It’s early September and although the temperatures are still quite warm, hockey season is underway here in New Hampshire. It was opening weekend for the 2010 Flames and they hosted a pair of games at West Side Arena to begin the new campaign.
There was much work done on the rink itself and the infrastructure outside such as a minor facelift to the building and a beautiful new parking lot, with lines and everything. We are fortunate to have such a place to call home for our youth hockey players.
Anyway, it was opening weekend and the Flames played the North Shore Shamrocks and the IHC (Islanders). While the Flames dropped a pair of decisions, 2-1 and 5-3, there is always something to build on and opportunity for growth. As the second game closed the weekend of play on Saturday afternoon emotions bubbled into action on the ice. Player vs. player, team vs. team. It didn’t get out of control but it could have likely been avoided. Either way, just seconds after the teams had heated to their respective boiling points, they had to line up and shake hands. This, to me, is one of the great hockey traditions.
I know that it has become easy to avoid this tradition with all the fear in the world and the unwillingness of officials to tackle, for a moment, the leadership opportunity they possess to make sure these things go off without a hitch. But for young kids learning how to be a good teammate and an accountable competitor, facing your opponent for a few seconds in a lineup without blowing your cool or acting irresponsibly is a good lesson to learn, over and over again.
Well, I realized that as I started taking pictures of the first game, that I am really rusty. I hope to get better as we go through the season. As always, though, this is all about the kids. Every shift, or every game, some kid might be having the best day of their sports life. Or maybe life, family, school has got a kid down and on the ice is his or her place to be at peace and find joy for long enough periods of time to learn how to find peace in joy in nearly everything that life throws our way. It’s their story and may parents and coaches may be ‘too’ caught up in their team or their dream pressed upon their own offspring to tell the story or even recognize it for it what it should be.
We are Americans. Right or wrong, we wait for nothing. We play more games per practice than much of the world because we take the shortcut to things that we can measure. Like goals and points and wins and losses, as if this the only to measure progress.
Kids play games in many cases to live up to an unreal expectation that parents and adults create for them because we want to be entertained and numerically satisfied. The program cannot be that good if we don’t play games constantly is the mindset.
With this approach we nearly lose sight of the kids entirely. Or at least losing touch with the pure joy that we were hopefully blessed to know as youngsters ourselves. I never played organized hockey as a kid, but I can honestly say that I did experience joy and unadulterated freedom while playing hockey on my own, for hours and hours on any back woods piece of ice could find. Honestly, I felt that way about any sport I played, even in our yard. For love of the game.
On Friday night, prime time, the Flames played the Shamrocks before a packed house for an 8:00 pm start. As it usually happens when these two teams meet, the game was close all the way through. The Shamrocks played well enough to earn a 2-1 win.
Score by period: Friday, September 9, 2022.
Shamrocks 0-1-1 = 2
Flames 0-0-1 = 1
As always with these galleries, please feel free to click on the pictures, read the captions, and zoom in and have a look around. Also, please enjoy! This is for the kids. I will get to everyone on the roster as weekends continue. Thank you for your time.
Game one: Flames 1 vs. Shamrocks 2
Score by period: Saturday, September 10, 2022.
Islanders 4-1-0 = 5
Flames 0-2-1 = 3
Game two: Flames 3 vs. IHC Islanders 5
The Flames dug themselves a big hole, falling behind, 4-0. They did battle back and dominated most of the second and third period. They could not come all the way back, though they continued to exert effort and a never die mindset. They lost, 5-3, ending up 0-2 on the weekend. Over the six periods of hockey played this weekend, the Flames tied two periods, lost two periods, and won two periods. In a nutshell, these two games were very close.
The thoughts and opinions expressed here are those of the individual contributors, mostly mine, and do not necessarily reflect the views of the schools, coaches, players, or characters listed in any of these blog posts. Or, maybe they do, but you would have to ask them directly.
Either way, “It’s a great day for hockey” ~ the late “Badger” Bob Johnson.