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Feature teaser

Posted: January 17th, 2006, 10:32 pm
by Chris Lang
Feature on the hockey program in the Wednesday fishwrap coming.

Posted: January 17th, 2006, 10:46 pm
by Sly Fox
That's impossible. I believe a poster on the old board said the fishwrap would NEVER do a story on LU hockey. You must be mistaken, Chris.

8)

Posted: January 18th, 2006, 7:41 am
by PAmedic
I berated CHRIS at the hockey game over lack of coverage and he didn't even draw back, let alone punch me. Good to see all my campaigning paid off! THANKS CHRIS!

Posted: January 18th, 2006, 4:28 pm
by bigsmooth
here is the article. great job chris!

LU hockey area puts Flames on ice
By Chris Lang
Lynchburg News & Advance
Wednesday, January 18, 2006


Kirk Handy was awestruck.
The coach of Liberty University's club hockey team, Handy hoped that maybe 500 fans would show up when the Flames opened the LaHaye Ice Center last Friday against George Mason.

Instead, the crowd was triple that. The mezzanine level of the building was packed. Fans, most of whom stood because of a lack of bleachers in the new building, lined the outside of the rink, hoping to catch a peek at a collegiate hockey game in Lynchburg.

"I couldn't get up to the glass or the rail to see the game," Liberty vice chancellor Jerry Falwell Jr. said.

And Liberty's students, who are a huge part of the hockey club's almost cult following, weren't even back on campus yet.

In the past, fans often made the hour-long trek to Roanoke to watch the Flames compete. Players often wondered, "if only we had a home rink."

That dream has become a reality, or so state the posters hanging at the LaHaye Center.

Playing home games in front of a packed arena filled with Liberty students and members of the community is just one small part of the ultimate dream: NCAA Division I hockey in Lynchburg. It seems like a stretch considering only one school south of the Mason-Dixon Line and east of the Mississippi River (Alabama-Huntsville) plays Division I hockey.

It's that vision that excites the players who come to Liberty, many of whom are from hockey's homeland Canada, even if there is no chance at a Division I scholarship right now.

"I was talking to NCAA Division I and Division III schools," said Dalton Stoltz, the Flames' sophomore captain who speaks in a comforting, small-town Canadian dialect. "Having hockey in the southeastern United States, and at a Christian school, is a complete oxymoron. Just for that unique opportunity, I didn't want it to go to waste."

Just how close is that vision to becoming reality? Mickey Guridy, the acting Liberty athletics director, said there has been little talk in the athletics department about adding hockey. (The team currently operates out of the office of student life.) The school's top brass will keep close tabs on how well the club team fares, though.

"No question, that's the goal," Falwell Jr. said of a move to Division I. "It won't be in the immediate future. I'm not sure how far down the road it will be. One thing that has to be considered is the potential revenue a hockey program can bring."

Handy is understandably coy about any potential move to Division I, though the Flames will likely move from the American Collegiate Hockey Association's Division 2 to ACHA Division 1 next year, he said. As for the sport attaining NCAA Division I status, Handy only says "I don't want to put a timeline on anything."

But, he adds: "We didn't just build a building to stay where we're at. If we wanted to stay at the same level, we might as well have stayed out in Roanoke and not spent all that money on the facility that we've got."

And anyone who has spent time with The Rev. Jerry Falwell knows that the LU chancellor rarely dreams small.

Obstacles

That doesn't mean a potential move will come easy - or cheap.

The most likely landing spot for the Flames would be College Hockey America, which currently has a hodgepodge of six teams scattered in the Midwest, Northeast, Colorado and Alabama.

Fifty-nine schools compete in NCAA Division I, with only Rochester Tech playing as an independent. Many of these schools still have club teams. Robert Morris, which used to compete in the University Hockey League Liberty currently plays in, is one such club. The Colonials have since started a Division I program that competes in CHA.

Travel costs and funding at least 25 scholarships are other considerations.

To add men's hockey, women's hockey would have to join Division I as well so the school could remain in compliance with Title IX. Handy said a women's club team is being formed and that the response from prospective players has been strong.

The women's team will play an exhibition schedule this semester and Handy hopes it can play a full schedule next year.

"We've already got girls who are e-mailing us about potentially playing on the team next year," Handy said. "The word's not only here on campus, but it's starting to spread out."

Already, Handy said, the Flames have enough talent to compete and be a "middle of the pack" Division III team.

Handy sells players on the potential for building a unique program. The only other Christian school that plays hockey is Division III Bethel College in Minnesota. As word continues to get out that Liberty is thinking about an eventual move, more players will become interested.

"I know a lot of our guys right now, given the right circumstances, could be playing Division I NCAA," said Liberty's Jordan Wilson. "It's just all about timing."

Finding a home

There was no bigger factor in advancing the program than opening a rink on campus. Before, players would shuttle to and from Roanoke for practices twice a week, eating up a six-hour chunk of the day. Now, players practice at 7 a.m. before buckling down for classwork.

"Having the opportunity to get up and start the day off on the right foot by playing hockey, it's great," Stoltz said. "I think it will help all of us academically as well. Now we have a little time between 7-10 p.m. to study or socialize. Before, our time, we didn't have a whole lot of it."

Games that used to start at 11 p.m. now begin at 8 p.m. Saturday's home game against UHL rival Indiana (Pa.) will be an exception. It will start at 9:30 so fans who want to attend Liberty's two basketball games at Vines Center earlier in the day can make it to the rink as well.

That may seem like a small detail, but Liberty's players have shown a genuine interest in gaining the support of the community.

Wilson raved about time spent skating with area children the night before the Flames' LaHaye opener. Handy wanted to hold morning practices so the prime-time hours at the LaHaye would be left free for community skate time.

Realizing hockey could gain a unique foothold in the community's sporting psyche, Handy is hoping to see youth and adult leagues form in Lynchburg. And he said he thinks Liberty can play a central role in that development. Fans who attended Friday night's game talked about the excitement of being able to skate regularly in town and get together for pick-up games.

There were a few glitches on opening night. A bank of lights went out at the end of the first period, forcing the teams into the first intermission with 2:16 left in the first period.

It didn't dampen the enthusiasam. Senior Scott LaPeer scored the first goal in the LaHaye Center in the first period (and he also picked up the first fighting penalty, eliciting a cheer from the crowd). The Flames won 9-0 Friday and 14-0 Saturday against an undermanned Patriots squad that had just seven skaters. Liberty dressed 27 players.

"This isn't just Liberty's hockey team, as far as the guys in the locker room are concerned," Stoltz said. "It's Lynchburg's hockey team as well. Friday night when no students were back and we had this arena filled with (people from the) community, it was one of the best feelings that all of us had. It was unbelievable."

Posted: January 18th, 2006, 4:31 pm
by PAmedic
love the green text SMOOTHIE- but I posted that article over on the LaHaye Center thread early this AM.

no big deal, a little extra publicity on here won't hurt!