A Season at the Rink
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| Sega segue:
club hockey coach Selman
and team's favorite videogame |
| Photo:Les
Todd |
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NHL
All-Star Hockey '97 on Sega Genesis is the favorite hockey
videogame of Duke's club hockey team. Before Duke vs. Georgetown
at 8:00 p.m., it was Sega Hockey (Penalties--Off, Fighting--On):
Dave Bradley, a six-foot-two senior, the team vice president,
business manager, webmaster, and starting center, vs. Brent
Selman, a thirty-two-year-old Canadian and head coach.
They faced off on the TV at the front of the bus, a 2003
MCI Renaissance 4500 C executive sleeper conversion coach
that the team had chartered for the trip to Maryland.
"I'm the Leafs," said Selman, a lifelong Toronto
Maple Leafs fan. Selman rarely plays Sega and looked every
bit the novice, tensely hunched over his controller, thumbs
poised above the buttons. Bradley, an expert, reclined
in his seat. Minutes into the first period, Selman turned
to his opponent, "Wait! You can speed blast the puck?"
"Yeah," said Bradley. Selman was incredulous. "Were
you gonna tell me about that, Davey? How do you shoot a
wrist shot? Come on, tell me! A or B, Davey? A or B?"
Even if you don't know how to shoot a wrist shot, one of
the charms of club hockey is that you are welcome to come
out and learn. Like most club sports, hockey's open to
players at any level of skill or experience. Only recently,
though, could you learn from Brent Selman, who, in his
third season at Duke, is unlike all of his predecessors
and the majority of club sport coaches in one important
respect: He is not a student. By day, Selman is a physical
therapist and runs coaching clinics around the country.
A former minor-league player, first as a Bracknell Bee
in England's British Hockey League, then as a Lakeland
Ice Warrior in Florida, he is the real thing on a team
that for most of the Duke community is, like Sega Hockey,
not so real.
That nowhere on campus can one actually see ice hockey
played raises the obvious question, "Does it truly
exist?" The explanation for this is that Duke's home
rink is located twelve miles west of campus in the Triangle
Sportsplex in Hillsborough--"nice ice," according
to Selman. Further proof of existence can be found on the
team's website, although the record of success that it
boasts--four third-place finishes in the ACCHL (Atlantic
Coast Collegiate Hockey League, a group of seven area club
teams) Tournament over the last eight years; one tournament
championship in 1997; a league-leading nine wins and one
loss on the current season--is so good as to be unbelievable
anyway.
But if hockey at a Southern school such as Duke is uniquely
challenged--by lack of interest, by temperate climate--it
is uniquely supported, too. A donor, who wishes to remain
anonymous, has made substantial contributions to club hockey
over the past three years. When Selman says, "Get
your buckets and twigs and hit the ice!" the players
put on brand-new helmets and pick up nice new sticks. En
route to the rink, they can simultaneously sleep, study,
play Sega Hockey, and watch "Fantastic Hockey Fights
Volume IV" on a chartered bus with four TVs, two card
tables, sixteen cots, and a refrigerator. And with jerseys
of the same make and quality as those of the basketball
team, they look as good as they play. "I'm a big fan
of the sport. My mission is simply to expand it," says
the donor. "A club team is a great place to do that.
Anybody can play."
Fans of Duke club hockey are few, but they are fervent.
They tend to fall in one of two groups: family member or
Canadian. Generally speaking, the family members love the
players, and the Canadians love hockey. John Thompson,
chair of the history department, is one of the Canadians
and the team's academic adviser. "I grew up on the
frozen plains of Manitoba, but I always rooted for Montreal," he
says. "I suppose I was a bad Manitoban."
Thompson, though, is a very good Duke fan. The Duke Hockey
website is his homepage. "Have you met Jesse Swanko?" he
asks. Swanko is the team president, scheduler, website-content
editor, a biology major, and a heavy-metal guitarist. "What
a guy, huh? They're some sharp kids. You couldn't say for
sure, but I'd bet if you took their combined GPA, it's
the highest of any team."
Later that night, Duke beat Georgetown 9-3. It was snowing. "Hockey
weather," said Selman. After the game, the goalie,
a second-year law student named Clayton Jernigan, shed
his pads and hurried back to the bus to resume his reading. "I've
got an exam next week, constitutional law." Suddenly,
parents materialized outside the locker room, cameras in
hand, congratulating with hugs. "With all you have
to write about, why a story on the hockey team?" one
father asked. He thought about it for a moment and then
said, "Well, we are pretty good, aren't we?"
--Patrick Adams
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