“Keep your kids out of hot water, put them on ice” SEPTEMBER 2009 PRICELE$$ INSIDE For The Good of the Game / Life Lessons on Ice / Blade Babe / The Messenger / MHOA / Behind the Bench Delivered by Brett Hull Contest Entry form on page 23. Win Dallas Stars Season Tickets!
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Transcript
“Keep your kids out of hot water, put them on ice” SEPTEMBER 2009 PRICELE$$
INSIDE For The Good of the Game / Life Lessons on Ice / Blade Babe / The Messenger / MHOA / Behind the Bench
Delivered by Brett HullContest Entry form on page 23.
Win Dallas Stars Season Tickets!
2 Keep your kids out of hot water – put them on ice! Follow us at twitter.com/icetimes icetimesmagazine.com
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The Brahmas Mite team got an opportunity to ride on the Fort Worth Brahmas Team Bus on Sunday after they won their scrimmage against Euless.
Louie and Louis Helsen enjoy a bit of holiday on ice time at a Father Son scrimmage.
Christopher Sharon lifting a dream.
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TOBY PETERSON KICKS OFF COPPELL HIGH SCHOOL HOCKEY TRAINING CAMP! Coppell High School started its training camp with a special guest. Toby Peterson from the Dallas Stars made a surprise visit to the Dr Pepper StarCenter
in Farmers Branch to meet with the players. While it was only a short visit towards the start of the practice, the players were able to get some valuable advice
from a guy that has faced all the obstacles and still made it to the NHL. Toby spoke about working hard, staying motivated through a long season, utilizing
coaches for help with both on- and off -ice challenges, and the importance of nutrition.
On the CoverSeptember 2009Now In Our Fourth Season!On The Cover:Braxton Drumm and Matt Brock helped lead the Oilers to the RHL Summer PeeWee Championship.Photo sent in by KYLE DRUMM
Want to be our next cover shot? Visit our website at www.icetimesmagazine.comand click on “send pics.”
Cover Shot Contest! PARENTS: Send in your picture and if it makes our Cover Shot of the Month you will win a gift certifi cate to
WIN A PRIZE!!Find Dorightsomewhere in the magazine. It’s not easy. Email us his location to [email protected] and be entered in for a drawing for a prize.
August’s Winner wasTREVOR McLAINCongratulations! Contact us for your prize.
Ice Times Magazine is published monthly by Tink Ink Publications, LLC & distributed free of charge at ice rinks and pro-shops. Copy and Photographs are welcome and must be submitted by the 20th of the month prior to publication. ITM reserves the right to edit, reject or comment editorially on all material contributed. Reproduction in whole or part without express written consent of the Publisher is prohibited.
Meeting minutes and handouts of TAHA’s Annual Meeting held June 20th are posted on our website. 2009-10 TAHA Board members include:
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Erik Starostin fl ying to the puck.
Being perfect is about being able to look your friends in the eye and know that you didn't let them down, because you told them the truth. And that truth is that you did everything that you could. Th ere wasn't one more thing that you could've done. Can you live in that moment, as best you can, with clear eyes and love in your heart? With joy in your heart? If you can do that, gentlemen, then you're perfect.
Friday Night Lights (hey, we know it’s football but it was a great quote)
Huge Contest Announcement! Th e Dallas Stars have partnered with
Ice Times Magazine for a very special
contest. Th ey are giving away season
tickets to one lucky Ice Times Magazine
reader! Not only are they giving away
season tickets but those tickets will be
presented to the winner by none other
than hockey great, Brett Hull. It doesn’t
get much better than this! In order to
register for the contest you must fi ll out
the form on page 23 of this month’s issue.
ONLY ONE FORM PER HOUSE-
HOLD and you have to be at least 21
years old to enter. You will need to do
this as quickly as possible since the form
has to be mailed in by the deadline date.
Fill your form out and send it in today!
Good luck and tell the ‘Golden Brett’ we
said hi. ■
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TEAM TEXAS Mite AA Roller Hockey State Wars US Champions.
Joshua Mehr, taking a knee during the Dallas Stars Elite hockey camp.
Matias Hermanson makes a leg pad save with the inside of his right leg pad (notice puck beneath pad).
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Blade Babe By Scarlett Chambers
If you want to contact Scarlett please emil her at [email protected]
I have never quite understood those people who love watching a sport but
have never actually played it. So after many years the words come out of my mouth with out even realizing that I am saying them: “Why aren’t you ladies on the ice? Why should the guys have all the fun?” I recently asked a crowd of hockey moms and wives who were watching their men skate the above question, followed by, “If you ever want to try it, I would be happy to take you out on the ice.” Most of the time women give the usual
Girls Just Wanna Have Funresponse about how they could never do something like that, but occasionally I will have a taker. Lori Paxton was watching her husband James skate with team SoulPatch, which consists of several hockey dads new to playing on a team. She was ready to get started right away and was on the ice before the weeks end. Her fi rst day on the ice was a family outing to a parent/child drop in at the Euless Stars Center. Both of her sons, Josh and Blake, as well as her hubby were all on the ice. She was all geared up in loaner equipment plus a couple of things she had to bum from the lost and found. At fi rst she was skating well, but just a few minutes into open hockey, she took a nasty spill that left her with a black eye for a couple weeks or more. I thought she might want to call it a day after that, but Lori wanted to stay. She was having a good time so she picked herself up and
kept going. It was obvious that the rest of the Paxton crew was impressed by her determination. Th at week, Lori sent many a text while shopping for her own gear. “How long should my stick be?” What kind of skates do you recommend?” It did not take long to fi nd a team to skate with. Th e Silverwings in Euless needed players. So she got ready for her fi rst game, and as the start time grew near she became more anxious. Th e texts started to come in on the way to the rink, “Are you sure I can do this?” “ I am not feeling so good.” Yet when I walked into the lobby, there she stood. A big smile on her face and her gear on her shoulder. Lori had asked her boys to stay at home so she would not worry about them on her fi rst night out, but her dad still showed up for her game and even came down on the bench to cheer her on. She played a great game, and she is excited to keep playing. Interestingly
enough, she is making one change: she will be skating with her husband’s team, Soulpatch. If you ask her now if she is having more fun skating with the team then watching them, you know that she will answer, ‘Yes!’ If you are interested in learning to play hockey please contact your local rink or log onto www.drpepperstarcenter.com. After all, why should the men and boys have all the fun? ■
Lori Paxton
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Tommy and Alex Evanyk shave some ice. Photo courtesy of Mr. Patrick.
Bobby Williams, Midget, plays in the Dallas Stars Youth Hockey league for Duncanville.
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"Pssst, hey buddy, looking for some free Dallas Stars Season tickets?" Check out the contest on page 23
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My Russian Hockey Experience
By Hank Crone
My name is Hank Crone and I play hockey for the 98 Dallas Stars Elite
hockey team. I was privileged to get to go to Russia to play for a very
advanced team by the name of Nike Bauer Selects with one of my teammates,
Ryan Pouliot. We were selected to play with other players from around the country
to play in the Tretyak Challenge Cup against Russia’s top teams. It was easily
an experience of a lifetime. Our Nike Bauer team, going into the tournament,
knew that these European teams were defi nitely going to give us a challenge. For
the time that Ryan and I were in Moscow we got to play teams like the Russian
Red Army, Traktor, and the Moscow Dynamo. Th ere were also teams that gave
a little less challenge like Team Belarus, Th e Moscow Silver Sharks, and the
Russian White Bears.
Our team actually won the tournament with a record of 4-0-1. It was especially
rewarding to win against the Traktor team because they haven’t lost a game in
three years and even beat our Dallas team when they were here in February playing
in the Sportech Super 98 tournament. It was fun to see the Russian players that
stayed with us while they were here. At the closing ceremonies we got to meet
Tretyak and then as a special surprise Ovechkin showed up to present the medals
to the winning team!
We were scheduled to play two friendly games on our last two days in
Russia, but ended up playing three. Th e Red Army wanted a rematch since we
tied them in the tournament and we played at the famous KHL arena where the
cold war games were played and beat them. While the hockey was exciting and
challenging - the sites also helped make my trip to Russia an experience that I
will never forget. ■
IceTimesMagazine
Hank with Challenge Cup – 1st place
Ryan Pouliot with 1st place medal
The Kremlin White PalaceSt Basil’s Cathedral Tretyak and Ovechkin at Closing Ceremonies
Hank with linemates Logan Brown and Clayton Keller
Game against Moscow Silver Sharks Hank and Ryan at the Armory
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Scrum in front of the net.
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The Grapevine Lighting celebrate their 3-2 win over the Panthers in the Squirt playoffs of the Recreational Hockey League (RHL). The Lightning play out of Grapevine Polar Ice House.
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Landon Ruhde makes the save during a summer league playoff game with the Arlington Wild.
Cole Sharrah of the Houston Hurricanes rips off a shot.
Three amigos on the ice.
Summer is over. It’s back to school and back to work! Working parents usually only have time to send their kids off to school with prepackaged lunches or money which usually ends up buying fast food. Exercise? Is there time?!
In Health magazine, Oprah Winfrey’s medical guru, Dr. Oz, stated that families should be concerned about better nutrition and working out. “A little bit of change can have a profound impact on your life 20 years from now.“ In order to heed his advice, families need the tools to get healthier together. Workout 101 is providing just that. Programs are now available for families to exercise together with proper nutritional products. Scheduling a workout for you and your children is the new and healthy way to spend family time together.Find out about the family work out programs. Contact Coach Dan at 214-405-6017.For nutritional products call 1-888-238-2591 or 817-253-9991E-mail: [email protected]. Make it your mission to keep our hockey families throughout the organizations fi t and trim this hockey season and throughout your lifetime!!!
Hockey Wellness – by Lita Regala
Family Time and Fitness
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Well, here I am, back at the key-
board. I haven’t been near an ice
rink for most of the summer. Th is may
come as a shock to many of you (it did
to me), but there is life above 40 degrees!
On the other hand, I do miss watching
the game. Th at’s good, because another
season is about to start. But this time I
will have a very unique - for me - per-
spective…but I get ahead of myself.
Rule #1: you may have heard of this:
Never, ever, under any circumstances,
shoot the messenger. Regardless of how
much you disagree with the message,
it ’s politically improper to shoot the
guy carrying that water. In fact, if you do
shoot the messenger, there results a great
disturbance in Th e Force, and everyone
becomes very uncomfortable, especially
the messenger. Th is is not a new millen-
nium approach to public behavior, not by
a long shot. Th anks to the universal wis-
dom resident in Wikipedia, I discovered
that Sophocles (Antigone) fi rst uttered
that admonishment, and then Th e Bard
(King Henry IV pt. II) plagiarized the
whole messenger-gets-a bye-thing. So
there’s a bunch of tradition to live up to.
I’m not making this up.
Rule #2: Sometime it ’s hard to
fi gure out who the messenger is. Many
writers specialize in fl ying below the
radar pretending to be a messenger,
carefully avoiding any personal account-
ability, when they are actually expressing
their own real thoughts. Th ere’s also a
corollary to Rule #2..it’s hard to apply
Rule #1 if you don’t know if the message
is true or not. Half the things I wrote
about my goalie son saying the last two
years he never uttered, or did he? (He
should have.) Th e same will be true for
this Team Manager column. I won’t be
telling tall tales about the parents from
this year’s team, nor from those the past
two years. No, I’ll always be writing
about the composite youth hockey par-
ent. You know who you are! In hockey,
the goal’s the thing. In writing, it’s the
story. Th is is the most fun a writer can
have; is it fi ction or non-fi ction?
Th is is a preamble to a key ques-
tion: did you notice that the name for
my monthly column has changed? Yes,
now I am going to be the voice of a Team
Manager, and will use that perspective
for all my words and observations. It’ll
be an interesting season for a great many
reasons. First, I’m managing a team that
doesn’t have Goalie Son on the roster,
which explains why I cannot write as
Goalie Parent. When you read this, my
son will be off at college (wow that just
sank in for me) and later this month he
will be playing in net for his school. (Go
ZAGS!) Well, at least that’s the plan. In
thinking this all through, I’m not sure he
can play hockey without me along the
glass. Know what I mean? I fully expect
after his fi rst game, to receive a call say-
ing, “Dad, I can’t play goal without you
watching. Can you come up here next
weekend?” Yes, I KNOW that’s what
will happen.
(Th at last paragraph began as non-
fi ction and ended with fi ction. My son
would likely say it concluded with a
delusional daydream. smile)
But, back to Team Managers. Be
kind to them. No one on a youth hockey
team has more to do, with less authority.
Team Managers have to communicate
the schedules, the day to pick up apparel,
the rules and all sorts of Association
organizational requirements. TMs have
to track down the lost order for practice
socks, decals, or those cute little trading
pins. Team managers live the life of the
messenger.
Don’t for a moment even consider
casting friendly fi re in the direction of
your Team Manager. If you must vent,
fi nd someone on your team’s Association
Board, or pull the Coach aside and vent
directly. (Or go through your Associa-
tion’s 24-hour, 12-step cool down pro-
cess for disputes??!) Just don’t dump on
your Team Manager, who is doing his/
her best. Th e o’dark thirty scheduled ice
practice times and subsequent changes
are not their idea. Oh, and when your
Team Manager asks for something,
like paperwork, or birth certificates,
volunteers, etc., be sure and respond in
a timely manner. Not doing so makes
the TM’s job that much more diffi cult.
(Here’s where I must insert that most of
my teams’ parents have been quite coop-
erative. I’m just referencing the kinds of
things we Team Managers talk about in
the Team Managers’ lounge.)
As a Team Manager, I keep busy
communicating continuously with my
team’s parents. I do, however, avoid any-
thing to do with collecting money, travel
planning or – God forbid – fundraising.
I let other’s parents enjoy those special
jobs. But, there are some Team Manag-
ers who do it all...coordinating all the
fundraising jobs, travel, all while fi lling
in as team treasurer. Th ese folks are so
special. If yours is a Super-Team man-
ager, doing all these tasks, you should
bow your head every time they walk into
the rink. Th ese folks are saints in waiting.
Th ey have my unending admiration, and
if they are your TM, you owe them. Big
time.
And, so, let the games begin! Yeah, I
know that’s not actually supposed to be
copyrighted speech until February, but
it just seemed like it belonged here too.
Another great season of youth hockey
awaits. And let ’s see and read where
this column takes us. Remember, most
of what I am writing is protected under
Rule #1, even if I am being very creative
with the facts and opinions. In those
instances, if you’re able to distinguish
any diff erences, I’ll be taking refuge in
Rule #2. And, if you fi nd all this very
confusing, you can take comfort in Rule
#3, which states: when in doubt, see Rule
#1.
To be continued… ■
Mike Schwarz, Team Manager, looks remarkably like a Goalie Parent whose Goalie Son has left the crease, leaving an empty net.
The Messenger By Mike Schwarz
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Cost to tryout for her fi rst travel team $75.00. Cost to play on her fi rst travel team $3,200.00.
The fi rst moment your daughter spots her tryout number on the team list - PRICELESS.
Allyson Simpson makes the 2009-10 Scots Squirt Team. Congratulations!
$ Colton Carson, goalie for the Grapevine Sharks pee wee team, prepares for a shot during the RHL Pee Wee Championship game.
Midget Jorge Rojas playing in a tournament in Monterrey, Mexico.
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Metroplex Hockey Officials AssociationNew Game Rules for 2009/10 Season
This is a rule change year for USA
Hockey and it therefore becomes
necessary to try as best I can to briefl y
communicate to everyone what the new
rules are, their interpretation, and what
to expect over all.
The standards of play initiative
began four seasons ago, so you can
expect the officials to continue to
enforce this direction. That means if
the players keep two hands on their
stick, the stick on the ice and their feet
moving, they will stay out of penalty
trouble. Any restraint of a player made
with the stick, hands, etc. is subject
to a penalty. Th e key is DIG, Disrupt,
Impede, Gain an unfair advantage. For
more descriptive information on this,
please go to www.usahockey.com and
watch the videos.
Specifi c major rule changes are –
Rule 301 – Sticks: Cleans up
language regarding the dimensions of
a stick and identifi es the penalties to be
called for violations under this rule. Also,
please note the requirement to have the
butt end of hollow sticks covered.
Rule 302a – Skates: Modernizes the
description “fancy” skates by changing to
“fi gure” skates as being prohibited in ice
hockey.
Rule 303 – Goalkeeper’s Equipment:
This is a significant change. New
goalkeeper’s equipment standards that
were identified in the 2007-09 Rule
book have been adopted. Th e sizes of
the protective equipment have been
changed. Leg pads are limited to 11”
x 38”, the blocker is now 8” x 15”, the
trapper is limited to a 45” circumference,
16” length, 18” from heel to web length,
and 8” in the cuff . Th ere are other minor
changes, but I would encourage everyone
to read the standard and make sure the
equipment is in compliance. Th e referees
will measure a piece of equipment when
asked. If the equipment is illegal, a minor
penalty is imposed and the equipment
must be removed from the game. If the
equipment is found to be legal, a minor
penalty for delay of game to the team
asking for the measurement will be
assessed. Th is rule is enforceable at all
levels of play.
Rule 304e – Protective Equipment:
Adds recommended equipment to those
items that must be worn in the manner
in which it was intended and designed
and calls for a team warning to be issued
prior to the assessment of a misconduct
penalty for a violation. This means
that ALL recommended protective
equipment is covered under this change.
Breezers (pants) can no longer be open
in the inseam. Th at means breezers with
zippers must be zipped closed, undone
(torn open) inseams must be taped
closed in some manner. Minor tears in
the inseam are not what the offi cials will
be looking for. It will be for the ability
of the breezer, in the opinion of the
offi cial, to do its job. Short (3/4 sleeve
sweaters must cover the elbow pad. Most
importantly, mouth guards will be more
closely scrutinized. CUBAR (Chew
up beyond all recognition), cut up, etc.
mouth guards are not permissible. Th e
rule requires that mouth guards must be
NON CLEAR (i.e. pigmented), cover all
the remaining teeth of one jaw and be
in place during play. Th is will be strictly
enforced. Custom mouth guards made
by dentists can be pigmented. Further,
helmets with ear protection, properly
fastened chin straps and face shields fall
under this rule change. Do not expect
the offi cials to look the other way. It is
every player’s responsibility to wear the
protective equipment in the manner in
which it was intended and the coach’s
responsibility to insure their players
comply.
403a and 405a – Major and Match
Penalties: For a player that is assessed
a non-coincident major penalty and
game misconduct or match penalty,
the off ending team is not required to
immediately place a substitute on the
penalty bench and may do so prior to the
expiration of the penalty. No player may
enter the game except from the penalty
bench with a bench minor penalty being
assessed for a violation. Th is means that
you do not have to immediate place a
player in the penalty box for a player who
is assessed game ejection type penalties.
However, you must place a player in
the penalty box prior to the penalty
expiration and you must do that during
a stoppage of play prior to the expiration.
If you fail to do so, you may not substitute
from the player’s bench. You will play
short handed until a stoppage of play and
then place a player on the ice. Please note
that you will be considered as playing at
full strength once the penalty expires.
If you subistute from the players bench
at the expiration, a bench minor will be
assessed.
Rule 409b – Calling of Penalties:
Requires a delayed penalty that is
nullifi ed as the result of a goal being
scored to be recorded on the game sheet
and counts towards the 5/15 penalty.
Game misconduct (Rule 404d) rule. No
more free ride on this one.
Rule 601i2 – Abuse of Offi cials:
Allows for a game misconduct to be
assessed to any Team Offi cial for any
course of conduct for which the team
has been previously assessed a bench
minor penalty. Th is means that if the
head coach is assessed a bench minor
penalty and then the assistant coach
begins abuse, he can be assessed a game
misconduct penalty. Th is is enforceable
during the same occurrence and “same
occurrence” is defi ned as being when the
bench minor has been assessed and while
it still remains on the penalty clock.
Rule 613 – Fisticuff s: Adds new
section that calls for a game misconduct
penalty (excluding Adults) to be assessed
for any player who removes his (or
opponent’s) helmet prior to or during
an altercation.
As always, if you have questions,
please do not hesitate to contact me.
Have a great season. ■
Ken ReinhardPresident, MHOA
Local Area Supervisor of Offi cials, North Texas
USA Hockey
Ken Reinhard
Ice Times Magazine is in the process of updating its website. Soon we will be your one click resource for amateur ice hockey nationwide. If you have suggestions on what you would like to see on the website please email your ideas and suggestions to [email protected]. Hockey bloggers, let us know if you want to be linked.
Ice Times Magazine Online“Supporting the Growth and Success of Amateur Ice Hockey in America”
end
wantComing soon…
Your one click
resource!
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BEHIND THE BENCH By Mark Dyslin
Mark Dyslin has been coaching youth sports for over 15 years and coaching youth hockey since 1999. He is currently one of the coaches for St. Mark’s Junior Varsity Hockey Team.
M k D li h b hi
“Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication”
says Leonardo da Vinci. What a gloriously
simple statement about simplicity! In
other words, simple is gooder! Yet when
it comes to designing practices, do we
prize sophistication (cuz it looks cool?)
over simplicity? Have you ever tired to
mimic drills you saw the pro’s practice,
only to become frustrated when your
crew of 8 and 9 year olds don’t get it?
Yes. Age will dictate instructional
complexity. But I would argue even older
kids need concepts presented in readily
understood English (or whatever the
mother tongue). So this month’s column
is, perhaps, aimed at those who work
with the little ones: pee-wee and younger.
When one only has an hour or so
to impart volumes of hockey knowledge,
one must keep it simple. So borrowing a
page from those cheesy mother’s day cards
we thought were sooo cool in the 70’s,
I am presenting the “K-I-D-S” practice
method. “KIDS” is an inordinately
fromagey acronym to help reinforce the
idea of keeping things simple. Here we go:
K is for Kinder einfach, which
translates from German (in my world)
to remember your audience and keep
instructions easy to understand. When
explaining what you want the kids
to do, break it down into bite size
chunks, each building on the previous.
Instructions should be kept to one or
two short sentences. Visual cues, such
as drawing on a board (or the ice, which
little kids love) and demonstrating
your instructions are requisite.
I is for interesting. I harp on this all
the time, but it is a pretty simple concept.
Try to avoid putting the whole team
into a single line for every activity. Th is
leads to boredom, which leads to “line
mischief ”, which leads to you screaming
at the kids. Use your assistants and divide
the ice into sections. Keep ‘em moving as
much as you can. Use small area games
to reinforce skills or concepts. I suggest
your practice be constructed so that 70%
of the time is spent in small area games,
27% in drills, and 3% in water breaks.
D is for dedicated. Plan not only
your next practice (tactical), but draft a
“syllabus” for the whole year (strategic),
and create practice plans accordingly.
Kids have this alien-like ability to tell
when a coach is just going through
the motions. You need cohesion in
your practice plans. You can’t wing-it
every practice; relying on whatever
drills you can think of while you lace
your skates. Lack of “D” will erode “I”.
S is for silly. Give some of your
activities (aka “drills”) goofy names.
Embrace “non-traditional” methods
to reinforce skills development. For
example, I once saw a game of “Duck-
Duck-Goose” being played on the ice
and marveled at the bag of skills being
cultivated. From jumping up off the
ice, to rapid acceleration, to cross-over
turns – it was genius! But to the kids,
they were simply playing a game of tag.
One last word(s) about small area
games: use them! Small area games
reinforce skills/concepts, but really
teach kids how to deal with “high
traffi c” situations. Th ink about it, over
80% of the game is played when there
are two or more gathered ‘round the
puck. Playing games aimed at helping
kids fi gure out how to deal with mobs
is simply the right thing to do. Really.
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22 Keep your kids out of hot water – put them on ice! Follow us at twitter.com/icetimes icetimesmagazine.com
Professional hockey is now in Collin
County. Th e Allen Americans of the
Central Hockey League (CHL) have set
up shop in the quickly growing town of
Allen.
Th e team will play its 32 home games
in the newly built, state-of-the-art Allen
Event Center, which holds 6,135 people
for hockey games. Th e arena is located in
Th e Village at Allen, which is located at
the southeast corner of US-75 and Stacy
Road.
Th e Americans, the CHL affi liate
of the Dallas Stars, are the equivalent
to a AA farm team. Players will hone
their skills in Allen with the expectations
Americans Ready To Begin Play In Allen
to move up to the American Hockey
League (AHL) and eventually the
National Hockey League (NHL).
Fans can expect high scoring,
physical hockey. The team has two
players headed to NHL training camps
and seven confi rmed to attend AHL
training camps with more invitations in
the works.
Th e inaugural season starts Oct. 16
with the team playing in Arizona. Th e
Americans continue to play on the road
for three weeks before the home opener
Saturday, Nov. 7, vs. Corpus Christi at
7:30 p.m.
Th e club is owned by Douglas H.
Miller, Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer of EXCO Resources, Inc.,
and former NHL defenseman Steve
Duchesne. Duchesne, who won the
Stanley Cup with Detroit in 2002, also
serves as the club’s president.
Local hockey fans will see familiar
faces behind the bench. Head Coach
and General Manager Dwight Mullins
will lead the team alongside Associate
Coach and Director of Player Personnel
Bill McDonald.
Th e two coaches have known each
other for quite a while. Mullins has
played for and coached with McDonald
prior to coming to the Americans. Th e
current head coach was captain of the
championship Fort Worth Fire team in
1997 when McDonald was head coach.
Th e following year Mullins was assistant
coach while McDonald served as head
coach in the inaugural season for
the Fort Worth Brahmas (1997-
1998).
Full and half season tickets are on
sale now. Ticket information is available
by calling 972.912.1000 or visiting
allenamericans.com. The Americans
offi ce is open from 8:30 a.m.-7:00 p.m.
Monday through Friday and 10 a.m.-
2 p.m. Saturday. It is located at 190
E. Stacy Road #1508, Allen, Texas
75002. ■
Daniel Patrick getting his ‘hockey fun’ captured while at Disney World Summer 2009.
Sam Yujuico, Defense on the ’98 Jr. Brahmas AAA team that played in the OneHockey tournament. There was just a few minutes left in the game against the PA team and Sam got a great cross pass at the top of the circle, took a wrist shot, and scored his fi rst (and only) goal of that tournament, just as an opponent was trying to block his shot. Nice job, Sam.
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Sean Kuehn makes a save against Hovas Hockey Club during the Planet Hockey touranment in Kungsbacka, Sweden.