Laura Fortino

Laura Fortino
Born (1991-01-30) January 30, 1991
Hamilton, ON, CAN
Height 5 ft 4 in (163 cm)
Weight 143 lb (65 kg; 10 st 3 lb)
Position Defence
Shoots Left
CWHL team
Former teams
Brampton Thunder
Cornell
National team  Canada
Playing career 2009present

Laura Michele Fortino (born January 30, 1991) is a Canadian ice hockey player for the Cornell Big Red women's ice hockey program. On October 3, 2011, she was named to the Team Canada roster that participated in the 2011 4 Nations Cup.[1] Of note, she was the first overall selection in the 2014 CWHL Draft.[2]

Playing career

In 2004, Fortino played for the Hamilton Reps (Bantam AA Boys) and she won a silver medal at the Ontario provincials. As a member of Stoney Creek, she won a bronze medal at the 2007 PWHL championships. At the 2007 National Women’s Under-18 Championships in Kitchener, Ontario, she won a gold medal with Ontario Red . The following year, Fortino won a gold medal with Stoney Creek at the OWHA provincials and at the PWHL championship of 2008. In 2007–08, Fortino led PWHL defensemen in scoring. She won a gold medal with Ontario Red at the 2008 National Women’s Under-18 Championships in Napanee, Ontario. In 2009, Fortino won a silver medal with Stoney Creek at the OWHA provincials. Fortino ranked second among PWHL defencemen in scoring in 2008–09. Played for Mt. Hamilton Hornets in the Hamilton Hub League and demolished Eastwood Hawks by 10+ goals every game. Most known for being Kyle Rooney's AA defensive partner.

NCAA

Fortino joined the Cornell Big Red in 2009 and she earned All-America honors as a freshman. She led NCAA defencemen, Cornell defencemen and Cornell freshmen in scoring in 2009–10. As a member of the Big Red, she played in the NCAA championship game at the Frozen Four in 2010.

Hockey Canada

Named to 2014 Olympic roster for Canada.[3] In August 2008, Fortino was a member of Canada’s National Women’s Under-18 Team for a three-game series against the United States in Lake Placid. Later that year, she would win a silver medal with Canada’s National Women’s Under-18 Team at the 2008 IIHF World Women’s Under-18 Championship in Calgary.

The following year, she participated with Canada’s National Women’s Under-22 Team for a three game exhibition versus the United States in Calgary. At the 2009 IIHF World Women’s Under 18 championships, Fortino won a silver medal in Füssen, Germany. She was part of another three game exhibition series with the Under 22 team vs. the United States in August 2010. Fortino won a gold medal with Canada’s National Women’s Under-22 Team at the 2010 MLP Cup in Ravensburg, Germany. In the semifinal of the 2011 MLP Cup, Fortino scored a goal in a 9–0 rout of Russia to advance to the Gold Medal game.[4] Fortino would score another goal as Canada beat Sweden in the final by a 6–0 tally to claim the gold medal.[5] In March 2011, she was invited to the Canadian national women's ice hockey team selection camp to determine the final roster for the 2011 IIHF Women's World Championships.[6] In a March 31, 2012 exhibition game versus the United States, Laura Fortino scored her first international goal in a 1–0 win at the Ottawa Civic Centre.[7] She scored at 17:26 of the second period and was assisted by Marie-Philip Poulin, as she scored on American goaltender Molly Schaus. Fortino was credited for an assist feeding the puck to teammate, Marie-Philip Poulin when she scored the winning goal in Sochi against the United States.

Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL)

On August 19, 2014, Fortino was chosen first overall in the CWHL by the Brampton Thunder.[8]

Awards and honors

Career stats

Hockey Canada

Year Event GP G A PTS
2008 Pre-U18 1 1 1 2
2008 U18 WC 4 1 4 5
2008U18 vs. USA 3 0 11
2009IIHF U18 Worlds 5 0 44
2009 U22 Selection camp 2 0 00
2010 MLP Cup 4 1 0 1
2010 U22 vs. USA 3 2 1 3
2011 MLP Cup

NCAA

Year GP G A PTS PIM
2009–1033 10 22 3238
2010–1114 0 11 116

CWHL

Year Team Games Played Goals Assists Points +/- PIM PPG SHG GWG
2014-15 Brampton Thunder[12] 24 5 10 15 -19 8 2 0 0

References

Preceded by
Jessica Wong (2013)
First Overall Selection, CWHL Draft
(2014)
Succeeded by
Sarah Edney (2015)
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