SportsLife 2016, issue 5 | Page 14

Milne, Pirrie, Maisey Among G By Scott Taylor, Photos by James Carey Lauder Pirrie and Maisey If this were 1970, people would be appalled at the state of the Winnipeg High School Football League. After all, in 1970, girls would be run off a high school football field faster than you can say, “Theresa Dion!*” But it’s not 1955. As Prime Minister Justin Trudeau so aptly pointed out, “It’s 2016,” and in the WHSFL of 2016, girls play linebacker. For Kyla Milne, football is a family affair. Her uncle, Brock Campbell, is a University of Manitoba Vanier Cup winner and a Churchill Hall of Famer. She and her brother Nick, played together the past two seasons with the Churchill Bulldogs. Julia Maisey plays football because it’s fun, although she will admit, that one day she’d like to be a cheerleader Brooke Pirrie of Garden City and Julia Maisey of Miles Mac 14 / sportslife and a player at the same time, if only somebody at Miles Mac would start a cheerleading team. And Brooke Pirrie has played football with the boys since she was 12. She simply loves everything there is to love about the game and as a hardhitting linebacker with the Garden City Gophers, she’s already a veteran of the Winnipeg High School Football League. Kyla, Julia and Brooke are the newest face of the WHSFL. They are girls playing a tough, collision sport with the boys and they like it. But they certainly aren’t alone. In the WHSFL, there are 31 high school teams in three varsity boys divisions and there are actually quite a number of female players including Ashley McCabe, a Grade 12 student at Kildonan East is in her second season with the Reivers and a group of three at Fort Frances: Serene Whitecrow, Chelsea Allan and Macey McMillan. It was only in 2006 that the Pasternak sisters, Amy and Jesse, sued the Manitoba High School Athletic Association for the right to play on the boys’ high school team at West Kildonan Collegiate. These days, girls playing varsity football in the Winnipeg High School Football League seems about as natural as boys playing. Granted, there still aren’t a lot of girls suiting up on varsity teams but there are enough to notice. Even though WHSFL commissioner has never really bothered to notice. Nobody will be suing his league for the right to play. “Don’t care if you’re a boy or a girl, doesn’t matter,” said Henkewich, 63, a former university DB and kicker who had a tryout with the Blue Bombers back in the 1970s. “If you want to play, you can play. We’ve never had a meeting about it. You know, whether