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Hockey's Daddy?

Aniyah Sanford
Aniyah Sanford
2025-04-03 05:02:34
Count answers: 3
His mother was a North of England player, and his father was an international hockey umpire, who’d officiated at the 2002 World Cup in Malaysia. Weekends were spent playing hockey, it was the done thing. I got to see high-level players all the time as Saturdays were spent with Mum and Sundays were with Dad.
Karina Volkman
Karina Volkman
2025-04-03 03:37:40
Count answers: 4
Defenceman Sonny Rost, who became a member in 1955, was one of the first Canadians to come to this country to play in the 1930s. The family’s tradition in the sport continued into a third generation with John’s son Warren.
Francisco Little
Francisco Little
2025-04-03 01:56:13
Count answers: 6
My father had a big hockey stick. My father cut that big stick and gave it to me when I was about four or five years old. My father would come home from work and take me to the ground to teach me hockey. So my father has played the most important role in my hockey career. My hard work and my father have played the most important roles in this. My father used to give me massages to help me recover. He was my rock during those uncertain times, and he prepared me to play again.
Glenda Lehner
Glenda Lehner
2025-04-02 23:47:23
Count answers: 2
He is widely acknowledged as an authority on the history of British ice hockey. Martin Harris was born in Southampton in 1937. He fell in love with ice hockey as a boy when his father took him to watch the Southampton Vikings play, and spent the next sixty years researching the sport, recording its origins and development in the UK.