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AbNormal27
10-15-2004, 07:01 AM
Mexican hockey team plays U.S. pro teams for first time

By LYNN BREZOSKY, Associated Press Writer
October 14, 2004

HIDALGO, Texas (AP) -- The unlikely hockey hotbed of South Texas will be the site of some historic games this weekend when the Mexican national team plays U.S. professional teams for the first time.

The Mexicans will take on minor league teams in Hidalgo on Friday, Corpus Christi on Saturday, and Laredo on Sunday. The games are the latest sign of the hockey craze along the border, where the ongoing NHL lockout is a world away.

``I've been around in the world of minor league hockey, and this is the best minor league town I've ever been in,'' said Laredo Bucks spokesman Joe Dominey, whose team employs bilingual announcers and draws fans from Mexico.

Hockey is also booming south of the border, where soccer and baseball have long been the favored sports.

Mexico coach Joaquin De La Garma, who helped launch the national team in 1992, said nine new hockey rinks have since opened and there are now about 1,000 players in Mexico.

``We are growing quickly,'' he said.

De La Garma, a former Olympic rower and longtime hockey aficionado, said the team has come a long way since losing every game in its first international tournament in 1997. Last year the team took the bronze in Iceland in Division 3 of the International Ice Hockey Federation, the lowest level of international play.

De La Garma said the Mexicans expect quite a challenge from the South Texas teams, which play in the Central Hockey League and are made up mostly of Canadian, Midwestern and European players.

``It will be a great experience to play here,'' he said. ``It's preparation for the world championship.'' Mexico City is hosting the 2005 Division 3 championship.

The South Texas arenas should be full of Mexican fans this weekend, as they typically are.

New teams in Laredo and Hidalgo have been big draws since starting up in the past three years and giving Texas 12 minor league franchises -- the most of any state.

In addition to sellout crowds, teenagers in the region are rushing to join junior teams, some from across the border in Reynosa or Nuevo Laredo.

In Laredo, the Bucks open their third season Oct. 22 at San Angelo buoyed by last year's Southeast Division championship. The last game was a sellout, with a spillover crowd of 2,000 watching on big-screen televisions in the parking lot.

In Hidalgo, which like Laredo has a young, fast-growing population and a sizable Mexican city just across the border, the Rio Grande Valley Killer Bees began play last year and came in second to Laredo in the division.

The Killer Bees sold out 12 games, including their final six.

``It was unbelievable,'' team spokesman Chris Due said. ``We were named the CHL franchise of the year.''

He said season ticket sales are near the goal of 3,500 for an arena that holds 5,500. The Killer Bees open the season Oct. 23 at Austin.

Promoters say the games against Mexico are a milestone as hockey continues to spread to warmer climes, and especially Latin America.

``A Mexican national team playing hockey here? People would have thought that would have been years off,'' NHL spokesman Ken Martin said. ``In terms of the NHL, I think it's something we want to embrace and be able to do more of.''

But then, Martin said, who would have thought the Lone Star state would support so many minor league teams, including nine of the 17 CHL teams.

Martin said the Mexican team's growing popularity is good news for a sport that's trying to diversify.

``The face of the game is changing,'' he said.

Aaryn

AbNormal27
10-15-2004, 07:01 AM
Mexican hockey team plays U.S. pro teams for first time

By LYNN BREZOSKY, Associated Press Writer
October 14, 2004

HIDALGO, Texas (AP) -- The unlikely hockey hotbed of South Texas will be the site of some historic games this weekend when the Mexican national team plays U.S. professional teams for the first time.

The Mexicans will take on minor league teams in Hidalgo on Friday, Corpus Christi on Saturday, and Laredo on Sunday. The games are the latest sign of the hockey craze along the border, where the ongoing NHL lockout is a world away.

``I've been around in the world of minor league hockey, and this is the best minor league town I've ever been in,'' said Laredo Bucks spokesman Joe Dominey, whose team employs bilingual announcers and draws fans from Mexico.

Hockey is also booming south of the border, where soccer and baseball have long been the favored sports.

Mexico coach Joaquin De La Garma, who helped launch the national team in 1992, said nine new hockey rinks have since opened and there are now about 1,000 players in Mexico.

``We are growing quickly,'' he said.

De La Garma, a former Olympic rower and longtime hockey aficionado, said the team has come a long way since losing every game in its first international tournament in 1997. Last year the team took the bronze in Iceland in Division 3 of the International Ice Hockey Federation, the lowest level of international play.

De La Garma said the Mexicans expect quite a challenge from the South Texas teams, which play in the Central Hockey League and are made up mostly of Canadian, Midwestern and European players.

``It will be a great experience to play here,'' he said. ``It's preparation for the world championship.'' Mexico City is hosting the 2005 Division 3 championship.

The South Texas arenas should be full of Mexican fans this weekend, as they typically are.

New teams in Laredo and Hidalgo have been big draws since starting up in the past three years and giving Texas 12 minor league franchises -- the most of any state.

In addition to sellout crowds, teenagers in the region are rushing to join junior teams, some from across the border in Reynosa or Nuevo Laredo.

In Laredo, the Bucks open their third season Oct. 22 at San Angelo buoyed by last year's Southeast Division championship. The last game was a sellout, with a spillover crowd of 2,000 watching on big-screen televisions in the parking lot.

In Hidalgo, which like Laredo has a young, fast-growing population and a sizable Mexican city just across the border, the Rio Grande Valley Killer Bees began play last year and came in second to Laredo in the division.

The Killer Bees sold out 12 games, including their final six.

``It was unbelievable,'' team spokesman Chris Due said. ``We were named the CHL franchise of the year.''

He said season ticket sales are near the goal of 3,500 for an arena that holds 5,500. The Killer Bees open the season Oct. 23 at Austin.

Promoters say the games against Mexico are a milestone as hockey continues to spread to warmer climes, and especially Latin America.

``A Mexican national team playing hockey here? People would have thought that would have been years off,'' NHL spokesman Ken Martin said. ``In terms of the NHL, I think it's something we want to embrace and be able to do more of.''

But then, Martin said, who would have thought the Lone Star state would support so many minor league teams, including nine of the 17 CHL teams.

Martin said the Mexican team's growing popularity is good news for a sport that's trying to diversify.

``The face of the game is changing,'' he said.

Aaryn

Turbulence
10-15-2004, 07:49 AM
All of these countries have fielded teams in Division III tourneys in the past:
Mexico
Luxembourg
New Zealand
Ireland
Turkey
Armenia
Iceland
North Korea
Israel
South Africa
Spain
Australia
Hong Kong

Who woulda thunk it?

Turbulence
10-15-2004, 07:49 AM
All of these countries have fielded teams in Division III tourneys in the past:
Mexico
Luxembourg
New Zealand
Ireland
Turkey
Armenia
Iceland
North Korea
Israel
South Africa
Spain
Australia
Hong Kong

Who woulda thunk it?

puck_it
10-15-2004, 10:57 AM
Iceland


idunno they were pretty good in the mighty ducks 2 ;)

puck_it
10-15-2004, 10:57 AM
Iceland


idunno they were pretty good in the mighty ducks 2 ;)

SoCalcaniac
10-15-2004, 11:33 AM
That story is stunning to me-I had only a small clue- In my native SoCal, there was a drive years back to 'diversify' the Kings were the ones to spearhead the effort (Gretzky did several clinics and camps in several communities like South Central L.A., Little Tokyo, and several in East L.A.- large hispanic community) and it kinda snowballed- the Ducks came into the league and Paul Kariya did alot in the huge Orange County Asian communities with his own clinics so when we say it's a global game- or the world is getting smaller- sheesh- this article sure does show it. I do remember a practice I attended last season at the RBC Center- there were several workers in the RBC of mexican descent- they were installing cup holders- I remember it clearly. I distinctly remember them being mesmerized by the players as they were doing drills. They'd install a cup holder, stop and watch- and two of them started mimicing moves they saw the players make in the aisles- I was amused, and obviously didn't have a clue- I thought they hadn't seen hockey before and were getting into it LOL....

SoCalcaniac
10-15-2004, 11:33 AM
That story is stunning to me-I had only a small clue- In my native SoCal, there was a drive years back to 'diversify' the Kings were the ones to spearhead the effort (Gretzky did several clinics and camps in several communities like South Central L.A., Little Tokyo, and several in East L.A.- large hispanic community) and it kinda snowballed- the Ducks came into the league and Paul Kariya did alot in the huge Orange County Asian communities with his own clinics so when we say it's a global game- or the world is getting smaller- sheesh- this article sure does show it. I do remember a practice I attended last season at the RBC Center- there were several workers in the RBC of mexican descent- they were installing cup holders- I remember it clearly. I distinctly remember them being mesmerized by the players as they were doing drills. They'd install a cup holder, stop and watch- and two of them started mimicing moves they saw the players make in the aisles- I was amused, and obviously didn't have a clue- I thought they hadn't seen hockey before and were getting into it LOL....

StormShaman
10-15-2004, 02:52 PM
I'm holding out for a team from Mongolia. :D

StormShaman
10-15-2004, 02:52 PM
I'm holding out for a team from Mongolia. :D

tommy
10-15-2004, 03:57 PM
That's awesome to hear!!!

LOL @ the Iceland comment -- they WERE good in D2.

tommy
10-15-2004, 03:57 PM
That's awesome to hear!!!

LOL @ the Iceland comment -- they WERE good in D2.

Fernando da Silva
01-20-2005, 12:18 AM
And, another wasted year for Brazil...

Fernando da Silva
01-20-2005, 12:18 AM
And, another wasted year for Brazil...

Turbulence
01-20-2005, 08:25 AM
You should join their team, Fernando. :D

Turbulence
01-20-2005, 08:25 AM
You should join their team, Fernando. :D

Fernando da Silva
06-05-2005, 03:40 PM
You should join their team, Fernando.

Thanks!!! The problem is that my salary isn't enough to pay a decent life in Mexico!!!

Turbulence
06-05-2005, 04:31 PM
Not to mention that you don't speak Spanish. Or do you? Or are Portugese and Spanish similar enough so that you can understand some Spanish? (Like Norwegian and Swedish and Danish...)

That, and you aren't Mexican. That kind of hurts when you're trying to play for the Mexican National Team.

Okay then, you should start a team from Brazil! :D

tommy
06-05-2005, 06:46 PM
That, and you aren't Mexican. That kind of hurts when you're trying to play for the Mexican National Team.

Yes this perhaps could be a setback.

puck_it
06-05-2005, 06:56 PM
a small setback

apolinar
06-05-2005, 11:55 PM
Okay then, you should start a team from Brazil! :D

I can see it now... a samba after every goal. Carnivale on Ice. The "Cheerleaders" all Brazilian women. Fernando. You have your mission. BRAZILIAN HOCKEY TEAM!!!! Official colors: Green and Yellow.

puck_it
06-06-2005, 12:07 AM
can somebody say old school kings jerseys replacing the purple with green?

tommy
06-06-2005, 12:55 AM
can somebody say old school kings jerseys replacing the purple with green?

umm...


"old school kings jerseys replacing the purple with green"... there, i said it. now what?

:beatup: :p

puck_it
06-06-2005, 01:08 AM
now that i think about it, didnt the northstars have one like that?

mmm maybe not

e2ipiand1
06-08-2005, 12:40 PM
Here's the info for Brazilian hockey from the IIHF's website:

Brazil (BRA)
President: Arialdo Boscolo
General Secretary: Antonio Lopes Siqueira

Confederação Brasileira de Hóquei no Gelo
Rua Padre Domingos Giovanini
596 Campinas/SP
CEP 13087310
Brasil
Phone: +55 - 19 - 324 22 063
Fax: +55 -19 - 324 289 28
e-mail: reginaboscolo@terra.com.br
Internet: www.esporte.gov.br