Team Alberta Female Embraces Unity, Culture, and Competition at 2025 NAHC
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — With the 2025 National Aboriginal Hockey Championship (NAHC) in full swing, Team Alberta Female arrived in Kamloops, ready to compete and connect, grow, and lead with purpose.
Head coach Bryan Toles brings a philosophy rooted in trust, accountability, and culture at the heart of the team’s preparation and identity. Stepping into the role midway through the process, Toles has quickly established a foundation of unity that transcends the ice.
“It really is about the experiences,” said Toles. “A lot of these players are going to go on to junior teams, colleges, or back to their club teams, but what they’ll remember most are the things that happen on the bus, in the dressing room, at the hotel. Winning becomes a byproduct of that.”
Team Alberta Female represents a mix of returning players and first-time participants, each bringing their own regional and cultural identities into a shared provincial mission. To help this group come together, the coaching staff has prioritized team-building initiatives, including cultural experiences like a group visit to a newly opened residential school museum in Kamloops, an intentional effort to ground the team in the deeper meaning of the NAHC.
“We’re doing cultural stuff, team bonding, and providing an atmosphere where they can connect and play free, but also challenge each other,” Toles explained. “It’s about being able to move in one direction before puck drop, trusting the process, as cliché as it sounds.”
Trust and freedom are core principles of Toles’ coaching style. He encourages his players to make mistakes, learn from them, and stay focused on their collective responsibilities rather than fear individual slip-ups.
“We have some non-negotiables in terms of our structure, but I want the players to play free within that system,” he said. “Everyone makes mistakes, and how you recover and how the team responds together matters.”
That balance of structure and freedom mirrors what Toles has implemented successfully with the Edmonton Wolves, who recently won provincials under his leadership.
“A lot of these players are getting to the point where they’re young adults,” said Toles. “We want to give them the ability to make the right decisions on and off the ice, not just as athletes, but as people.”
As competition has unfolded this week, Team Alberta Female goal was not only chasing a championship but building a legacy of respect, resilience, and cultural pride. With strong leadership and a unified locker room, the team competed hard, but their most significant win may come from what they can take home beyond the game.
“We’re going to have fun, we’re going to learn, and we’re going to grow,” Toles added. “Seeing these young women put the same jersey on and go together, that’s what I’m most looking forward to.”