Like a fine wine, Kaleigh Fratkin has only gotten better.
Thatโs how the reigning NWHL Defender of the Year described the process of a defensive player progressing. In her six years in the NWHL โ one of the original eight players still active in the league โ Fratkinโs star has only risen.
โEvery year, in the offseason, I evaluate a different part of my game and realize thereโs a whole part of my game I need to become better at,โ she said. โA lot of that comes with being in a position like a defender, the older you get, you look at the game differently.โ
Forcing plays in college trying to be offensive, she changed her game to not do that as much and had more success defensively.
Fratkin has missed just five games since her college days, and those came at the start of her third NWHL season, where she was evaluating her future in hockey while balancing a full-time job. She decided to play with the Boston Pride, where her ironman streak continued and she developed into one of the toughest defenders to play against in hockey.
Becoming that player wasnโt easy, and it didnโt happen overnight.
Fratkin said she โway overtrainedโ in college, going to the gym often, and mostly without focus. As sheโs gotten older, sheโs become more strategic with her training.
โThis offseason Iโm working on my foot speed,โ she said. โItโs an aspect of my game I never want to lag. Itโs just re-evaluating, the offseason is different when you have a full-time job like early in my career.โ
Entering her fourth season with the Boston Pride, Fratkin has operated like a de facto second captain, alongside captain Jillian Dempsey. But Fratkin runs the blue line in Boston, leading one of the strongest cores of defensive talent in womenโs hockey.
With a combination of veterans like Lexi Bender and young talent like Mallory Souliotis with her, the Pride defensive corps has earned a reputation as one of the toughest to play against.
That really starts with Fratkin, though.
Fratkin has played in almost every womenโs hockey entity available, from college to the CWHL to international play to even some menโs hockey.
The NWHL has meant something special to her, however, and how sheโs seen herself grow with the league.
โI grew up playing hockey wanting to make the Olympics,โ she said. โI got to my sophomore year of college and saw where I stood in that program and was like, well am I done playing hockey? I have no where to go. The NWHL made me realize I can keep playing hockey as long as I can if I feel good enough to play.โ
Fratkin notched a career-high 23 points last season, arguably her best to date in the NWHL. Before she was one of the leagueโs original members in 2015, she spent a year with the Boston Blades of the ill-fated CWHL, where she had 30 points. Before that, her illustrious career at Boston University was preceded by a stint with the Canadian U18 team, and a few menโs juniors teams.
Fratkin didnโt know what direction she was going in in her hockey career after one CWHL season, but when she made the leap to the NWHL and spent her season with the Connecticut Whale, she knew she was there to say.
โIโve played international, Iโve played in the CWHL, Iโve played menโs hockey, and my coolest experience has been playing in the NWHL,โ said Fratkin. โBetween All-Star Weekend, the first-ever game, this past season at home, the semi-final game when we thought we were going to the Isobel Cup. Weโre developing a fanbase of people who donโt think, โoh itโs just womenโs hockey.โ They think itโs really cool hockey.โ
At just 28 years old, Fratkin is far from being an older player, even in a sport like womenโs hockey that leans young. She has a lot of years left if she wants them.
Sheโs still a veteran leader for the Pride though, and as one of the leagueโs founding members, has already formed meaningful memories in the NWHL.
โThereโs been great games and cool moments, cool events and initiatives in Boston, but the biggest thing Iโll remember always is the autograph lines,โ said Fratkin. โThe amount of people Iโve met who had never been to a hockey game and then we saw them every single home weekend.โ
Next seasonโs Pride roster is filled mostly with players looking to avenge a lost opportunity to win an Isobel Cup. Fratkin is still seeking her first title, after believing 2020 would be the year she finally hoisted the trophy.
Itโs going to be a long time yet before Pride fans have to say goodbye to the best defensive player in franchise history. She has a lot of impact left to make; whether thatโs on the ice or off.
โThere are girls at camps in the offseason and theyโll say they were in the autograph line and ask if you remember us, and itโs like oh my god I do remember, and now theyโre saying they want to go to BU or something, Iโll remember that. You never really know the impact youโre having.โ
