Right wing Carrigan Umpherville and defenseman Saige McKay are freshmen at Long Island University, a suburban New York school that launched its NCAA Division I women's hockey program this season.
"It's really an amazing thing, honestly," Miswaggon said. "I didn't expect to come this far growing up, coming from a small community. You don't expect to get an opportunity, so just having my best friends go out to the states and me to the West Coast, it's really crazy."
Miswaggon won the most valuable player Award at the 2019 Aboriginal Hockey Championships and received the Female Aboriginal Athlete Award from the Manitoba Sports and Recreational Council in April. She played for Team Manitoba in the 2019 Canada Winter Games and attended the Canadian women's national team's Under-18 selection camp in 2018-19.
Ryerson University coach Lisa Haley, who was an assistant on Canada's gold medal-winning team at the 2014 Sochi Olympics, said Miswaggon has Team Canada potential.
"Her skills are above and beyond others in her age group, there's no question about it," said Haley, who coached Miswaggon for two weeks for the 'Hit The Ice' shows. "If she wants it, she's got the ability. It definitely gets tougher as you go --- there's only 23 spots on that national team and there are a lot of young women that chase after [them] -- but she certainly has the skill level to be in that conversation."
Umpherville, 18, is LIU's leading scorer through 15 games with 16 points (seven goals, nine assists), including two goals and an assist in a 7-3 home win against Franklin Pierce on Saturday. She led her high school team, Pilot Mound Academy in Manitoba, in scoring with 42 points (23 goals, 19 assists) in 48 games last season.