Tuesday, August 9, 2022

Shock’s Jaman in softball for life

By Darren Steinke
Gordie Howe Sports Complex

Haley Jaman sets for an at bat for the Shock.
Haley Jaman expects to be a softball lifer because of the people she’s met in the game.

The 20-year-old outfielder with the Saskatoon Shock and University of Saskatchewan women’s club team has been around the game for as long as she can remember beginning with watching her older sister, Jocelyn Jaman, play the sport. From that start, Haley Jaman began playing tee-ball at around age five and proceeded to grow up playing through the ranks of Saskatoon’s minor softball system.

“Half the girls that I am still friends with today I started playing ball with since we started playing zone ball,” said Jaman, whose Shock will play in Softball Canada’s women’s nationals that run August 10 to 14 at the Gordie Howe Sports Complex. “We’ve grown up together, and we still keep in touch.

“In the winter, you kind of drift apart, but once summer starts, you are back together with your friends again. I think that was the biggest thing. I love the game.

“I love the competitiveness. Obviously, I love it enough I want to share it with other people. Definitely, the people and the connections I’ve made were like the best part about it.”

The connections have gone beyond those she’s made with her teammates over the years. Jaman has gotten a taste of the coaching side of the game for about the past five years. While attending high school at Centennial Collegiate, Jaman took part in the softball academy at Tommy Douglas Collegiate.

Through the softball academy at Tommy Douglas, Jaman completed a coaching component in Grade 10 that had her work with kids at various schools around the city, and she realize she liked that aspect of the game. Jaman got a little more involved with coaching when longtime elite level coach and player Jon Equina asked her to come out and help with various camps.

Haley Jaman, right, explains a drill to some players.
“I started evaluating and doing stuff for Team Sask for winter programs and had coaches approach me asking if I would come run like little camps with their own team,” said Jaman, who has coached with JQFP Softball and the Saskatchewan North Central Softball Academy. “This winter I took a Hustlers team, and I kind of helped out a little bit – a B team.

“I feel like it is very rewarding to see more of a progression. It has been something I knew I wanted to do since I was a kid.”

So far during her coaching, Jaman has noticed there are times young female players are more receptive to pick up a teaching point, if it comes from a female coach. As a player, she said she has times where she’s picked up pointers and messages from a female coach, which sometimes weren’t picked up when a male coach delivered those same pointers and messages.

“I think that is kind of the cool thing that the girls have someone closer to their age and a girl to relate to,” said Jaman. “That is exactly why I do it.

“Eventually, I want my own team, and I want to coach a team all summer. For now, I like just floating and helping when I can.”

Equina, who is the Shock’s head coach, has enjoyed coaching and coaching with Jaman over the years.

“Coaching Haley (Jaman) is an absolute treat,” said Equina. “She works hard every single time she comes out to the park.

“Whatever you tell her, she is definitely open minded to try it whether she has never tried it before. She is the kind of player and coach that she is willing to try different things in order to see different results. She is definitely ready to go outside the box in a lot of things player and coach.”

Haley Jaman patrols the outfield for the Shock.
Equina said he has been keeping his eye out for players that are coming up through Saskatoon’s minor softball system who he thinks might make good coaches. He thought Jaman would be great in that role as she brings a great positive energy when she interacts with others.

“My biggest thing as a coach is I am trying to get the next generation of coaches now in line,” said Equina. “I’ve been doing this for over 22 years and the same with the other guys that are with me and older.

“Now, it is the next generation, and the females especially that we need to get involved coaching. With her in mind, it was just perfect, because she loves helping out. She loves volunteering.

“Now being able to properly coach or how to coach was the big thing, and she has learned so well. She is excited to do it every time. Passion is something you can’t really teach.”

While she has been piling up the experiences on the coaching front, Jaman is still pumped for the opportunities she gets to play. After graduating from Centennial Collegiate in 2019, Jaman exhausted her eligibility for under-19 level ball as teams played an exhibition schedule locally in 2020 due to measures that were in place to battle the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic that gripped the world.

Jaman had been playing out of the Hustlers zone and was part of group of players that didn’t want to be split up among the adult teams that existed in the city. Jaman and her Hustlers teammates joined up with a group of similar aged players from the Lazers zone to form the Shock, who had a handful of roster spots filled by players from other programs.

Equina agreed to be the Shock’s head coach and the team hit the diamonds from there.

Haley Jaman demonstrates a diving catch drill as a coach.
“The girls we played with we didn’t want to go play on random teams,” said Jaman. “We made our own team with ‘Queens’ (Equina).

“He is our coach, and that is how we got to stay playing together. One of the coaches actually came up to me and told me that the U of S has a team. Last year, I played with the U of S, and it was like a totally different experience.

“They were so cool. It was like just a little bite of what you get to do in college, but like playing just at home.”

The Shock won Softball Saskatchewan’s under-23 A provincial title sweeping a best-of-three series 2-0 over the Saskatoon Sabres. The Shock closed out the set with a 5-0 victory in Game 2 on July 9 at Bob Van Impe Stadium.

At nationals, the Shock will play in the women’s draw as there weren’t enough teams committed across the country to play an under-23 national championship tournament.

Jaman said she has never played in a Softball Canada nationals at home, so she is pumped for that opportunity this year. Besides having the support of family and friends in the stands, Jaman said a number of the girls she coaches want to come watch her play.

“I think that is going to be a really big difference this year that is going to work to our advantage having people to watch us,” said Jaman. “All my little girls (I coach) they already ask, ‘Send us your schedule.’

“All their parents want to know when we are playing, because they want to come support us. It works both ways. It is good for us, but then it is good for them to see this different level of ball.”

Haley Jaman plans to be involved in softball for a long time.
After this season is complete, Jaman wants to keep playing for softball as long as she can at any type of level. When she feels like she can no longer play, Jaman plans to focus even more time and attention on coaching.

“Once I kind of feel like my time playing is done like I said, I want my own team,” said Jaman. “I want to be able to grow with a group of girls and see them from where they started and kind of take them the way I’ve had a coach.

“I’d like to do that. In that way, I definitely just want to keep helping out. My kids will play.

“They don’t have a choice. They’ll play ball, so they’ll get a coach from their mom.”