Fri 18 Jul, 2008
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The effect of field hockey: a youth's awakening x21
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| Planet Field Hockey |
April 13, 2001 
Rebecca Kanter
> Page Views 6723
At the beginning of my senior season, the last season of playing for my high school team, I was told that I did not have the ability to play at the varsity level.
I was devastated. I had been improving from, as my coach said, "tripping over lines, to starting in every game."
When my coach told me that I might be cut, I asked myself if I was responsible, since I spent time and effort introducing field hockey to the younger players in my community.
Coaching elementary and middle school field hockey has been the most rewarding experience. I gave kids something I wish I had been given at their age: the game of field hockey.
When I started, no one played field hockey in my town before ninth grade. My freshman year, we learned how to play field hockey through observation, not being taught by anyone -- not even the coaches. By sophomore year, I was given the Most Improved Player award -- though, it probably could have been the "I-Found-My-Passion" award.
Later that year, my neighborhood recreational department started a kid's field hockey program; I was elated! I lived in a neighborhood that had very little in terms of youth sports -- not even pee-wee football. I decided to volunteer.
Since my varsity coach was directing the program, I thought that volunteering would be another chance for me to play. Little did I know what I was getting into; these kids have touched me forever.
A handful of kids that showed up at the gym the first day, and the reactions were predictable: "Oh, manyou can only use one side of the stick," "What, you play this on graaaass?" "This looks weally weally dangerous because the stick and ball are very hard."
The kids were an assortment of stories. Gillian wore two mouthguards -- both designed to fit the top row of teeth, but she put one upside down on her bottom teeth. During the whole hour and a half she would wear these mouthguards religiously. "Gillian, we're sitting down and talking about hockey; you can take your mouthguards out," "Noh" she replied, "bethause younevwernohwhatpillhapppen."
And then there was Claire, who knew what to do, where to stand, even in the scrimmages which sounded like two humongous slabs of wood being turned into hamster shavings. While the rest of the players were crowding around the ball, she stood away from the mosh pit of people, ready to receive the ball when it crowd-surfed out.
Claire had a natural talent, something I wish I had when I was her age.
It was amazing to watch these kids develop skills at such a young age, the kinds of skills that I have to spend so much time practicing. But what was even more incredible to see was the improvements in every other kid that wasn't a Claire. In six weeks, because of what you have taught them, they have the incentive to go home and practice field hockey during every TV commercial.
Unfortunately, this recreational program ended after my varsity coach decided to leave my team for another school. I didn't want to see it end; had I been 18, I would have run it myself.
Another organizational decided to start developmental programs in field hockey. Here, skill level varied; there were many Claires but also just as many Gillians, those who were just eager to try their very hardest to be just as good as their peers.
Teaching these kids how to hit the ball hard with a hockey stick on grass was the most gratifying to me. I was never taught this skill at school, and it took me a year to learn how to hit the ball more than a foot. But I was able to show these kids, in a few weeks, that they can drive the ball farther than the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
But there were also pre-teens, a situation which was the biggest challenge I faced in coaching. Some of the kids took Sunday field hockey to be their social event, rather than their place to discover sweat, hard work, and strength for the first time.
These girls seem to take field hockey for granted; it was given to them because their sister played it, because their parents had money to buy a stick and not wait for a school-issued one, because "Well, MandyandSarahandAmandandJenny are doing it too, so pleeeeease?"
Every time I saw them I told them how lucky they were, how I wish I could have been in their shoes, how if they even try, put their butt down, bend their knees, and shift their weight, they will be so good by the time they get to high school. To this day, they don't appear to understand field hockey; I wish they did.
Coaching has become much less an opportunity to improve my skills, but a place to spread my enthisuasm for field hockey. To help others learn, improve, love, challenge, (and sometimes even hate) field hockey. To give them what I was never given by anyone, but had to discover--a passion.
But how could I love field hockey so much when during my junior year my skillls were nonexistent and I was almost cut my senior year? Maybe field hockey means so much to me because I love the game; because I try to so hard to improve. Sometimes, I am driven by my frustration at the players that have natural athletic talent, yet they do not have the love of the game.
The fact that there were more players trying out who had previous field hockey experience -- some because of my efforts in increasing hockey awareness -- had made the team more competitive. How could I still love field hockey when, in a way, my passion had backfired on me?
My love for hockey and my motivation to improve proved to be enough for me to remain on varsity, and I played more than half of the games we played senior year.
I want to play field hockey, and spread this love, this passion, more than anything else in the world. Coaching field hockey is not about the money, but about one's love for the game and wanting to spread this love.
Rebecca Kanter is a senior at Silver Spring Montgomery Blair (Md.)

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Comments on this article
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Peter Munsing
04-15-2001 12:35 pm
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Rebecca--with your courage, your maturity, and your clarity of vision and expression you will go far. Stay with it--play club level, it it be so. Not every one can be on a Division 1 school--but given the winning is the only thing philosophy that can govern, that may not be the worst thing.
I hope that you will continue to teach development programs--and strive to include boys in these programs--in every gym class where boys are exposed there are usually a few who think "this is a neat game--I wish I could play it."
Good luck and courage!
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Cindy Christian
04-19-2001 8:58 am
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Rebecca, Hi, I was hit by your story. I coach field hockey, and, you would be a wonderful coach yourself. Why don't you do something like that, because you have a love for the game, just like I do, (i am 25 yrs old and been coaching since 18)I love coaching that I don't even care about the money. As long as you know the skills, and the new techniques, your all set. I also run with my girls, and they love that. They have so much respect for me for doing that. It is like I am playing again, but only I am playing 11 minds at a time. If you need some encouragement, email me at mcc@gis.net, I would love to hear your stories about field hockey!
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Keely Dunn
04-19-2001 10:00 am
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Hi Rebecca:
Your story is well-written and echoes my own experiences in the game. I got cut from the senior high school team in grade 11 and played juniors a second year (despite playing for the U16 provincial team); I got cut from the university team the first time I tried out; I was only added as a "red shirt" (non-roster, practice only) player the following year; I was cut from the U21 Alberta team in my final year of eligibility for that team after playing the 2 years previous, which also happened to be the same year as the Canada Summer Games.
Those were my setbacks. At 29, I now also have the following accomplishments on my resume: I've played in 13 national championships, including seven years on the senior team (and finally scored a goal in the 2000 tournament!); I played my five years of eligibility on my university team and went from left bench to 70 min./game at right D; I've become a respected coach, a regionally-rated (and hopefully soon Canadian-rated and more) umpire, and a leader for my club team (www.phoenixfieldhockey.org).
My setbacks were just as important as my accomplishments in my field hockey career, because I never would have become the player I am if it weren't for those setbacks. What I'm trying to tell you is that not only should you never give up on your passion, which is just as valuable in a player as athletic gifts, but that when you go on to make it after your own setbacks, it will be all the sweeter.
I wish you the best in all your endeavours, and I know that in ten years you'll be able to look back with pride on your career as I do now and be looking forward to even more. Please keep in touch! kdunn@keelydunn.net
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Liz age 33
04-19-2001 5:08 pm
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Rebecca,
I admire your love of this passionate game. When I was high school I wound up being player/coach and it was very difficult spread the enthusium and passion we share for this game. What also made more difficlut I had my NCCP level 1 and 2 coaching. After having incredible passion it fizzled as I attended university, I was benched in spite of making varsity squad I was benched, and I too played provincial hockey. I didn't have an attitude, and to this day I have no comprehension of why but, I am so beyond it. Nevertheless, may your passion hockey continue to burn inside of you for now and forever.
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Liz
04-21-2001 6:08 am
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I connect with your story a lot - here in England I was dropped two weeks into my last season as a 'senior' at 1st team level. I didn't have the natural ability or skill of most of the rest of the team and I know how you feel about loving the game with such a passion you want to spend your entire time practising and improving yourself. Thankfully continued hard work got me back into the team like yourself, and I think it's great there are people such as yourself spreading this encouragement on to others who will have the opportunity to practise as hard as those that just love the game but with the natural talent too.
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Ashley Reaburn
04-21-2001 9:04 pm
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Wow! what a great story. It is so nice to hear that you have such a love for the game and a passion to share that with others. It is so important for people to have coaches who are just like you. It sounds like the kids you coach are not only getting a neat opportunity but they are getting to meet one of those people who will change their lives. Maybe one of the kids that you have coached will one day be one of the best field hockey players in the country or maybe you will coach someone who will look back in 20 years and remember what a great time they had playing a sport when maybe they weren't that athletic. I just want to encourage you to keep up the great work and continue to share that love and passion for the game with others because it will rub off on them.
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Susan
04-22-2001 6:25 am
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Dear Rebecca:
I am playing right now, and true, like you, my skills are nonexistent and at every training, i will try to put everything i've learn to use. But sometimes, it just doesn't work. I didn't get selected from my batch of girls to play with the seniors as part of gaining experience on the pitch. And i'm really disappointed. But regardless of anything, i'm still training hard to catch up with the rest of my peers. I envy my teammates for being able to pick up every skill so easily.
I admire your courage to go on playing hockey. And most of all, i love your passion for hockey. Hockey rules, totally!
*smiles* So take care, and all the best. Patience is what you need now, someday, you'll make it.
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girlygirl
04-22-2001 9:02 pm
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hey rebecca, i truly believe that if you want to continue playing hockey especially at the varsity level, it all begins with you...if you want to play bad enough, you will find a way...and it's true that not everybody gets the chance to play D-1 hockey but hockey is hockey what ever level you want to play at. stick with it and just remember, that when life closes a door, look for the open window...or make one! good luck!
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Rebecca (AKA Fdhkydemon)
04-23-2001 1:06 am
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I have been loving the comments; so sorry it has taken me so long to respond (I have been very busy with school work, ugg). This article is a compilation of two essays I wrote for college admission. While I wrote them for admissions, I really wrote them for myself. Most of this article comes from a large essay on what has been my most rewarding experience; it has a much better flow, and does not have changes made by other people in it. The larger essay was emotionaly draining for me to write and by the middle of it I was near tears. A lot of the essay is feelings and emotions that I had kept inside of me for a LONG time. But now that I have written the essay, I am much more open to talking about my experience (although it's still hard to talk about); and I realize the importance in sharing my experience/thoughts with others. If any of you are really captivated by my story, I strongly recommend you read the original(s). If you post your email, I can email it to you. But enough about me talking like I'm trying to boast about myself.
My passion for hockey is still within me and it is my dream to play at the D3 level when I get to college in the fall (University of Rochester). Hopefully, my skills will live up to my aspirations. My fitness level I know will be up to par by then, but I have always felt that my skills have been at least a year behind everybody else. My sophmore year I improved dramatically, and for once, I felt that my skill were up to par-I had become one of the top players on jv and really felt I could have a lot of playing time on varsity they next season. So that summer, all I did was go to hockey camp and run; I get to preseason and where are my skills. NOWHERE! It suxed, it's so so so hard to work day after day (mentally and physically) only to feel like you have acheived nothing. I felt like what I had put in, I was not getting out; and, to me, this is not the way it should be. So in my mind I was not alive during my junior hockey season. I guess it was a rebuilding season for me, I dunno. It's so frustrating to look back on, to see where I was sophmore year, and then to almost realize that I got "worse" my junior year; yet, I had done sooo much to improve, way more than everyone else. And then to see the people who have natural athletic talent, who do not care, who play field hockey not for the passion, but for the social life. Just don't even get me started on that. To top it off, at the sports awards ceremony right after my junior yr season, what do we find out? That the coach is leaving, to coach at the school she works at. I cried for nights after this (and so did all the other soon to be seniors) and felt like a part of me left, when she left (I still feel this way). This coach is THE BEST coach--there is no question in my mind. She has an incredible knowledge for hockey, that is accompanied my an ethusiasm for hockey that is unseen in the majority of coaches today. I could go on all day about her--every time, I talk about how she left it makes me teary-eyed; however, we stil keep in touch and have a great relationship. So it became my duty is it to make sure that we got a hockey-smart coach, not the jv coach who knows nothing (because i knew the athletic director wouldn't do a thing, because the jv coach is his daughter). It was sooo painful to spend the summer talking to people who were seriously and geniunely enthusiastic about coaching our team, hearing them say they would contact the necessary people, etc. And then never hear back from them again, until you call them back, and they act like they have no idea who you are (after you talked them for like an hr the last time) or what you are talking abou:(! Senior year:
new-varsity coach(my old jv coach) decides third day into preason!!! that I will most likely be cut:( She does not see that I have completely changed my drive, so that it's correct (hitting off left foot), that my fitness is 200% better, that my dribiling (which will ALWAYS be my weakness, because I was never submerssed into performing basic hockey skills for a long time; like the kiddies i coach:)<sadness>) was a lot better, etc. So the compromise was, was that I should write down my goals, etc. on a sheet of paper. But I can't just scribble my "goals" on a piece of paper. I went home and wrote a three page paper (i have that if you wanna read it) on why I think I should not get cut, my strengths (my passion-which this coach does NOT see AT ALL)/weaknesses(ball control), and my goals (#1 goal I believe was Time-time to improve, and eventually, time to play). She reads it, is totally in awe, says okay I probably(99%) wont cut you. Then she takes the paper home...says she reads it 10x, writes on it, etc. On cut day, says she wants to "talk to me" I was like what the f---! You said you weren't cutting me. She's like, well, I don't like that you said this and this and this and I don't believe this and this about the paper (the same paper she seriously LOVED a couple days before). This is the "teary eyed talk" I mention in the essay (whooops in the original essay...). So she says that I should manage, as they need managers. I said nope I will not manage!!! I could not emotionally manage (didn't tell her this, but she wouldn't get it anyway); how could one manage a sport they LOVE soo much will all of their heart. Beats me. After more tears, and luckily the young-new-jv-coach was there (who "saw" my emotion) to kinda convince the coach to keep me--the coach goes, well I'll give you a uniform, you will only play if we are winning 200-0 and the rest of the time you'll have to manage. I sat there holding back tears, again this wasn't good enough [for me]. So I was like can I at least practice with the team so I can improve. She did not at all understand why I would want to do this. After awhile, she says you can practice for 2weeks, I will see where you are, and then I will make a decision. I said something like "you say yourself that I am not capable of improving dramitically anymore, so what do you expect of my in two weeks, really, you know you will just cut me then". My tears and my anger created a stalement between me and the coach, and the jv coach miraculously convinced her to let me be a part of the team. However, it was still expected that I would NEVER play unless we were winning 200-0 (but I didn't have to manage, thakt god). What's even more shocking, is that i got to play like at least a quater of the first game; AND the coach actually said she liked my playing!!! So I got to play over half the games my senior season:) and ironically, my name was mentioned in the Washington Post on a huge story about our team (the only story that has been written in the Post about our team in my 4yrs and it's extremely rare that high school hockey gets any articles in the high school sports section); but I was responsible for the only goal scored in that game. My senior season was great because I was able to remain apart of the team and play hockey, but truthfully, the rest of it suxed. I improved a little, but I was not coached--my old "real" coach knew what to tell everyone to make them play better, etc. and this coach knows nothing!! The team was full of natural talent and was able to somewhat trust each other, so we were able to have the best varsity record since my freshman year. My other years, the varsity team did not lack the talent, but had a HUGE attitude problem--which prevented them from "gel-ing" in games--hence, poor records. But come the senior year playoff game, we were playing our biggest rival (because it's the same team we've randomly playing the past 2yrs in playoffs and lost), this year we finally have a better record then them and it's at our house. But we lose, why do we lose? Because we were not coached! I strongly believe we needed to be coached (not just in this game, but the whole season) and we weren't. It was very sad. But what was even sadder, is that one is supposed to be sad that the playoff game is their last game of high school hockey. But while I was a little sad, I was almost happy that the season was over. The season was too emotionally draining. Now, I play hockey once a week (which is not enough) with freshman and sophmores who go the school my "real" coach coaches at; it's very hard to play with people who are a lot younger than you and don't have as good a skill level as you do. (but this is a story for another time). I cannot even express to you how much I cannot wait to be coached again come the fall--to me, I have not been coached since my "real" coach left. This is very hard to live with. It is said that what you put into something you will get out of it. [like I said before] I have always felt that this statement does not work for me in hockey, that what I put in, I have not gotten out. But through writting these essays and talking to my friend (Al Matei) who originally published the compilation on his website and reading these comments, I realized I have gotten out of hockey what I put in. Well...maybe not in terms of my skills, but in terms of life. I was able to develop a passion and "rub it off" onto others. Again, to give others what I was never given by anyone, but had to discover--a passion. The question that I'm so horribly faced with now, is what will I think of hockey if I get cut from the college team? While, I think I will feel like hockey has backfired on me; I realize (through talking to my "real" coach about this) that I can never stop playing hockey--hopefully, I won't (even if I get cut). But I don't want to "go there" now. I must enjoy my last summer of playing "youth" hockey:)
Peace and let it be known that I was crying in the middle of this too...
(I should just make this into another essay:) )
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Rebecca
04-23-2001 1:10 am
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Please excuse the multiple typos I just realized, as I just wrote that long thing at 12-1am at night:)
Again, Thanks for your best wishes.
Talk ta ya laterz
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Rebecca
04-23-2001 1:19 am
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Sorry, one last thing...
girlygirl-"if i want to contiune at the varisty level..." it doesn't all begin with me....as you'll see in the huge post...what I put into hockey, I obviously, did not get out--in terms of, almost getting cut my senior year. I did the absolute best I could (and still do), given that I have no natural athletic talent and was not introduced to hockey at a young age, yet it did not get me the amount of playing time I would have liked; but i also didn't deserve the playing time--as my skills felt like they were a year behind everybody else (well, 9th,11th,12th grades). So varsity hockey does not "all begin with me"; sorry that really bothers me. But what really bothers me, is that you say "hockey is hokcey what ever level you want to play at". This is somewhat true, but I would love to play D1 hockey if I could, but I can't. We don't always get what we want. But I also realize, that I had I been offered more playing opportunites, I would never have coached. And well, we all know the powerful effect that coaching had on me:)
Thanks for your support, I really really appreciate it:)
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Kiran - kds15@usa.net
04-27-2001 3:02 pm
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I just discovered this website and I am pleased and surprised to discover that such passion for "field hockey" (called hockey in all other continents on the globe, so I'll call it hockey from now on), exists in North America. I think most of you writing are from Canada or the US, right? When I started playing hockey in grade 9, there were no tryouts, we were just glad we had enough players to make a team. It was the first time our school had a hockey team in a long time, and it would also be the last, since our coach left the following year. I am so lucky that I was in the school that year and I decided to give it a try. Being Indian, I knew about the sport from my parents, and I thought "why not give it a try?" since I didn't make the soccer (ok, I'll call it football, why do things always have to be different in North America?) football team or the basketball team, I loved sport and I was trying to find a sport I was really good at. So when I started playing I was surprised to find dribbling was easier for me than most of the other beginners. So I was asked to train with the provincial team. Just like that, I was playing for my province and travelling to play in tournaments, I had found my sport, my passion. Well my point is, it came so easily for me, I had no idea that some struggle so much yet still have the passion to play on, keep trying. I tend to give up on things if I practice and I'm still not good at it, so thanks for being my inspiration.
Now that I'm in India (just for a year) I can truly appreciate the opportunities we have in Canada, you have coaches, artificial turf, abundant hockey balls, proper equipment, a chance to play. In India, all of those things are in short supply, yet the truly dedicated players out here are determined, they coach themselves, spend hours dribbling, whatever it takes to make it. There's no youth program,only the best students can go to university and sometimes not even a team to try out for. So as sad as it may be appreciate what you have, an opportunity to play, a chance to try out, and facilities to improve your game. Being cut has opened doors for you (coaching), and I wouldn't have discovered this sport if I hadn't been cut from the basketball team....Hockey is a competitive sport and the coach has to select the best team for the job, its heart breaking I know, but that's just the way life goes...
[B]Editor:[/B]
Kiran - Thank you for your honest and positive comments.
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Alyson
05-22-2001 5:24 am
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You can say a great story but it is really a terrific story.
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cheers rebecca
08-11-2001 1:38 pm
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this story has help me
i am 15 years old i coach the youth of my club and have seen many of them reach county and national standard, but with all the help i was giving them i wasn't concentrating on my own hockey i got scrapped from my national team and didn't even make regional team but now i've read your story i have realsied it doesn't matter all i wanted to do was coach others who could afford to play international and i have been doing that but i did have to stop because of exams but hopefully next season i will be able to start coaching again and maybe with the love i have for hockey like yours, i will make it to international standard and get to go the the olympics but if not as long as i carry on enjoying it and bring the passion to others thats as good as being in the olympics
cheers for posting your story its good to know others out there love it as much as i do
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Rebecca
09-01-2001 8:30 pm
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The unimaginable has happened! Today, I standed on my Univeristy's turf in a uniform. I didn't play, but that didn't matter to me. I was in awe just standing there in a kilt. I was never expected to play in college hockey; hence, I never really expected myself to be able to play college hockey [either]. It's truely amazing; such a learning experience.
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debbie
01-30-2002 6:41 am
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hockey
imdoing a talk at school on english and iwas wondering if you could send me information on hockey and the details comtaining:the 1st ever hockey stick made and the 1st hockeystick ever made!could you please send this information to the follwing address:sausage_egg90@hotmail.com!thank you for your time yours sincererly debbie
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Marge Redmond
07-25-2002 2:53 pm
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Division I hockey is not for everyone
Division III could be an option
Check out the philosophies of the coaches at some of these institutions
Team members contribute no matter what role they play on the field or the bench
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Keely
02-05-2003 6:09 pm
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I have been playing filed hockey since i was in sixth grade. But at the time when i began i was alot liek the girls in your story and was there for social reasons. I am now a Freshman and our feild hockey team is a division one team. It wasnt until this season that my love for the game grew. This year 21 players were picked for each team, jv, and varstiy. THe head of sprts has already told our coach that next year they have to cut it down to 16 players per team. My coach is one to cut anyone but she loves a young team (meaning a lot of freshman make jv.) I love my coach so much because of her love for the game. I can't imagine not making the team next year and it means everything to me. I also play basketball and lacrosse but they after my feild hockey season they dotn even compare. Im willing to work beyond normal standard to make this team next year and im hoping for 3 more years of great seasons. OUr team is so close . . .closer than any other sports team in the school. Any girl would kill to be on our field hockey team which makes it such an honor to be on it. The fact that their only takign 16 players next year frightens me. My friends keep tellig me that becasue i was pulled up to varsity for distrcits that i shouldnt be worried . .. but you couldnt imagine how worried i am. Your story touched me and thank you for spreadign field hockey around and giving younger kids the oppertunity to play the game of a lifetime.
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Masood
05-10-2004 6:53 pm
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looking for job
DEAR SIR,
HI,
I AM PLAYING HOCKEY SINCE 1990 IN SIALKOT (CITY OF PAKISTAN).
I HAD ATTENDED MANY CAMPS AND REPRESENTED MANY DEPARTMENTS, DIVISION
AND
NATIONAL TEAM AT NATIONAL LEVEL OF PAKISTAN. NOW I AM PLAYING FOR MY
PROVINCE LAST 3 YEARS. I HAVE PLAYED A LAT OF HOCKEY YET WANT TO PLAY
MODERN HOCKEY IN ANY MODERN COUNTRY. WILL YOU PLEASE TELL ME HOW CAN I JOIN YOUR TEAM.
THANKING YOU FOR SUCH RESPONCE.
WITH BEST REGARDS,
SYED MASOOD MOHSIN
smasood514@hotmail.com
smasood24@yahoo.com
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maryanne
09-21-2004 6:09 pm
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omg
feild hockey is everything to me i have been playin for more than 2 years and i play at home and at school soooo ya it is my whole life. my sister and brother play too they got me into it. thank you this has helped me and enspired me too. so if any1 wants to instant messeage me or email me they are
lilgrlmare@aim.com
mryswtbrt@aol.com
thank you for that
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Thyna
05-03-2005 2:31 am
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Hi...I'm proud of you.I think your story is good.But mybe you must try to be a good one.I hope you get it...
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