I Love Hockey Research Paper

Words: 1175
Pages: 5

Hockey has been the single longest thing I have chosen to do in my lifetime. I would confidently say that I have spend nearly one thousand hours of my life in various hockey rinks, stretching from Maine to New York. I can barely remember a time when I didn’t play hockey, as I have spent more years playing it than I have not. Playing hockey has taught me more than how to power push or have a perfect butterfly, it has taught me a lot about people, and introduced me to a lot of great friends. So this is my story through the ups and downs of my hockey career, and more importantly, through one of the single biggest things in my life. Before one can play hockey they have to know how to skate. Since just after the time I learned to walk, to the …show more content…
The first game we played there was the first time that our team had ever played together, and our lost of four to nothing was fairly expected. That was the day that I met one of the closest friends I have ever made through hockey. Hannah was so similar to me, it’s a shame that she lives an hour away. If I really wanted to, I could probably go to school with her now, but the tuition for Philips Exeter is a tad too expensive. Those two years in Dover were probably the two in which I improved the most. U14, as mentioned earlier, means that anyone under the age of fourteen can play on that team. That means I, at the time a ten and eleven year old goalie, would be up against girls as old as freshmen in high school. One of the sayings I started hearing around this time is that the worst teams have the best goalies. I guess going up against people almost half again your age can do that to you. Eventually, our time in Dover was up, and the rink showed us that we were no longer welcome. So, we took the majority of our team and moved fifteen minutes closer to play as the Rochester Blackhawks. The first year at Rochester was pretty amazing. That year was the first in which we had a true U14 team, meaning the vast majority of our team was fourteen and thirteen. That year we won the state championship. Hannah and I sang “We Are the Champions” all the way to the locker room after we got our winning picture taken. At regionals a few months later, we lost pretty badly, which wasn’t an unexpected result, but I don’t think any of us will soon forget the