9/29/2014

Let the season begin!

The Team CLE tryouts took place last night at the Cleveland Heights ice rink. I thought it was a lot of fun, despite the sharp snap back to reality (my endurance has seen better days, guys). A bunch of familiar faces, but a few new ones, too. Good turn out overall. Thanks to everyone who came out, and thanks to the Katies for putting the whole shindig together.

Team Navy will be scrimmaging the Gilmour Academy U-19 team in a few weeks (rumor has it they're pretty good this year, so it should be a tough game), and Team White has a couple of inter-squad scrimmages lined up at the end of October. Hockey's finally here! And so is the Pumpkin Spice Latte at Starbucks! So go spend $4.00 on a deliciously sugary hot drink and get pumped, because Team CLE is going to dominate the women's hockey world this year. I can feel it in my bones. 

P.S. In her last blog post, Lindsay described the ideal way to ensure you receive a new hockey stick for Christmas. That'll be me this year. But please, none of the ones shown below. I have standards.



P.S.S. Go Blackhawks! 

9/25/2014

Just a couple more days






Soon my child, soon.

Here's a hockey to do list for Sunday, guys. Am I missing anything?

1- Sharpen your skates. I'm told the shop near Cleveland Heights rink is closed, as is Blue Diamond in Macedonia. This leaves us as far as I know with Peranis on the west side and Kent State on the east side.

2- Buy a year's supply of sock tape now, because If you're like me, you won't remember/prioritize spending $3 a roll on it for the rest of the year.

3- Think about replacing your many years old composite stick. If you're game, replace it. Otherwise, scope out the stick you really want online, send link to your parents/significant other/workplace secret Santa. Tough it out with the old stick for the first half of the season, cross fingers you have a good Christmas. It worked for a girl I know.

4- Watch some hockey and get excited. Mighty Ducks trilogy is on Netflix. I watched the first one about a week ago. It ages pretty well, although I can't see Disney making a show full of 'like a girl' insults in this day and age, and the first Mighty Ducks is full of that. Still worth it though, and oh that Charlie Conway. Total shades of what was to come with Pacey Witter on Dawson's Creek. Ok, I've kind of gotten off topic here. My point is, between now and Sunday make sure you sit down and relax a bit, maybe watch some old hockey movies. Miracle would be great but I don't think it's on Netflix.

5- Most importantly: Go to usahockeyregistration.com and get a USA hockey number. Feel accomplished, organized and like a real grownup when you arrive at tryouts on Sunday with a completed tryout form, $10, and a USA hockey number.

See you guys soon, 4:45 on Sunday at Cleveland Heights!






9/12/2014

A throwback Thursday kind of post (on a Friday)

Abby in 1975, most likely FLH

A few weeks back, I emailed my friend Abby a list of questions about the Twisters. Abby is the founder and long time manager of the Kent Twisters, and is a significant reason why adult women's hockey is thriving in Cleveland. I am grateful to Abby for a couple reasons. The first is simple - I love playing hockey, and because of Abby and her persistence in growing and managing a team (along with Coach Jimmy, Eric and some other key supporters) I have somewhere to play. Thanks guys!

More than providing me a crew to play hockey with, Abby has been an example of female leadership. I love that when she thinks of things she wants to do, she just does them. Whether it's hockey, or time banking, or sharing her love of fresh baked pie on Facebook, there is no stopping Abby. 

As much as I enjoy reading about famous women leaders (may I recommend Pat Summit's "Sum it Up"?), to be surrounded by female leaders in real life whether on my hockey team or at work is pretty much the best. I am lucky that in my experiences, there has been no shortage of women leaders. A few years ago I just sort of opened my eyes and started paying attention and there was Abby, front and center.

So, as we say goodbye to the Twisters and transition to Team CLE I wanted to share some of Abby's comments about her Twister experience. Here are 17 quotes (ok, excerpts) from Abby, for 17 years of Twisters hockey:

Ahead of her time:

"I grew up in the country and learned how to skate on the creek.  Yes, the old push-the-kitchen-chair-down-the-creek laughing and drinking hot chocolate and being silly.  We were lucky to have a decrepit ice rink in town called the Ice Barn.  We would all go and skate there with our friends, eat popcorn and play air hockey.  When my sister and I were around 10 and 11, she decided that she would play hockey.  Of course, I wanted to do whatever she was doing so we joined the team.  I don't remember ANY other girls anywhere near a hockey rink at that time.  I remember hearing stories of a girl goalie in Cleveland and feeling pretty much in awe.  Think 1975!"

Years later, on finding an adult women's hockey team:

"In 1996, on a whim, I called the Kent State University ice arena and asked if there were any women playing hockey these days.  They said, "Oh yes, we have a group of 'moms' (grrrrrrrr) who play once a week."  Boy, was I excited.  I blew the dust off my skates and found some used pads and went to have a look.  The team was called Babes on Blades (double grrrrrrr) and it was a group of crazy, fun, not very experienced women who loved the idea of playing hockey."

"I was in heaven.  I flew around the ice as though I had wings on my back."

On starting a new team in 1997:


"I challenged myself to organize something that would not only be fun, but develop skills and passion, both individually and team work, into a competitive adult women's team."

"The trick would be, how can I create something that would satisfy all of us as we were all at different levels.  I just knew it could be done."

The vision:

"I believe that my goal was to develop women to the point where I could compete with them and then, together, we would have a team that we could play games.  Clearly, I am competitive enough to also want to develop a team that would not only WIN games but stick together as a team.  Being a team together was always equally  important to me as developing individual strengths."

"I had very high expectations for players on the Twisters.  You had to have a REALLY good reason for missing practice.  You had to commit to all of the games.  It was a tight ship but the result was a team that knew each other so very well."

Play like a girl:


"This was NOT just babes on blades or chicks with sticks.  This was now a group of women who really enjoyed learning power skating (the only real thing I could teach) and the art and beauty of combining skating with a stick and puck and working on things that pros make look so easy.   I have seen many men over the years, coaches, dads, and referees laugh at the women who are so incredibly brave to put on skates and pads and a helmet and try something that did not come naturally for them.  I still feel the sting of insult.  For me, this was my number one passion and the women I shared it with were equally passionate." 

Patience is a virtue:

"As women's hockey was slowly beginning to grow, I knew that if I were patient, skilled women would come and want to play with the Twisters.  It was a matter of waiting.  The USA/Canada Women's Hockey Olympics helped fuel the fire but it would be a few years before we would see adult women come up, compete and then want to join a recreational league to stay in the game!"


A few years later, our coach: 

"Jimmy brought many things to the table for the Twisters.  First, and foremost, a respect for women.  Second, an experienced methodology for teaching both individual skill AND team play.  Third, a most patient and kind heart for women who came from all backgrounds and all learning styles and all levels of skill."

"It was key that the coach of this team could integrate the division of skill, style and heart and work with it.  He did some really amazing things over the years that I still shake my head at, such as putting certain people in front of the net and watching his plan unfold easily with a goal.  He could read all of that in our players, in their hearts, in their minds and in their ability."

Growth:

"Each year that went by, more and more experienced players came which really broadened the playing field for Jimmy.  I think he was as excited as I was to think that we were really growing.  The new players with talent and the older players who were fitting in exactly where they were effective, was thrilling.  Coaching is an art.  To satisfy even 75% of your players is remarkable.  Jimmy had the vision and intuition to know when and where to make the right coaching moves.  That is a very real art and because he had that ability, the team grew in success."


Becoming hard to beat:

"I don't remember what year it was or who came on to our team to give us the needed boost but we quickly went from losing ALL of our games to winning all of them and we became hard to beat.  We had to go to tournaments to face more competition.  It seems like there were several years there where we simply out-brained each and every team we played.  Again, good coaching was the reason for these wins."

Some favorite memories:

"It fed me to see that our hard work, determination, practice and coaching would lead to the very thing we were striving towards.  It turns out I am most moved by TEAM play.  When we started working on our powerplay, I couldn't have been happier.  It was not luck nor lack of competition that we worked together to make a plan to outwit and outskill our opponent."

"I enjoyed the fact that our Twisters did not fall to the common disinegration due to drama.  We had no drama.  We did not tolerate drama.  So many women's teams fell apart because of team drama and I was determined not to see that happen."

What it's all about:

"It's a pretty amazing thing to see a team lift a teammate to where they ought to be."

"The Twisters gave to me something that I feel I lacked as a kid.  A team.  As a junior high student going into high school, I tried out for the softball team.  I had played fast pitch over the summer and thought that I was pretty OKAY.  Heck, I was first baseman!  Well, I was nervous and I flubbed a couple of grounders and I didn't make the team.  All of my friends who I played fast pitch with made the team.  I was devastated.  I turned a cold shoulder (as well as putting a chip on my shoulder) and never participated in sports again.  I didn't have a sportsmanlike role model to tell me to try again so I gave up and always, ALWAYS felt angry about it.  I used to glare at the softball coach in the hallway.  [I'm still angry]  I never even once went to a high school sporting event because, in my heart, I was really hurt."


"I believe that the camaraderie of the Twisters gave to me that non-softball year to me tenfold.  I felt loved and accepted and even admired for my skating ability.  In turn, I loved and admired any woman who was willing to be on our team and FIGHT LIKE HELL together." 


***

In our final year (the 2013/14 season), the Kent Twisters resembled the original team in some ways, and were unrecognizable in others. In its final year, the Kent Twisters were still a group of women who are passionate about hockey. It was still a group of women who are brave about trying new things. We still lift each other up, and I hope we always will. In our final year of hockey we were still a team that had a place for players new to the game.

True to Abby's vision, one thing that had changed was that the skill level continued to rise and the team ultimately became one that competitive, experienced hockey players loved to play for as well. 

Thanks so much Abby for all you have done to give us a place to play! Enjoy playing hockey with your daughter and new friends that you are playing with in Cleveland Heights, and of course we will see you...at the rink. 

9/04/2014

The Secrets of Hockey

Hockey season is nearly upon is. In a few short weeks, Team CLE will be back on the ice for the 2014-15 season, making another run at the National Championship that eluded us in early April. Now that hockey’s fresh on our minds, now that we’re all desperately trying to figure out how we can possible get in shape before upcoming tryouts, now that we’re swearing off alcohol and ice cream and potato chips and dreaming of our TJ Oshie-esque shootout moves and sharpening our skates, it’s time to take a look at some of the lesser known reasons why hockey is the greatest sport on earth.

1.       The goalies are crazy.

In no other sport are goalies quite as insane as they are in the hockey world. Go up to any hockey player and ask them to describe their goaltender. They’ll probably say something like, “I’ve never met a weirder person in my entire life, but I love the heck out of her.” If that’s not the answer you get, chances are the goalie in question isn’t any good. That’s the secret: the weirder the goalie, the better the goalie.

Our goalie, Allie, has been wearing Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles pajamas under her gear for years. My college goalie ate Nutella at every single meal. My middle school goalie applied thick coats of coal-black eyeliner before every game.

See what I mean? I guess you have be a little off your rocker to jump in front of a 90-mile-an-hour slapshot, though…

2.       The rituals are even crazier.

Hockey players live and die by rituals. One time, when I was 9 years old, I forgot to lace my skates up all the way, leaving the top eyelet on both skates lace-less. Then I scored a hat trick. Guess what? I’m about to turn 29, and I haven’t laced my skates up all the way since. 20 years. 20 YEARS OF INSUFFICIENT SKATE SUPPORT, ALL FOR A RITUAL!

One of my Team CLE teammates carries a bottle of tequila (named Jack) to every single tournament. Certain players take a shot of Jack from a very special shot glass before every single game. Chuck, one of our top defensemen, yells, “THIS IS THE MOST IMPORTANT GAME OF THE TOURNAMENT!” before most games (even when it is, arguably, not the most important game of the tournament). Red Wings fans throw dead marine life onto the ice!

I guess we’re just a superstitious bunch. 

3.       The smell will knock your socks off.

The good smells – and the bad. There’s absolutely nothing like walking into a hockey rink. The smell is unique; it’s chilling, crisp, wintry, sweaty, rubbery. It’s perfect and unmistakable, like nothing else.
And then there’s the gear. Some people spritz a little Febreze into their bags after playing (lookin’ at you, Katie Virtue), but others don’t bother. We don’t bother because we know no amount of Febreze is going to make a dent in that disgusting hockey funk.\

The gloves are the worst. Never, ever make the mistake of sniffing a pair of hockey gloves. You will likely die.

4.       Chemistry reigns supreme.

On paper, two players could be perfect for each other. They’re fast, smart, aggressive… but then you throw them on a line together and … nothing. Nothing happens. Confusion sets in.

Or the opposite happens – the most unlikely pair gets caught out on a shift together, and their chemistry lights up the rink. Where did that come from, and why couldn’t we predict it?

Hockey’s this combination of quick-thinking, finesse, strength, split-second decisions, full-body athleticism, hand-eye coordination … and chemistry. Can you read your teammate? Do you know where your winger’s going to be before SHE even knows where she’s going to be? That’s the magic right there. That chemistry is impossible to teach, and it’s arguably even harder to learn, but it’s what makes hockey so incredibly satisfying.

What’s your favorite thing about hockey? What do you think makes it better than any other sport on the planet? We’d love to hear your thoughts.



9/02/2014

So tell me, how did you become a Twister or an Ice Hawk?

In four weeks we will take to the ice as Team CLE for the very first time. I can't wait. I can't wait to see you guys, meet the new members, step on the ice, and play some games. I miss you. As wonderful as maternity leave is, it does make for a long off season.

The inception of Team CLE is a logical next step in adult women's hockey in NEO. I am sad to see the Twisters come to an end, but take many things from that experience. I found my friends, met interesting people at different stages of life, and benefited from the leadership of many.

Before we get too far as Team CLE I want to talk a bit about the Twisters and Ice Hawks. I'd love to hear how you guys stumbled onto your respective teams, or your favorite part of being on those teams. Also, I have a ton of info from Abby about the Twisters that I will share soon so we have a record of our roots. I know, I know, I'm too sentimental. I can see you all rolling your eyes.

Anyway, the Twisters embraced me in 2011 when I was a hockey player without a team, and was looking to make friends. I found the team through Kristen, who I had reconnected with at a Mercyhurst hockey reunion in Erie in early 2011. We hadn't seen each other since 2005 and neither of us was playing hockey. Between March and July Kristen somehow got an in with Jimmy's summer group, and got me in as well. I met the Twisters that were playing summer hockey - Rhonda, Hillary, Chuck, Katie, Abby, Ann, Missy, possibly Allie and of course Coach Jimmy. I decided to join the Twisters.

I went to Kent State Ice Arena in the fall and met the team. We had pizza before going on the ice, introduced ourselves, toyed with the idea of Nationals, and Abby shared that Katie was going to assist her in managing. And we all know what happened next. We didn't make it to Nationals that year, but made it in 2014. After founding the team in the mid nineties and managing it until 2012, Abby passed the torch to Katie.

So tell me, here or on FB, how did you become a Twister or an Ice Hawk?