The Minnesota Wild celebrated Native American Heritage Day in a unique and historic way -- the team's game against the Colorado Avalanche Friday was broadcast entirely in Ojibwe, the first telecast of its kind.

Ojibwe is an indigenous language of the Algonquian family spoken by the Anishinaabe people in the Great Lakes region of the U.S. and Canada.

The trio of broadcasters -- Maajiigoneyaash Jourdain, Ombishkebines Gonzalez and Ginoonde Buckholtz -- brought plenty of enthusiasm to their historic call, which the Wild shared on social media.

Jourdain told WCCO - CBS Minnesota that he grew up playing hockey as a child in Lac la Croix, Ontario. The broadcast meant he "finally made it to the NHL, but in a different way, using the voice of the Ojibwe people."

During the landmark broadcast

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