Posts Tagged ‘united-states’

09
Dec

Amanda Kessel starts strong at Minnesota

In the fall of 2005, Phil Kessel arrived at the University of Minnesota for a career that lasted just 39 games before being halted by Holy Cross and the lure of the NHL. Now, five years later, a second progeny of Phil Sr. and Kathy Kessel of Madison, Wis., is poised to make an even greater impact on Gophers athletics.

In street clothes, 5-foot-6-inch Amanda Kessel’s appearance doesn’t suggest a phenom on the ice.

Whenever I meet friends’ parents, they’re always like, ‘You’re a hockey player?,’ kind of in disbelief,” she said.

Amanda Kessel of Minnesota (Tim Brule)

Amanda Kessel of Minnesota. Photo by Jim Rosvold.

Kessel resembles countless other blonde-haired, blue-eyed teens one sees at a Midwest mall or cinema on a weekend. Not that her schedule leaves much time for shopping or movies.

You don’t really get any breaks; especially during the season, you may have one off weekend or so,” Kessel said. “Sometimes you wonder what it would be like to be a normal college student, but then all of the perks that come with it, I wouldn’t trade it.”

Upon seeing Kessel take the ice, any doubts about her playing hockey vanish.

Teammate Jen Schoullis, who first got to know her at Shattuck-St. Mary’s prep in Faribault, Minn., when Kessel was a 15-year-old freshman, marvels at her skating.

I always tell her, ‘What is in your legs; how do some people get to skate that fast?’ She just smiles.”

Hockey coaches like to encourage their pupils to pass the puck, because the puck can travel faster than the skater; if true in Kessel’s case, it would be a close race. In a recent game versus Harvard, she swung back into her own zone to collect the puck near the goal line, accelerated as she turned, and beat the entire Crimson team down the ice. The last defenseman committed a penalty trying to stop her, and Minnesota scored the game-winning goal on the resulting power play. Gophers fans had seen a rush like that before, but only because they had the luxury of watching current assistant coach Natalie Darwitz in maroon and gold for three seasons.

Her speed just sets her apart and is what makes her dynamic,” Darwitz said of Kessel. “I think people in the stands have gotten a glimpse of that.”

Kessel guesses that her velocity on the ice results from a couple of factors.

Amanda Kessel (Tim Brule)

Amanda Kessel. Photo by Jim Rosvold.

I think genetics, and hard work mixed in there,” she said. “Both my parents are good athletes.”

While Kessel may be working hard as she skates, she makes it look effortless.

She just floats,” said Minnesota head coach Brad Frost. “She’s so smooth and so deceptive.”

Schoullis, who started the season playing on a line centered by Kessel, says that her wings have to always be ready for a pass.

She’s definitely extremely creative, and sees the ice probably better than anybody I’ve ever played with. Every time she’s out there, she’s making plays and creating chances from opportunities that not many players can create chances from.”

Darwitz, recognized as one of the best at reading the action as it unfolds on the ice, sees similar abilities in No. 8 for Minnesota.

Amanda has great vision,” she said. “You can’t teach that stuff. You can teach raw speed, and skill, and shooting, but to teach a vision and to see a play create is a gift of Amanda’s.”

Kessel believes that in her case, at least, that talent was taught.

I think some of it is natural, but also growing up I had great coaches,” she said. “Since I was young, I’ve been taught the game, the right systems. I think that definitely helps; coaching has a big part to do with it.”

Following older brothers Phil and Blake, now a junior defenseman at New Hampshire, Kessel began skating when she was three, and joined her first team when she was five or six. She starred on boys’ teams through bantams, winning state and regional championships with the Madison Capitols. In 2006, she enrolled at Shattuck and made the switch to the girls’ game.

I loved playing with guys, because it pushed you, like the pace,” Kessel said. “I think that’s helped me in girls’ hockey. There’s an extra level of pace with boys. They’re obviously just stronger. When they started to get bigger, I couldn’t really handle it anymore.”

At Shattuck, opponents couldn’t really handle Kessel. She tallied 102 points her first year, progressing to a senior season where she accounted for 122 points in 46 games. Her Sabres won national U-19 titles in 2007 and 2009.

Kessel said it takes a lot of mental toughness to emerge on top.

That’s always so tough in tournaments, because it’s like who can last that long, who can win that many games in a row. Not always the best teams win in those tournaments, but I think we always had good teams and people just stuck with it in those.”

Events didn’t always unfold perfectly for Shattuck, as their favored team was knocked out in a national quarterfinal in 2008.

We had some really good players, a lot of top-notch players, and it was just like a heartbreaker, but we learned not to take anything for granted,” Kessel said. “We kind of came on slowly in that game and learned, I guess.”

Kessel also got a taste of international competition during her prep days, helping the United States to U-18 gold medals in 2008 and 2009. She’s now advanced to more senior national teams, competing with the U-22 team in a series versus Canada over the summer, and being named to the roster for Four Nations Cup before having to withdraw due to a shoulder injury.

That level, it keeps getting better and better,” Kessel said. “U-18, that was a good experience, but then to get to play with the top girls in the nation, it helps me. Every camp, I think I get better after going to it.”

She’s very college ready,” Frost said. “I thought she had a great chance to make that Olympic team last year.”

Darwitz, who captained the 2010 US Olympic team, thinks Kessel is on the right path to an Olympic dream.

I just think getting her feet wet in the U.S. program, and getting experience against Canada and the top teams and the top players, and knowing what it’s like to go against them,” Darwitz said. “I think that’s going to help her out.

With Amanda, you can pull her aside and work on a little more advanced things than you would with some average players. That I find a lot of joy in, because as you say, we kind of have the same vision, so it’s kind of like teaching myself. What did I want to do better, what can I do better, and translating that to Amanda.”

Kessel can identify a couple of areas where she’d like to see improvement.

I think my shot could get a little bit better,” she said. “And then, I guess I just need to stay healthy. It’s kind of been impairing my play a bit.”

Despite missing three games and most of a fourth due to injury, Kessel is tied for second in points for Minnesota and leads in points per game, but her play thus far only hints at what she can do.

She’s been banged up since before she even got here; most of the stuff, people don’t even know,” Frost said. “The shoulder is more public knowledge, but she’s been dealing with other things all year. Hopefully, by the time she comes back in January, she’s healthy enough to really play 100 percent for her.”

Her physical ailments led to some changes when she returned to face Harvard.

Partially because of her injuries and partially because of trying to find some units that gel together, we’ve changed our lines up quite a bit, but Amanda is someone that can play with anybody,” Frost said. “As you saw last weekend, we had her on the wing for the first time, and it’s not because she can’t play center; she’s done a really good job there, just to kind of keep her out of the corners with her shoulder injury. We saw some really great things about playing her on wing, and that’s just her speed and the ability to attack off the rush. She’s a really flexible kid and will play anywhere that we need her to. I appreciate her attitude that way.”

That’s refreshing, given the word “attitude” often comes up in a negative context in sports.

She’s definitely shy at first, but once you get to know her, she’s kind of like the new prankster on the team,” Schoullis said. “She has a good sense of humor, and she’s just an all-around good kid.”

And when it comes to hockey, more than just “good”.

More than anybody, she wants to be the best player on the ice every night, and you want that from your top players,” Darwitz said.

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21
Oct

Mullin taps myriad skills

Rookie, leading scorer and fledgling superhero are just a few of the things that could be used to describe Jimmy Mullin.

Rookie, leading scorer and fledgling superhero are just a few of the things that could be used to describe Jimmy Mullin.

The 18-year-old is in his first season with the Fargo Force and leads the team with 6 points (4 goals, 2 assists) through six games.

“He enjoys being at the rink every day,” Force head coach Jason Herter said. “He has a smile on his face whether it’s a work day or a fun day. He’s a highly skilled player, but has a lot to learn about how to play the game.”

Learning and the need to get better is why Mullin is playing with the Force this season. Mullin admits his game needed work even though he is a Miami (Ohio) University commit and Tampa Bay Lightning draft pick.

One of his goals is to develop mentally.

“It’s a faster game compared to high school and you have to think faster,” Mullin said. “You have to be used to getting in and out of the corners against guys that are bigger and stronger than you.”

Being 5-foot-10 and a 160 pounds, one of his goals is to develop physically by getting stronger.

When it comes to his skills, some of his teammates believe Mullin is in a good spot.

Defenseman Dan Weissenhofer said he walked away impressed after going against Mullin in training camp.

But give Weissenhofer credit. He impressed Mullin enough to tell Miami recruiters about him.

“I was like ‘Who was that guy?’ ” Weissenhofer recalled. “Then I looked him up and found out that he’s the kid from Shattuck who’s been drafted that committed to Miami.”

Mullin played high school hockey at powerhouse Shattuck-St. Mary’s in Faribault, Minn. – a program that has produced countless NHL players including current stars Sidney Crosby and former University of North Dakota standout Zach Parise.

“Crosby, by far, is one of my favorite players,” Mullin said. “Every time I watch hockey with my friends and there’s a Shattuck guy, I remind people and I get a bunch of crap for it.”

Loving his alma mater isn’t the only thing Mullin gets a hard time for.

He also takes heat for wearing a Superman shirt underneath his gear.

Third-year forward Nick Oliver said Mullin’s had one of the best starts he’s seen in the United States Hockey League.

But he’s a long, long way from being the “Man of Steel.”

“I think he has the illusion that he is Superman,” Oliver said with a grin. “He thinks he has those same qualities as him and I strongly disagree with that. I don’t understand it.”

Mullin said he started wearing a Superman shirt last season.

It started out being a joke but turned into something more.

He said the shirt gives him a mental edge.

“I think everyone should get a superhero shirt,” Mullin said. “That way we can all play like our favorite superheroes.”

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05
Oct

Four SSM Alums named to the 4 Nation’s Roster- M. Lamoureux, J. Lamoureux, Kessel, and Decker

September 17, 2010

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – USA Hockey today announced the 22-player U.S. Women’s Select Team, which will compete in the 2010 Women’s Four Nations Cup from Nov. 9-13 in St. John’s, N.L. Four-time Olympian Jenny Potter (Edina, Minn.) will serve as captain of the team.

Potter, who was selected as USA Hockey’s Bob Allen Women’s Player of the Year for the 2009-10 season after leading Team USA to the Olympic silver medal with a team-best 11 points (6-5), will be competing in her ninth Four Nations Cup. The forward is one of 12 Olympians on the U.S. roster.

Forward and three-time Olympian Julie Chu (Fairfield, Conn.) and two-time Olympic defensemen Caitlin Cahow (Branford, Conn.) and Molly Engstrom (Siren, Wis.) join Potter as the most veteran members of the team.

Team USA returns eight additional players from the 2010 Olympics, including defenseman Kacey Bellamy (Westfield, Mass.); forwards Meghan Duggan (Danvers, Mass.), Hilary Knight (Sun Valley, Idaho), Jocelyne Lamoureux (Grand Forks, N.D.), Monique Lamoureux-Kolls (Grand Forks, N.D.) and Erika Lawler (Fitchburg, Mass.); and goaltenders Molly Schaus (Natick, Mass.) and Jessie Vetter (Cottage Grove, Wis.).

Defenseman Anne Schleper (St. Cloud, Minn.) and forward Brianna Decker (Dousman, Wis.) return to the Four Nations Cup after having played at the event in 2008. The pair most recently competed in the 2010 Under-22 Series along with seven other members of the U.S. Women’s Select Team. Among those seven are four newcomers to the senior-level team – defenseman Josephine Pucci (Pearl River, N.Y.) and forwards Kendall Coyne (Palos Heights, Ill.), Sarah Erickson (LaPorte, Minn.) and Amanda Kessel (Madison, Wis.).

In addition, defenseman Michelle Picard (Taunton, Mass.) and forward Haley Skarupa (Rockville, Md.), both of whom recently played for the U.S. Women’s Under-18 Select Team, will play in the Four Nations Cup as the youngest members of Team USA.

Rounding out the U.S. roster for the tournament are defenseman Meagan Mangene (Manorville, N.Y.), a three-time member of the U.S. Women’s National Under-18 Team, and forward Allie Thunstrom (Maplewood, Minn.), who previously competed at the 2007 Under-22 Series.

Prior to the start of the Four Nations Cup, 22 players will participate in a training camp at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, from Oct. 31-Nov. 6.

The camp will include 11 Olympians, 10 members of the 2010 U.S. Women’s Under-18 Select Team and two additional skaters. The camp squad will play Sweden on Nov. 5, before 11 of the camp participants continue on to St. John’s on Nov. 7, where they will meet the 11 NCAA players who complete the U.S. roster for the Four Nations Cup.

Team USA opens play at the Four Nations Cup with an Olympic gold-medal rematch against Canada on Nov. 9 at Mile One Centre in St. John’s.

NOTES: Members of the U.S. Women’s Select Team hail from nine states, with five players coming from Massachusetts; four each from Minnesota and Wisconsin; two each from Connecticut, New York and North Dakota; and one each from Idaho, Illinois and Maryland … The Four Nations Cup is an annual tournament featuring the top four women’s hockey teams in the world – the United States, Canada, Finland and Sweden.

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