocate from the small industrial city of Ukhta to the major metropolis of Saint Petersburg midway through the campaign.[39] Furthermore, Arktik-Universitet had not been successful on the ice, winning just four times in 24 games during 2017–18.

Thanks to the arrivals of Williams and Rafter, along with a nucleus that included Russia women's national ice hockey team players Fanuza Kadirova and Liana Ganeyeva, Gorny slowly became increasingly competitive within the league, improving to 12 wins in 2018–19.[40] Williams, for her part, scored her first two Russian goals in a win over Biryusa Krasnoyarsk on October 18, 2018, then added key goals to help the squad defeat perennially-strong HC Tornado and Dinamo Saint Petersburg over the following two weekends.[41] In all, she finished her rookie year in Russia with ten goals, tied for second-most on SK Gorny, while her 19 points ranked 38th across the entire league. Williams' exploits merited a spot in the ZhHL's All-Star Game, played on January 13, 2019 in Nizhnekamsk. With the SK Gorny trio of Williams, Rafter, and Kadirova each scoring a goal in the contest, the West downed the East 4–2.[42][43]

The following season, both Williams and SK Gorny improved. The team contended for a playoff berth until the end of the year, thanks in part to the addition of Russian national teamer Alexandra Vafina from SKIF Nizhny Novgorod (ultimately finishing fifth, three points behind Biryusa for the final spot), and the player bumped up her stats production to 11 goals (14th in the league) and 22 points (16th). She picked up an assist in arguably SK Gorny's biggest win, a 2–1 overtime victory against eventual league champion Shenzhen KRS Vanke Rays late in the season,[44] and notched a professional-career-best four points (on two goals and two assists) in a season-opening rout of SKSO Yekaterinburg.

Williams participated in her second straight ZhHL All-Star Game on January 12, 2020 in Moscow, although her Team West dropped a 4–1 decision to Team East.[45]

Personal

Williams is the founder of Hockey Worldwide, a hockey training and coaching organization that produces on-ice camps and off-ice training programs.[46]

Career statistics

College and professional

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
2009–10[47] Bemidji State NCAA 16 0 0 0 8
2013–14[48] Robert Morris (IL) ACHA 32 31 37 68 44 3 3 2 5 4
2014–15[49] Miami University ACHA 25 27 26 53 12 5 3 3 6 2
2015–16[50] Buffalo Beauts NWHL 17 1 4 5 14 3 0 0 0 0
2016–17[37] Brampton Thunder CWHL 14 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0
2017–18 Toronto Furies CWHL 28 4 10 14 22
2018–19[41] SK Gorny ZhHL 35 10 9 19 40
2019–20 SK Gorny ZhHL 28 11 11 22 18
NCAA totals 16 0 0 0 8
ACHA totals 57 58 63 121 56 8 6 5 11 6
NWHL totals 17 1 4 5 14 3 0 0 0 0
CWHL totals 42 4 10 14 24 1 0 0 0 0
ZhHL totals 63 21 20 41 58

International

Year Team Event Result   GP G A Pts PIM
2013 United States WU 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 7 2 3 5 4
2015 United States WU 5th 5 2 4 6 4
Totals 12 5 6 11 8

Awards and honors

ACHA

  • 2013–14 Zoë M. Harris Award
  • 2013–14 First Team All-American[51]
  • 2013–14 First Team All-Tournament[13]
  • 2013–14 First Team All-CCWHA[52]
  • 2013–14 First Team All-CCWHA Tournament[12]
  • 2014–15 Zoë M. Harris Award
  • 2014–15 First Team All-American[53]
  • 2014–15 First Team All-Tournament
  • 2014–15 First Team All-CCWHA[54]
  • 2014–15 First Team All-CCWHA Tournament[55]
  • Harrow Player of the Month – November 2014

NWHL

  • 2016 All-Star Game selection

ZhHL

  • 2019 All-Star Game selection
  • 2020 All-Star Game selection

References

  1. ^ "Russian women's league announces All-Stars". The Ice Garden. December 18, 2018. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
  2. ^ "WHL All-Star Announcement". Russian Women's Hockey League. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
  3. ^ "CHICAGO MISSION GIRLS 19U - 2008 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS". Chicago Mission. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  4. ^ a b c MacDonald, Scott (April 26, 2020). "Hayley Williams: Road Map to the Russian Women's Hockey League". Real Xperience Podcast. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  5. ^ "BSU women end playoff streak, top St. Cloud 2–1". Bemidji Pioneer. February 28, 2010. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  6. ^ "Final Face-Off bound; Beavers win playoff series against Huskies". Bemidji State Athletics. February 28, 2010. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  7. ^ a b "Williams Embodies Team USA's Never-Give-Up Spirit". USA Hockey. December 8, 2013. Retrieved May 14, 2017.
  8. ^ "2011 ROSTER". Bemidji State Athletics. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  9. ^ "# 13 Hayley Williams". Pointstreak. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  10. ^ "(W1) Robert Morris University (IL) vs (W1) Colorado State University: 2-1". Pointstreak. November 3, 2013. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  11. ^ "(W1) Robert Morris University (IL) vs (W1) Adrian College: 4-3". Pointstreak. February 16, 2014. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
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  17. ^ Reuter, Rachel (February 22, 2015). "CCWHA DI Champions: Miami University!". CCWHA. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
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  19. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on August 29, 2014. Retrieved August 7, 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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  22. ^ NWHL (2015). "Llanes, Williams, and Harrington Sign NWHL Contracts". NWHL.Co. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
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  31. ^ March, Jenn (January 26, 2017). "Hayley's Dream". YouTube. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  32. ^ @TorontoCWHL (November 11, 2017). "@haywilliathlete goes bar down on the back hand" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  33. ^ "Thunder win in the shootout, Furies lose in a blowout". Pension Plan Puppets. December 9, 2017. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  34. ^ @TorontoCWHL (December 17, 2017). "YOUR FINAL #FuriesPOTG FOR 2017!" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
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  37. ^ a b Scott, Richard (2019). 12 Seasons: The CWHL Records Book. Up North Productions. pp. 114–130. ISBN 978-1-71-414708-3.
  38. ^ "Hayley Williams on Instagram: "A few weeks ago, I woke up to an unexpected offer..."". Instagram. August 28, 2018. Retrieved May 10, 2020.
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  40. ^ "Table 2018/2019". Women's Hockey League. Retrieved May 10, 2020.
  41. ^ a b "#3 Hayley Williams". Women's Hockey League. Retrieved May 10, 2020.
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  43. ^ "Team West wins WHL All-Star Game, Rafter and Cupkova go to KHL All-Star". Kontinental Hockey League. January 13, 2019. Retrieved May 11, 2020.
  44. ^ "Good start to the home series". SK Gorny. February 15, 2020. Retrieved May 11, 2020.
  45. ^ "Trick shots, dance-offs and a great Women's All-Star Game". Kontinental Hockey League. January 12, 2020. Retrieved May 11, 2020.
  46. ^ Gallivan, Peter (April 21, 2020). "From Russia with love; former Beaut still teaching hockey to WNY from a distance". WGRZ-TV. Retrieved July 15, 2017.
  47. ^ "Bemidji State Beavers (Women) 2009-2010 Team Statistics". collegehockeystats.net. Retrieved April 23, 2020.
  48. ^ "(W1) ROBERT MORRIS UNIVERSITY (IL) - TEAM ID 13172". Goalline. Retrieved April 25, 2020.
  49. ^ "# 77 Hayley Williams". Pointstreak. Retrieved April 25, 2020.
  50. ^ "Hayley Williams". National Women's Hockey League. Retrieved April 25, 2020.
  51. ^ "Women's Division I Awards 2013-2014". American Collegiate Hockey Association. Archived from the original on August 8, 2014. Retrieved April 14, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  52. ^ "All-Season CCWHA Teams Announced!". Central Collegiate Women's Hockey Association. February 2014. Retrieved February 26, 2018.
  53. ^ "Past Awards". American Collegiate Hockey Association. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
  54. ^ "2014-15 All-Season Teams Announced". Central Collegiate Women's Hockey Association. February 2015. Retrieved February 26, 2018.
  55. ^ "2015 CCWHA DI All-Tournament Teams". Central Collegiate Women's Hockey Association. February 22, 2015. Retrieved February 25, 2018.