As a young girl who wasnât allowed to play, a trailblazing university athlete and a successful physician, Dr. Laura Bennion has always had a deep connection to Canadaâs game
It was the late 1970s in Vancouver and a young Laura Bennion wanted to play
minor hockey.
Her mom Glenda took her to the local arena to sign up, waiting in line for
their turn to fill out the paperwork. When it was their turn, the Bennions
were told seven-year-old Laura wouldnât be allowed to play the game she
loved.
âI was quite a little tomboy so I didnât really look out of place there,â
recalls Laura. âI got to the front of the line and my mom started to give
my name and everything. The person at the desk looked at me and then looked
at my mom and said, âNo girls allowed. Thereâs no girls allowed in this
league.â And then she said, âGirls donât play hockey.ââ
That experience may have driven little Laura away from the game. But the
story didnât end there. As Laura and her mom stepped aside to figure out
what to do next, a local minor hockey coach, Keith Morrison, tapped Glenda
on the shoulder and offered young Laura a spot on his team.
Morrison was a longtime supporter of minor hockey in the community and a
player himself, helping grow a group of UBC friends into the Vancouver
Flames Oldtimers. Morrison, who passed away in January, was inducted into
the Canadian Adult Recreational Hockey Association Hall of Fame in 1998.
Bennion has been thinking about Morrison a lot these days, as the first
person to give her a chance in hockey, something that led her to a lifetime
love of the game.
â(Morrison) said, âWeâll figure something out; weâll put Larry on her
helmet and she can play on my team,ââ says Bennion. âHis kid was the same
age as me and we had gone to hockey school together so he had seen me play,
not that that really matters when youâre seven. He did that and I played
hockey as Larry for the whole first year and it sort of started to leak out
at the end that I wasnât actually Larry. Thatâs how I got my start.â
As a young child, Bennion was seemingly one of those kids just destined to
be in and around hockey for her whole life. Her mother Glenda, who
continues to live in the Vancouver area, says young Laura would spend hours
on their concrete deck in the backyard screaming âShe shoots, she scores.â
âShe had a love of hockey from the time she was a toddler. It did not come
from me,â laughs Glenda. âHer father died when she was five months old of a
brain tumour but he a was a rabid hockey fan. His team was the Toronto
Maple Leafs. He never got a chance to teach her that, but Iâve always
presumed itâs genetic, honestly. When they say nature versus nurture, I
think it was just in her genes. She loved hockey.â
Today, Bennion is 50 and is a well-known and reputable doctor in Calgary,
splitting her time between her family practice, obstetrics and gynecology,
and sports medicine. Her husband, Ian Auld, is the team doctor for the
Calgary Flames and the couple have two children â 15-year-old Evan, who
plays hockey at Edge School for Athletes, and 11-year-old Carys, who is an
avid volleyball and softball player.
Bennion has never lost her love for hockey and it continues to be a major
part of her life. After that first year of playing minor hockey as Larry,
she joined a girlsâ league in the Lower Mainland, where she spent the rest
of her minor hockey career. As a teenager, Bennion developed a keen
interest in basketball (seeing more opportunities in that sport than
hockey) and played varsity basketball in high school. She went on to play
two years for the womenâs basketball team at the University of British
Columbia, thinking then her hockey career may be over.
Soon, thoughâ¦
âI started to run into problems with my shoulder dislocating and it became
clear that basketball â where obviously your arms are over your head a lot
â was vulnerable for me and not a great sport for me and hockey was
actually better,â says Bennion. âI heard there were some varsity teams in
the eastern U.S., so I reached out to the coach of the Northeastern team in
Boston and I went there for my third, fourth and fifth years of my
undergrad (journalism). I quite fortunately found myself in a really good
hockey program.â
Bennion would return to British Columbia after those three years to study
medicine at UBC. She was instrumental in starting the womenâs hockey team
at the university in 1994, gathering players from across the campus and
eventually helping it grow to a post-secondary power. Bennion coached the
UBC team initially and then, due to the fact she still had university
eligibility to play, spent three seasons (1996-99) with the team on the
ice.
Bennion, who played forward and defence during her college/university
career, also tried out for Canadaâs National Womenâs Team on two occasions,
including in the mid-90s in the lead-up to the 1998 Nagano Olympics.
Her work in starting the UBC womenâs team was so critical that Bennion was
inducted into the UBC Sports Hall of Fame in 2014.
She continues to be active. She and Ian are avid cyclists, spending much of
the spring and summer months on their road and mountain bikes. Hockey is
still at the forefront of Bennionâs life, as well; she is a doctor for
Canadaâs National Womenâs Team and worked with the Calgary Inferno during
its Canadian Womenâs Hockey League lifespan, dating back to its start as
Team Alberta.
She shares a family practice with a partner in Calgary, practices sports
medicine with Group 23, and continues to deliver babies. Bennion loves the
diversity in the work she does.
âI think Iâm a pretty even-keeled type of person. I donât get flustered by
much. That helps,â she says when asked how she succeeds. âProbably being
involved in all of those realms has helped with that. Iâm interested in a
bunch of different things. Iâm not an all-eggs-in-one-basket kind of
person. I really thrive on the diversity.
âI never used to see many parallels between sports medicine and pregnancy
but, actually, there are tons. Sports medicine people are trying to use
their bodies in a way that challenges them and sometimes it doesnât always
go right and pregnancy, obviously, is one of the biggest challenges,
physically, that a woman will go through in her life. I feel like those two
things there are some natural comparisons.â