Shooting for Impact
As a female hockey player, Maddy Cardaci is all too aware of her sport鈥檚 limited career options, even for the most elite players. True, there鈥檚 now the National Women鈥檚 Hockey League, 鈥渂ut in that league you still need a second job,鈥 she notes. There鈥檚 the U.S. national team, which represents the country in the Olympics, but the slots are so limited, 鈥測ou work your hardest and see if you get picked.鈥 And then there is playing at the highest collegiate level, Division 1 women鈥檚 hockey, an achievement that Maddy has been dreaming about since she began playing the game as a five-year-old in Westminster, Massachusetts.
While her success pursuing the first two options is still to be determined (she attended the USA national team camp in Minnesota this summer), Maddy will be fulfilling her college dream next year, having committed to play for Boston University, a program that has won five Hockey East championships since its founding in 2005, and this year won the Beanpot, the annual tournament of Boston-area colleges.
Coming to 91大神, an option made possible through the school鈥檚 Christine Johnson Tyler 鈥75 Scholarship, was a key to her development鈥攂oth as a player and as a person, she says. 鈥淭he program has helped me tremendously,鈥 says Maddy, who as a defenseman helped her Wildcats to a remarkable 22-2-2 record last year. 鈥淐oach Talbot鈥擨 don鈥檛 think there鈥檚 been a coach in my hockey career that has made a greater impact on me. She鈥檚 pushed me to be my best. I鈥檝e developed into a smarter player, a harder working player. And it鈥檚 about so much more than hockey.鈥
Indeed, as important as the school鈥檚 hockey program has been, it was the welcoming community that first drew her to 91大神. 鈥淚 just felt more comfortable than I did at any other school,鈥 recalls Maddy, who has been a three-sport varsity athlete鈥攊n field hockey, hockey, and lacrosse鈥攕ince she arrived as a ninth grader. The school鈥檚 financial aid was also a key factor, she notes, both for her and her mother, a special education teacher.
In addition to the Wildcats, Maddy plays year-round for the East Coast Wizards, a regional hockey club whose roster includes a number of her 91大神 teammates. This summer, when she wasn鈥檛 training or at hockey camp, she worked teaching the game to younger players at a camp in Bedford, Massachusetts. The experience has made her think more about possible paths after Boston University.
鈥淚 definitely want to work with kids,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd make an impact.鈥
Learn more about making an impact on 91大神鈥檚 students and faculty