Adrianna Milani
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| Adrianna Milani | ||||||||||||||
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| Born |
March 19, 2009 Oakville, Ontario, Canada | |||||||||||||
| Height | 5 ft 4 in (163 cm) | |||||||||||||
| Weight | 152 lb (69 kg; 10 st 12 lb) | |||||||||||||
| Position | Forward | |||||||||||||
| Shoots | Right | |||||||||||||
| National team |
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Medal record
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Adrianna Milani (born March 19, 2009) is a Canadian ice hockey forward. She plays junior hockey in Ontario and has represented Canada at the IIHF World Women's U18 Championship, winning a silver medal in 2026.[1][2]
Milani is from Oakville, Ontario.[1] In a 2025 profile, The Hockey News described her early development as including training on a backyard outdoor rink at home.[3]
Playing career
Milani has played for the Etobicoke Dolphins in the OWHA U22 Elite circuit, and was profiled as a young-age player competing against older opposition in The Hockey News prospect coverage.[4] Hockey Canada roster materials also list her with Ontario programs at the U18 national championship level and at national under-18 camps and series.[1]
Milani also appeared on Hockey Canada rosters at the Esso Cup level, including being listed on the Stoney Creek Sabres roster for the 2023 Esso Cup.[5]
College commitment
In 2025, Milani was announced as part of the University of Minnesota's 2026–27 women's hockey signing class.[6] The Hockey News reported that she was expected to join Minnesota a year earlier than typical for her birth year, beginning in the 2026–27 season.[7]
International play
In December 2025, Milani was named to Canada's National Women's Under-18 Team for the 2026 IIHF U18 Women's World Championship in Sydney and Membertou, Nova Scotia.[8]
At the tournament, Milani scored four goals in Canada's quarterfinal win over Finland.[9][10] Canada finished the event with the silver medal after losing to the United States in the gold medal game.[2]
IIHF tournament pages listed Milani on the event All-Star Team, and IIHF statistics credited her with 10 goals and 13 points in six games at the tournament.[11][12] Daily Faceoff described her tournament as matching the Canadian single-tournament goals record, with 10 goals in six games.[13]