This is a great article which is worth a re-post each year. I don't think I've seen a better reminder of what's important and what's not than Mr. Buccigross' rules. Everyone has a favorite of these rules and those who know me know which one is my favorite! Send me an email with yours.
~Yvonne
2010-01-12
John Buccigross of ESPN.com penned an article
in December - "My 13 simple rules for hockey parents everywhere".
Enjoy...Women and men used to gaze up at the
stars, awed at the sight and size of the universe, much like Detroit Red Wings fitness trainers used to be
in awe at the sight and size of Brett Hull's butt during his final
Motor City days.
My understanding of the sky's map is limited to
the Big Dipper (good nickname for Buffalo's Tyler Myers, by the way) and
the constellation Orion. Orion is located on the celestial equator and
can been seen across the world, much like Pat Quinn's head. Its name,
Orion, refers to a hunter in Greek mythology. Since my late teenage
years, whether I am in Mingo Junction, Ohio, or Vancouver, British
Columbia, I always look up and locate Orion. It's my satellite to home
and youth.
I first became aware of Orion from the now bankrupt
movie production company Orion Pictures Corporation, which made movies
from 1978-1998. I remember the company's animated intro prior to the
start of a movie: stars from the constellation would twirl into the
letter "O" before the entire word "Orion" was spelled out.
It
seemed as if 46 percent of movies produced in the late '70s and early
'80s, my HBO sweet spot years, were produced by Orion. I am sure this
number is probably much lower. "Back to School," "10," "Hoosiers,"
"Platoon," "No Way Out" and others all began with the animated Orion
logo. I would like to publicly thank the now defunct movie company and
HBO for my astronomy acumen and the indelible image of Bo Derek jogging
on the beach with wet, braided hair. ("Before the Internet, there was
HBO." Now there is a slogan to believe in.)
Today, kids,
teenagers, adults and Sean Avery don't so much stare
up to the trees, clouds, airplanes, stars and 6-foot-9 NHL linesman Mike
Cvik as much as they used to; now, most stare down at their cell phones
and personal digital assistants (Jim Balsillie's PDA BlackBerry, yo).
As a result of all this "looking down," we miss so much up in the
heavens. We even look down at these things during dinner, hockey games
and Heisman Trophy presentations. People even look down at their PDAs
while they drive. Who needs a moon roof on a clear summer night when I
can play Tetris on I-95 while I soar through the E-ZPASS lane?
This
is my gigantic preamble to why you should one day sign up your young
son or daughter to play youth hockey at a local rink near you. If
nothing else, it gets them away from electronics and teaches them a
small slice of humanity that they can take forward through life, a life
with more heart and less battery power. The rink's cold robs electronics
of their battery power and signal reception, anyway.
So, if you
are a first-time hockey parent, or dream of one day spending more than
$10,000 and sacrificing weekends for a decade of glamorous youth or
"minor" hockey, here are 13 important things you need to know about the
youth hockey universe -- and hockey in general -- to help speed up the
assimilation process in joining the "Congregation of Independent Insane
in the Membrane Hockey Community Union" or COIIITMHCU. If you move those
letters around you eventually get Chicoutimi. A miracle from the
star-filled heavens above. (I'm sure my fellow COIIITMHCU members will
offer even more, and we can post next week.)
1. Under no
circumstances will hockey practice ever be cancelled. Ever. Even
on days when school is cancelled, practice is still on. A game may be
cancelled due to inclement weather because of travel concerns for the
visiting team, but it would have to rain razor blades and bocce balls to
cancel hockey practice at your local rink. It's good karma to respect
the game.
2. Hockey is an emotional game and your child has
the attention span of a chipmunk on NyQuil. The hockey coach will yell a
bit during practice; he might even yell at your precious little Sparky.
As long as there is teaching involved and not humiliation, it will be
good for your child to be taught the right way, with emphasis.
3. Hockey
is a very, very, very, very difficult game to play. You are probably
terrible at it. It takes high skill and lots of courage, so lay off your
kid. Don't berate them. Be patient and encourage them to play. Some
kids need more time to learn how to ride the bike, but, in the end,
everyone rides a bike about the same way.
Your kids are probably
anywhere from age 4-8 when they first take up hockey. They will not get a
call from Boston University coach Jack Parker or receive Christmas
cards from the Colorado Avalanche's director of scouting. Don't berate
them. Demand punctuality and unselfishness for practice and games.
That's it. Passion is in someone, or it isn't. One can't implant passion
in their child. My primary motive in letting my kids play hockey is
exercise, physical fitness and the development of lower-body and core
strength that will one day land them on a VH1 reality show that will pay
off their student loans or my second mortgage.
4. Actually,
I do demand two things from my 10-year-old Squirt, Jackson. Prior to
every practice or game, as he turns down AC/DC's "Big Jack," gets out of
the car and makes his way to the trunk to haul his hockey bag inside a
cold, Connecticut rink, I say, "Jack, be the hardest, most creative and
grittiest worker ... and be the one having the most fun." That might be
four things, but you know what I mean.
5. Your kids should
be dressing themselves and tying their own skates by their second year
of Squirt. Jack is 67 pounds with 0 percent body fat and arms of
linguini, and he can put on, take off and tie his own skates. If he can,
anyone can. I don't go in the locker room anymore. Thank goodness; it
stinks in there.
6. Do not fret over penalties not called
during games and don't waste long-term heart power screaming at the
referees. My observational research reveals the power-play percentage
for every Mite hockey game ever played is .0000089 percent; for Squirts,
.071 percent. I prefer referees to call zero penalties.
7. Yell
like crazy during the game. Say whatever you want. Scream every kind of
inane instruction you want to your kids. They can't hear you. In the
car ride home, ask them if they had fun and gently promote creativity
and competiveness, but only after you take them to Denny's for a Junior
Grand Slam breakfast or 7-Eleven for a Slurpee. Having a warm breakfast
after an early morning weekend game will become one of your most syrupy
sweet memories.
8. Whenever possible, trade in your kids'
ice skates and buy used skates, especially during those growing years
and even if you can afford to buy new skates every six months. Your kids
don't need $180 skates and a $100 stick no matter what your tax bracket
is. They will not make them better players.
9. Missing
practice (like we stated above) or games is akin to an Irish Catholic
missing Mass in 1942. We take attendance at hockey games very seriously.
Last week, the Islanders'Brendan Witt was hit by an SUV
in Philadelphia. Witt got up off the pavement and walked to Starbucks
for a coffee, and then later played against the Flyers that night. Let
me repeat that: BRENDAN WITT WAS HIT BY AN SUV ... AND PLAYED THAT
NIGHT! Re-read that sentence 56 times a night to your child when they
have a case of the sniffles and want to stay home to watch an "iCarly"
marathon. By, the way Philadelphia police cited Witt for two minutes in
jail for obstruction. Witt will appeal.
10. Teach your kids
not to celebrate too much after a goal if your team is winning or
losing by a lot. And by all means, tell them celebrate with the team.
After they score, tell them not to skate away from their teammates like
soccer players. Find the person who passed you the puck and tell him or
her, "Great pass." We have immediate group hugs in hockey following a
short, instinctive reaction from the goal scorer. I am proud of my boy
for a lot of things, but I am most proud at how excited he gets when a
teammate scores a goal. He is Alex Ovechkinin this regard.
11. There
is no such thing as running up the score in hockey. This is understood
at every level. It's very difficult to score goals and unexplainably
exhilarating when one does. Now, if we get to 14-1, we may want to take
our foot off the gas a tad.
12. Unless their femur is
broken in 16 places, Mites or Squirts should not lie on the ice after a
fall on the ice or against the boards. Attempt to get up as quickly as
one can and slowly skate to the bench.
13. Do not offer
cash for goals. This has no upside. Passion and love and drive cannot be
taught or bought. I do believe a certain measure of toughness and grit
can be slowly encouraged and eventually taught. Encourage your kid to
block shots and to battle hard in the corners. It will serve them well
in life.
Enjoy the rink. Keep it fun, keep it in perspective and
enjoy the madness. In this digital world of electronics, you may find
hockey to be the most human endeavor you partake in. Cell phones run on
batteries. Hockey players run on blood. Blood is warmer. Welcome.