Hockey siblings Skylar and Gunnar Fontaine
The siblings try to see each other every day. There are times when Skylar Fontaine, a senior All-American defenseman, will be stretching in a corner of Matthews Arena. Sheâll wave across the ice to her brother, Gunnarwolfe Fontaine, a freshman forward, as heâs taking the ice.
The big sister, 22, and her little brother, 20, are two of Northeasternâs hockey starsâone established, the other emerging.
âItâs been great to get lunch with him, which we did the other day,â says Skylar, who was happy that she and Gunnar were joined in one of the heated tents on campus by their mother, Deborah Tancrell, who drove up from their hometown of East Greenwich, Rhode Island. âI hadnât seen him play or practice in the same area for three years. So itâs been great to be close to him again.â
Skylar and her No. 1Â Huskies (18-1-1) are pursuing an NCAA championship, with the next step coming in a Hockey East semifinal against Connecticut Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. at Matthews Arena.
She notes the divergent paths that led her and Gunnar to Northeasternâa hockey youth system that is far more advanced for boys than for girls. As Gunnar advanced from one league to the next, he moved from his Rhode Island home to Lawrence Academy in Massachusetts to the Chicago Steel of the U.S. Hockey League, where in two years he scored 46 goals with 54 assists over 105 games.
The moves paid off when the Nashville Predators chose Fontaine in the seventh round of the 2020 NHL Draft. Ask Gunnar how many high schools he attended along the way, and he needs to count twice to make sure.
âI went to fourâtechnically fiveâhigh schools,â he says, laughing. âThe second year in Chicago, I did a little bit of online school as well, so thatâs a fifth school.â
No such structure existed for Skylar, who grew up playing on boysâ teams in Rhode Island.
âSkylar might have been 12 when a friend of mineâwhose son was playing in the leagueâsaid, âI just want to let you know thereâs a player in our league that, if you didnât see the ponytail sticking out of the back of her helmet, you wouldnât know she was a girl,ââ says Dave Flint, the Huskiesâ coach. âHe said, âAnd sheâs the best player in the league.ââ
Both Fontaines are known for their speed. Flint compares Skylar to Bobby Orrâthe Boston Bruins Hall of Famer who was the greatest defenseman of all timeâin her ability to cover ice with minimal apparent effort.
âHer legs donât look like theyâre going fast but she generates so much power from her stride,â Flint says. âNext thing you know, sheâs by you.â
Fontaine uses her speed to attack in the offensive zone. She has been named the top defenseman in Hockey East the past two seasons, and last year was the conferenceâs leading scorer at her position with 17 goals, 25 assists, and 42 points.Â
âBecause of my speed, Iâve always loved jumping into the [offensive] play,â Skylar says. âBut I also know that I can only jump in the play when our entire team is doing well.â
She has become better at reading her teammates and recognizing when she can afford to move forward.
âEven if she goes at the wrong time and she turns the puck over, she still beats everybody back to our own end,â Flint says. âYou want to get mad at her for the decision she made to turn the puck over, but she beats everybody back anyway, so she doesnât really hurt us.â
Gunnar has used similar speed to generate 13 points (five goals) in his initial 17 games with the Huskies.
âHeâs on our first power-play unit and one of our top lines, so heâs adjusted very well to the college game,â says Jim Madigan, coach of the Huskies (9-7-3). âHeâs got a tremendous work ethic. He wins a lot of puck battles, and his compete level is really good. Weâre very happy with his progress and his contributions to our team.â
Both siblings give credit to their mother, a school teacher who played softball at Slippery Rock University, for raising her three kids to play hockey at an elite level. Their oldest sister, Alex Tancrell-Fontaine, played at Union College.
âShe did everything for us,â Gunnar says of his mother. âIt was amazing to watch how hard she tried to make sure we got everything we needed. She would rush home from work, make us our meals, and rush us off to the rink. Now I realize how much sheâs done for us, and I have to do everything I can on the ice and off the ice because I know what she did for me growing up.â
The upcoming weeks will be the most exciting time of the season for Northeastern hockey, based on the finality of the one-and-done postseason tournaments. But Skylar, in spite of her senior status, will have more to play for later this year when she competes for a spot on the U.S. Olympic team. And if that effort falls short, then Flint will be elated to invite her back for 2021-22, based on a temporary NCAA rule that provides an extra season of eligibility for athletes during this pandemic-haunted year.
âIt does take some pressure off,â Skylar says of her options. âBut Iâm taking this year and this opportunity as my last shot. I really want my team to do well, I want myself to do well, and hopefully we can make it to the NCAA Tournament and go all the way.â
And if she does find herself back at Northeastern next season? Her brother will be happy to see her.Â
For media inquiries, please contact media@northeastern.edu.Â





