Friday, October 10, 2008

We Love The Berkley Beacon!

(The following is an article from the Berkley Beacon, Emerson College's weekly newspaper. I managed to catch the article in print and knew immediately that it needed to be reposted on this blog! Here's the original link to the article.)

Late practices, new coach define Emerson hockey

Despite recent struggles and a rough start to the season, Lions' club team looks forward to a brighter future

Amelia Rayno

Issue date: 10/9/08 Section: Sports


At just after midnight, a flurry of purple and white jerseys scatter to the frosty edges of Simoni Rink in Cambridge. The allotted hour is up, the tired bunch has finished their drills and scrimmages, and now the band of 22 men and one woman shuffle toward the locker room.

Behind them, a commanding figure follows and quickly offers instruction as the players shed their thick padding. They brush the ice off their skates, throw their sticks into giant duffel bags, and rush out the door to catch the final train out of Lechmere Station. Tonight, like the other one or two times the team practices each week, the Emerson Lions were the last ones on and off the ice.

The Emerson hockey team, which has club status as a school organization, doesn’t have a choice when it comes to night-owl practices. Their 11 p.m. slot is the only one available since the rink is occupied by more established teams most of the time. As the dull buzz of the Zamboni makes the evening’s last wet circles over the sheet, the Lions are just tugging on their skates and helmets.

The athletes have paid to be here. They have sacrificed their time, their cash out of pocket and their comfortable Thursday evenings in front of the television. Their coach has given up his own share, carping drills and dropping pucks for nothing more than a free membership to Gold’s Gym. The late nights at Simoni ensure that everyone who is there truly wants to be.

“No one is pushing us,” said Alan Gwizdowski, a senior captain and television-video major. “We don’t get a lot of support from the school, and it’s a really expensive sport. You have to love it to be out there.”

Players say their passion for the game transcends what might seem like a thankless job to a less ardent crowd.

“We go to practices late at night, scrambling to get the last T home,” said Casey Smith, a freshman woman who is playing check league hockey for the first time. “If you didn’t love the game there is no way you would be willing to do that.”

And perhaps this love has proven even more powerful, through not only a lack of support, but also a rough start to this season following a 3-12 mark last year.

In its first game, Emerson fell 16-0 to Bentley College. In its second against Merrimack College, the margin widened to a 20-0 defeat.

“It’s frustrating [that these were the] first two games,” Gwizdowski said. “I know what the team can do, but for some of the freshmen—it’s tough to say we can get back into it, when we haven’t been in it yet.”

Bentley and Merrimack boast Division I programs. Many Lions players doubt whether they belong in the same rink as DI teams.

“Personally, I think the experience level is a juxtaposition,” said junior goalie Greg Cohen, who recorded an astounding 62 saves during the loss to Bentley.

Despite all of the team’s hardships, one thing is decidedly different for the Lions this year—they have a coach.

John Sullivan landed at Emerson when he answered a Craigslist.com posting created by Assistant Captain Pete Keeling after a dismal spring. The result brought the team something they were unable to give themselves: organized leadership.

After growing up in the Boston area, Sullivan returns after 18 years spent playing in junior leagues and instructing hockey camps in Canada. Now he routinely journeys to Cambridge on cool New England evenings and watches a group of college students slap shot after shot, the ice-sheathed bowl echoing with the rhythm of wood rasping over its surface.

Last year, Gwizdowski acted as the coach and ran practices. Having played hockey his entire life, he effuses passion collected from two decades of hitting pucks.

“I grew up skating on ponds,” he said, alluding back to his days as a tot in Rhode Island. By the time he reached the first grade he was playing six or seven days a week.

But as committed as he was to the Lions last year, Gwizdowski said he couldn’t do it all.

“It wasn’t easy to participate in drills while also coaching, trying to stop people to tell them what they were doing wrong, and doing right,” he said. “And also, coaching myself, no one was doing that.”

Players said Sullivan’s guidance has made all the difference this season.

Sporting a thick white hoodie, Coach Sullivan stands against the background of thick steel bleachers, a whistle slung about his neck, never for long. He plucks it up often, its shrill call signaling the start and stop of drills. He elicits the image of “the quintessential Canadian hockey guy,” as Gwizdowski called him. Sullivan, who is working to pass his bar exam while coaching Emerson, will be gone after this season, and then the Lions will be back to square one. But the coach, with the guidance and inspiration he brings, represents another phase in a steadily growing program.

Sullivan was quick to dismiss any serious concern over the ups and down of the team. He said the job was a good fit and that he wants to help players have fun and teach them along the way. But when he steps onto the rink, he gives every intimation that it means something a little more to both teacher and student.

The promise of a winning season lingers as a yet-fulfilled hope. Their games are played, for the most part, without a significant audience—many Emerson students aren’t even aware of the team’s existence. And without school support, the Lions have to buy their own equipment, jerseys and rink slots. They have stripped away everything but an unbounded appreciation for the game they play. It’s enough to keep them coming back.

“We are progressing every year,” Gwizdowski said. “The ball [is] rolling and now it’s [a] snowball effect.”

As the Lions let it roll and gather mass, the leadership, increasing support from the school and committed players such as Gwizdowski could change the face of this program. Of course, it takes time.

But the Lions said they will take time, and make time, in order to produce something special.

“What we lack in skill,” Smith said, “we make up for in heart.”

Monday, October 6, 2008

David rarely beats Goliath

Even the unreligious know the story of David and Goliath, right? Well, I've always been told not to assume, so I'll tell the concise version as it relates to Emerson Hockey: David (the Lions) is a young man who miraculously defeats a giant warrior, Goliath (Merrimack, Bentley) with only a slingshot.

The key word here being miraculously.

These two Goliaths mercilessly stomped David to pulp on the ice last week. The hits were hard and the final tallies ugly. There was not one Emerson goal to celebrate.

David shot, and shot, and shot, and the Goliaths deflected, scored, and scored some more, and then beat David's corpse until the final buzzer.

As they should have.

It would take a miracle of biblical (or 1980) proportions for the Lions to beat either of these teams. We barely have a club team, while Merrimack (Hockey East) and Bentley (Atlantic Hockey) both recruit for their Division 1 teams. Who do you think plays for their club team? If you guessed some very talented (and likely pissed-off) players who didn't make varsity, you're right.

Emerson doesn't stand a chance against these teams, and they know it. The coach and captains believe playing tougher teams will make the Lions stronger when they square off against more evenly-matched clubs, and they may prove to be right. The Lions clobbered RISD this Saturday, but tomorrow night's game against Berklee in Cambridge should be a better indicator of whether battling these two Goliaths has helped or hindered David.

***
My apologies for the dormancy here. I've been traveling a bit and haven't been able to check in on the team. To be honest, I could really use a hand with this. It's a great opportunity for a young journalist in a beat writing class.

Furthermore, is anyone reading this? Blogger doesn't offer a stat counter so I have no idea if there's an audience. I'd be much more motivated to post things if I actually thought I had readers, so leave a comment or two, wouldja? :)

Gnarly new Red Ice shirts now on sale


Maybe I'm biased, but that's an awesome shirt. Simple. Bloody. Effective. The team's just started selling these bad boys for $10 on it's merch site, and all proceeds support the team athletically. Fill in your own jock strap joke here ___________________, fill out an order form here, then fill the Simoni bleachers in your badass new shirt whilst you fulfill your bloodlust.

First Game of the Season

September 29, 2008

(A little backdated, but I suppose better late than never.)

The first game of the season was last night, and I was super excited to go! I always love the first game! Knowing that I wouldn’t be able to go to the second, and probably the third, I was ready to get my hockey fix for the week.

Emerson faced off against Bentley, another local area college, at Simoni Rink. I didn’t know what to expect for this game; I heard rumors that the team was back and better than ever, but it had been a long summer… Maybe it would be a little rusty.

The first few minutes of the game were solid. Greg Cohen (2010) played well in net as the rest of the Emerson Lions tried their hardest to defend against Bentley. Perhaps the summer proved to be too much. After a quick two goals, Emerson held off their opponent for the rest of the period, but finally grew tired and another three goals slipped in.

Again, over the next two periods, between a barrage of penalties, powerplays, and attempted shots, Emerson came up short with a final score of 0-16. The Emerson fans were proud nonetheless, and cheered enthusiastically for their fellow Lions as the end of the third period curtailed play. I can’t say that as fans we were surprised—after all, the 06-07 season saw only a few wins, as did 07-08—but we are still hopeful for the rest of the season to come. I blame it on summer rust. Give it a few games, and things will be moving like an oiled machine.

(Picture coming soon! Keep checking back!)

An Introduction of Sorts

My name is Jessica, and I am an Emerson Hockey fan. Yes, an EMERSON Hockey fan. I am a proud member of RED ICE, the Emerson Hockey fan club, and I’m usually at almost all of the game during the course of a season. I’m notorious for taking lots of pictures at said games, wandering around the rink with my camera in hand and my EC Hockey playlist blaring through my headphones.

I am an Emerson Hockey fan.

My fascination with the sport started two years ago thanks to one of my close friends, Lance Ning. Through some way, shape or form, I ended up at Emerson’s first hockey game with a bunch of my floormates—who I still attend games with on a pretty regular basis—and became completely entranced. I’m not a big sports follower. I like the Red Sox, and if I have some free time, I love going to or watch the games on TV. I was never one of those kids in high school who went to the varsity sports games on a regular basis. Hell, before I met Lance, I barely even understood hockey.

I am an Emerson Hockey fan.

I have walked back from UMass Boston in the pouring rain at 12am, praying that I’d make the last T back to campus. I have trekked out to Canton from Boston to see this team play. I have recruited friends countless times in hopes that they too will see how wonderful these boys are. I have shot countless amounts of pictures—it must be somewhere close to 3000 by now—at the games, crossing my fingers that I’ll get at least a few that are absolutely astounding.

I am an Emerson Hockey fan.

I’d be lying if I said that I understood all the rules of this game. I’m not going to claim that in any such way. I go to these games to see people play their hearts out, leave it all out on the ice and give it their best one-two punch. I go to these games because these people have passion, and heart. And although they don’t win every single time, I keep coming back. The way I see it, there’s no reason they don’t deserve every ounce of support in the world. I go to these games sometimes—okay, a lot of the time—for the checking, and the intensity. The players are loyal, dedicated, and admirable.

I am an Emerson Hockey fan.