Kerry Weiland
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Kerry Pauline Weiland Sorbara (; born October 18, 1980) is an American retired ice hockey and inline hockey player, a defenseman. As a member of the United States women's national ice hockey team, she won four
IIHF Women's World Championship The IIHF World Women's Championship (WW or WWC), officially the IIHF Ice Hockey Women's World Championship, is the premier international tournament in women's ice hockey. It is governed by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF). The of ...
medals and a silver medal in the 2010 Olympic women's ice hockey tournament.


Playing career

As a child, Weiland began skating and playing pickup games on her family’s farm. At age five, she followed her older brother when he began playing organized ice hockey with the Matanuska Amateur Hockey Association at the local rink in Wasilla, Alaska and played exclusively on boys' teams until she was thirteen. She played on boys' and girls' teams throughout her teens, including four seasons with the boys' varsity team of her high school, Palmer High School. With the Palmer High Moose boys' team, she became the first female player to earn first-team all-region honors in Alaska prep league history.


NCAA

Her college ice hockey career began in the fall of 1999 with the Wisconsin Badgers women's ice hockey program in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA)
conference A conference is a meeting of two or more experts to discuss and exchange opinions or new information about a particular topic. Conferences can be used as a form of group decision-making, although discussion, not always decisions, are the main p ...
of the NCAA Division I. The 1999–2000 season was the inaugural season of both the WCHA women's conference and the Badgers women's ice hockey program. Over half of the team were first-year players like Weiland and her fellow freshmen included future US national team goaltender Chanda Gunn and defenseman,
Sis Paulsen Sis Paulsen (born July 25, 1980) is an American ice hockey and softball coach. She is the director of hockey operations and equipment manager for the Wisconsin Badgers women's ice hockey team and the equipment manager for the United States wo ...
, the future Director of Hockey Operations for the Badgers women's program. In her first season, Weiland ranked fifth on the team for scoring, tallying 10 goals and 35
points Point or points may refer to: Places * Point, Lewis, a peninsula in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland * Point, Texas, a city in Rains County, Texas, United States * Point, the NE tip and a ferry terminal of Lismore, Inner Hebrides, Scotland * Point ...
in 33 games, and recorded the best
plus–minus Plus−minus (+/−, ±, plus/minus) is a sports statistic used to measure a player's impact on the game, represented by the difference between their team's total scoring versus their opponent's when the player is in the game. In ice ...
of all Badger defensemen, with +7. During the Wisconsin Badgers program’s second game on October 9, 1999, in which they faced the Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs, she set the WCHA all-time records for most penalties and most penalty minutes issued in a single game, with eight penalties and 24 penalty minutes; the records remain untouched . At the end of the season, Weiland was named to the All-WCHA Second Team and was awarded the team’s Most Inspirational Player award and Defensive Player of the Year award. Named alongside
captain Captain is a title, an appellative for the commanding officer of a military unit; the supreme leader of a navy ship, merchant ship, aeroplane, spacecraft, or other vessel; or the commander of a port, fire or police department, election precinct, e ...
Sis Paulsen in their
sophomore In the United States, a sophomore ( or ) is a person in the second year at an educational institution; usually at a secondary school or at the college and university level, but also in other forms of post-secondary educational institutions. In ...
season, Weiland served as an alternate captain during her last three seasons with the Badgers. The 2000–01 season, the inaugural NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season, was her most offensively productive and she led all defensemen in the country with 49 points (12 goals+37 assists), which set the still-standing Badger program record for most points by a defensive player in a season. Her 37 assists in that season tied for most assists by a defender in a WCHA season with Minnesota Golden Gophers defenseman Winny Brodt’s total from 1999–2000 (their record stood until 2006–07, when it was broken by
Meaghan Mikkelson Meaghan Mikkelson (born January 4, 1985) is a Canadian ice hockey player and a member of the Canadian national ice hockey team, currently affiliated with the Calgary chapter of the Professional Women's Hockey Players Association (PWHPA). Mik ...
). Her 38 penalties and 76 penalty minutes took second place in the Badger record book behind Sis Paulson’s 40 penalties and 91 penalty minutes from the 1999–2000 season and both currently sit at third, behind Paulson and Lindsay Macy (2003–04). Weiland and Badger teammate Meghan Hunter were both named to the 2001
AHCA The American Health Care Act of 2017 (often shortened to the AHCA or nicknamed Trumpcare) was a bill in the 115th United States Congress. The bill, which was passed by the United States House of Representatives but not by the United States ...
All-American Second Team and the 2001 All-WCHA First Team. The 2001–02 season saw Weiland play a less offensively driven role due to the addition of first-year defensemen Molly Engstrom and
Carla MacLeod Carla Rae MacLeod (born June 16, 1982) is a retired member of the Canadian national women's hockey team. Through her paternal grandmother, MacLeod is related to former Montreal Canadiens legend Maurice Richard. Playing career MacLeod was born ...
, who were able to provide additional production from the blue line – though she still recorded 22 points and ranked sixth on the team in scoring. Her junior season featured the highest
plus–minus Plus−minus (+/−, ±, plus/minus) is a sports statistic used to measure a player's impact on the game, represented by the difference between their team's total scoring versus their opponent's when the player is in the game. In ice ...
rating (+20) and the fewest penalty minutes (36 PIM) of her college career and was capped by her selection to the 2002 AHCA All-American First Team, becoming the first Badger to earn selection to the top All-American team.


Post-collegiate

Following her graduation, Weiland joined the Edmonton Chimos of the Canadian National Women's Hockey League (NWHL) for one regular season and two playoff games in the 2003–04 season before playing the full
2004–05 NWHL season Final standings Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime losses, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, Pts = Points. Playoffs *Toronto Aeros 5, Montreal Axion 4 (OT) The Toronto Aeros won the Championship of the NWH ...
with the Brampton Thunder. During that time, she also participated in the Esso Women's Nationals with the Chimos (as Team Alberta) in 2004 and with the Thunder competing as (Team Ontario 2) in 2005. Weiland chose to go abroad after being cut from the 2006 US Olympic team and signed with the Swiss team in the Leistungsklasse A (LK A) for the . She ranked second on the team and ninth in the league for scoring, with 16 goals and 11 assists. In addition to playing in the top Swiss league, she served as an assistant coach to the Switzerland women's national under-18 ice hockey team for the 2005–06 season. During her spare time while living in Europe, she visited fourteen countries. Returning to North America in 2006, Weiland joined the Etobicoke Dolphins for the
2006–07 NWHL season Inefficient NWHL Management controversy * February 10, 2007: In a game against the Brampton Thunder, the game ended in controversy. The Montreal Axion had a 2-1 lead in the third period. Jesse Scanzano scored two goals with assists going to Annie De ...
and remained with the team as it became the Vaughan Flames and joined the Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL) in its inaugural season, 2007–08. She participated in the Esso Women's Nationals in 2007 with the Vaughan Flames (as Team Ontario 2) and served as an alternate captain.


International play

Weiland was first invited to participate in the USA Hockey Women's National Festival in 1999 and took part in a total of eight festivals (1999, 2002–2005, and 2007–2009). Her first national team selection was to the United States women's national select team (also known as the national development team) for the 2002 Four Nations Cup in Canada, at which she won a silver medal. She won gold with the national select team at the 2003 Four Nations Cup in Sweden and was named to the United States national team roster for the
2003 IIHF Women's World Championship The 2003 IIHF Women's World Championships was set to be held in Beijing, China, from April 4–9, 2003. However, it was cancelled due to the SARS crisis. Only the top division event was cancelled, as the lower divisions still had their tournament ...
in Beijing before the tournament was cancelled due to the SARS crisis. A year later, she made her World Championship debut with the national team playing on the second pair with Molly Engstrom at the
2004 IIHF Women's World Championship The 2004 IIHF World Women's Championships were held March 30 – April 6, 2004 in Halifax Urban Area, Halifax and Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Dartmouth, Canada at the Scotiabank Centre, Halifax Metro Centre (now known as Scotiabank Centre), and the D ...
in Halifax, Nova Scotia, where she was +8 across five games and won a silver medal, and also took home silver from the 2004 Four Nations Cup in the United States. She was not named to the national team nor the national select team for any tournaments in 2005 and, though she was a prospect for the 2006 United States Olympic team, was cut early in the selection process. Of the conversation when she was cut, she recalled being told that, while she was undeniably skilled, the opportunity was being given to younger players (she was 25 at the time). After being cut from the Olympic squad, Weiland considered retiring from ice hockey altogether but instead decided to pause her national team aspirations and signed to play in Switzerland for the 2005–06 season. While in Switzerland, she attended various competitions at the
2006 Winter Olympics The 2006 Winter Olympics, officially the XX Olympic Winter Games ( it, XX Giochi olimpici invernali) and also known as Torino 2006, were a winter multi-sport event held from 10 to 26 February 2006 in Turin, Italy. This marked the second t ...
in Turin, including short track speed skating, curling, biathlon, and several matches of the women's ice hockey tournament. Upon returning to North America, she caught the 2006 Four Nations Cup on television and realized that she still wanted to pursue her Olympic dreams. Weiland contacted the director of the US national team and was invited to a camp in December 2006, where she was able to try out for the upcoming World Championship team. She made the US roster for the 2007 World Championship and began what she dubbed "a new era and a clean slate" with the national program. Weiland kicked off her new era at the 2007 IIHF Women's World Championship in Winnipeg, where she played on the third pair with Helen Resor, notched her first World Championship point – the secondary assist on an Engstrom goal against , and won her second World Championship silver medal. Later that year, she won her third Four Nations Cup silver medal at the 2007 Four Nations Cup in Sweden. In 2008, she relocated to Blaine, Minnesota to participate in the newly established USA Hockey residency program and began renting a flat with forwards Julie Chu and Karen Thatcher. At the
2008 IIHF Women's World Championship The 2008 IIHF Women's World Championships were held from 4 to 12 April 2008, in Harbin, People's Republic of China. The games took place at the event's main arena, Baqu Arena. It was the 11th holding of the IIHF Women's World Championship and wa ...
, Weiland was on a defensive pair with Chu, who played as a defenseman rather than at forward for the tournament, and took home her first World Championship gold medal. The United States also won gold at the 2008 Four Nations Cup, where Weiland contributed two assists. She won a second World Championship gold medal as the team’s seventh defenseman at the
2009 IIHF Women's World Championship The 2009 IIHF World Women's Championships was held in Hämeenlinna, Finland, from April 4 to 12, 2009. Goaltending leaders (minimum 40% team's total ice time) ''TOI = Time on ice (minutes:seconds); GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against averag ...
and notched an assist at the 2009 Four Nations Cup, where the United States took home silver. Weiland’s Olympic dreams were finally realized in December 2009, when she was announced to the United States' team for the women's ice hockey tournament at the
2010 Winter Olympics )'' , nations = 82 , athletes = 2,626 , events = 86 in 7 sports (15 disciplines) , opening = February 12, 2010 , closing = February 28, 2010 , opened_by = Governor General Michaëlle Jean , cauldron = Catriona Le May DoanNancy GreeneWayne Gretz ...
in Vancouver. At 29, she was the third-oldest player named to the roster, after 30 year old forward Jenny Potter and 29 year old defenseman Angela Ruggiero (born January 1980). Deployed alongside Kacey Bellamy on the third defensive pair, she earned the secondary assist on a Natalie Darwitz goal against and scored her first national team goal against , assisted by Erika Lawler. When the United States fell to in the goal medal game, she became the second Alaskan to win an Olympic ice hockey medal, after goaltender
Pam Dreyer Pamela Kristine Dreyer (born August 9, 1981) is an American ice hockey player. She won a bronze medal at the 2006 Winter Olympics The 2006 Winter Olympics, officially the XX Olympic Winter Games ( it, XX Giochi olimpici invernali) and also ...
won bronze in 2006.


Inline hockey

Weiland participated in four FIRS Inline Hockey World Championships with the United States women's national inline hockey team. winning gold medals in 2003, 2006, and 2007, and a silver medal in 2004. Several national ice hockey team players were Weiland’s teammates on the national inline hockey team, including Chanda Gunn (2003, 2004), Jess Koizumi (2006, 2007), Julie Chu (2007), and Angela Ruggiero (2007).


Personal life

Weiland was born on October 18, 1980, the second youngest child of Terry and Teri Weiland. She grew up with four older sisters (Annemarie, Amy, Sarah, and Alicia) and two brothers on the family’s hay farm outside of Palmer, Alaska. Her older brother, Andy, was friends with future- NHLer Scott Gomez during the years he lived in Palmer as a youth and Gomez remembered Weiland as "respectful and quiet - but on the ice, she wasn't scared of anything." She attended the University of Wisconsin–Madison on a full athletic scholarship, double majoring in legal studies and sociology, and graduated in 2003. Though she played ice hockey in some of the elite women's leagues of the time, Weiland spent years of her playing career living "below the poverty line" and often relied on financial help from her family and intermittent jobs to stay afloat. Weiland is married to Christina Sorbara, a former member of the Canadian women's national inline hockey team, and they have three children; the eldest was born in 2012 and they welcomed twins in December 2013. A street in Palmer, Alaska is named after her. Called Kerry Weiland Court, the road serves as the address for MTA Events Center (also known as Palmer Ice Arena), the town’s only indoor ice rink.


Career statistics


Regular season and playoffs

Sources:


International


Awards and honors

Sources:


Records


WCHA

''Records valid through 2021–22 NCAA season.'' Career * 4th most assists by a defender (90) – tied with Courtney Burke * 6th most points by a defender (124) * 9th most goals by a defender (34) – tied with
Emma Laaksonen Emma Kristiina Terho (born 17 December 1981) is a Finnish retired ice hockey defenseman and the current Chair of the IOC Athletes' Commission. She previously served as general manager of Kiekko-Espoo Naiset in the Naisten Liiga. At the 1998 Wint ...
and
Rachel Ramsey Rachel Ramsey (born 14 October 1992) is a former American ice hockey forward who won three US Collegiate (NCAA) championships with the University of Minnesota Golden Gophers. She is the daughter of former Olympic and NHL star Mike Ramsey. Ea ...
Season * 3rd most assists by a defender (37), 2000–01 season – tied with Winny Brodt (1999–2000),
Megan Bozek Megan Bozek (born March 27, 1991) is an American ice hockey player and member of the United States national team. She most recently played with the KRS Vanke Rays of the Zhenskaya Hockey League (ZhHL) during the 2020–21 season. Bozek playe ...
(2012–13), and Sophie Jaques (2021–22) * 5th most points by a defender (49), 2000–01 season – tied with
Meaghan Mikkelson Meaghan Mikkelson (born January 4, 1985) is a Canadian ice hockey player and a member of the Canadian national ice hockey team, currently affiliated with the Calgary chapter of the Professional Women's Hockey Players Association (PWHPA). Mik ...
(2006–07) * 5th most points per game by a defender (1.40), 2000–01 season; 22nd most points per game by a defender (1.06), 1999–2000 season * 20th most goals by a defender (12), 2000–01 season – tied with five other players: Bobbi-Jo Slusar (2005–06), Anya Miller (2007–08),
Anne Schleper Anne Kathryn Schleper (born January 30, 1990) is an American women's ice hockey player for the Buffalo Beauts of the National Women's Hockey League. She played college hockey for the Minnesota Golden Gophers women's ice hockey program and made her ...
(2009–10), Rachel Ramsey (2013–14), and Sydney Baldwin (2017–18) Single-game * Most penalties (8), Wisconsin vs. Minnesota Duluth on October 9, 1999 * Most penalty minutes (24 PIM), Wisconsin vs. Minnesota Duluth on October 9, 1999


Wisconsin Badgers

''Records valid through
2020–21 Wisconsin Badgers women's ice hockey season The Wisconsin Badgers represented the University of Wisconsin in WCHA women's ice hockey during the 2020-21 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. In the WCHA Final Faceoff championship game, the Badgers defeated the Ohio State Buckeyes by a ...
.'' Career * Most penalties (111) – tied with
Sis Paulsen Sis Paulsen (born July 25, 1980) is an American ice hockey and softball coach. She is the director of hockey operations and equipment manager for the Wisconsin Badgers women's ice hockey team and the equipment manager for the United States wo ...
* Most penalty minutes (249 PIM) * 2nd most points scored by a defensive player (124) * 18th most points scored (124) Season * Most points scored by a defensive player (49), 2000–01 season – tied with Meaghan Mikkelson (2006–07); 6th most points scored by a defensive player (35), 1999–2000 – tied with Courtney Burke (2015–16) * 3rd most penalties (38), 2000–01 season; 4th most penalties (32), 1999–2000 season * 3rd most penalty minutes (76), 2000–01 season; 4th most penalty minutes (72), 1999–2000 season; 7th most penalty minutes (65), 2002–03 season Single-game * Most penalties (8), Wisconsin vs. Minnesota Duluth on October 9, 1999 * Most penalty minutes (24 PIM), Wisconsin vs. Minnesota Duluth on October 9, 1999


References


External links

* *
U.S. Olympic Team profile
{{DEFAULTSORT:Weiland, Kerry 1980 births Living people American expatriate ice hockey players in Canada American expatriate ice hockey players in Switzerland American women's ice hockey defensemen Brampton Thunder players Canadian Women's Hockey League players Edmonton Chimos players Ice hockey people from Alaska Ice hockey players at the 2010 Winter Olympics American inline hockey players LGBT ice hockey players Medalists at the 2010 Winter Olympics National Women's Hockey League (1999–2007) players Olympic silver medalists for the United States in ice hockey People from Palmer, Alaska Wisconsin Badgers women's ice hockey players Swiss Women's League players