Hunter’s Green residents Sue Andreychuk, Dave Andreychuk, Dr. Tom Frankfurth, Doug Dunbar, John Loyless, Doug Dunbar, Joe Pequinot and Andy Ritter celebrate The Captain’s Hockey Hall of Fame induction at the Westin Harbour Castle in Toronto. (Photo courtesy of Andy Ritter)
Long-time Hunter’s Green resident and former Tampa Bay Lightning captain Dave Andreychuk is officially in the National Hockey League (NHL) Hall of Fame.
Andreychuk was formally inducted into the Hall on Nov. 13 at the Allen Lambert Galleria in Toronto, an hour from where he learned to play hockey in Hamilton, Ontario.
“Nobody thinks, ‘I want to be a Hall of Famer,’’’ Andreychuk said during his induction speech. “You think about just trying to play in the NHL, just trying to make your team better.”
Which is exactly what Andreychuk, who was drafted in 1982 by Buffalo, was able to do. While he played more than 1,600 games during his 23 seasons, and scored an NHL-record 273 career power play goals and 640 goals (14th all-time) overall, it was his experience and leadership that was credited with bringing the Lightning its only Stanley Cup in 2004.
A bronze statue of Andreychuk holding the Cup above his head stands outside Amalie Arena, where the Lightning still play.
TAMPA, FL – JUNE 7: Dave Andreychuk #25 of the Tampa Bay Lightning skates with the Stanley Cup after defeating the Calgary Flames in game seven of the NHL Stanley Cup Finals on June 7, 2004 at the St. Pete Times Forum in Tampa, Florida. The Lightning won the Stanley cup by defeating the Flames 2-1. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)
Hunter’s Green is holding a celebratory party for Andreychuk tonight.
During his Hall of Fame speech, “Andy” thanked his friends and family for years of support.
A handful of Hunter’s Green residents joined him in Toronto for the Hall of Fame weekend, while others cheered him on at Amalie Arena on Nov. 18, when the Lightning honored him.
Andreychuk gave special thanks to his three daughters — “You made my life a lot better” — and his parents Roz and Julian, whoattended the induction.
He also gave special thanks to his wife, Sue. “She always had a smile on her face,’’ he said. “When I would come home after a game, whether we won or lost, not much changed.”
David Tassinari (pictured) broke his foot during the fire that destroyed his K-Bar Ranch home, burning everything in the garage to a crisp. (Photos: John C. Cotey)
David Tassinari was in a panic as he looked up the stairwell to his mother-in-law Wendy’s room.
There were flames licking at the ceiling, and smoke pouring down the stairs like a black waterfall. He screamed for her – “Mom, wake up! Wake up!” – as he quickly climbed the stairs. In his haste, he broke his foot before reaching the top, but couldn’t go any further as the smoke filled his lungs. Feeling as if he was ready to pass out, he retreated.
His wife Kim screamed for him to get out, and together they ran outside, turned back towards the house, and watched it burn.
“It was sheer terror,’’ Kim says.
A minute passed, when both noticed a familiar figure walking out of the front door. It was Wendy.
“After that minute of horror, thinking we had lost her, when she did come out, nothing else mattered,’’ David said. “Everything burning was just stuff.”
A month after the fire destroyed their three-year-old, 3,727-sq.-ft. dream home in the Bassett Creek neighborhood in K-Bar Ranch, the Tassinaris are now renting a home right around the corner. They will rebuild on the same site as their burnt-out former residence, and hope to move into their new home in about 14 months.
Kim said the walls will be a different color, the tiles will be different, the layout will be new. It needs to be.
Moving on isn’t easy. Kim has already had multiple nightmares where she wakes up convinced she can smell smoke in the house. David can’t shake the feelings he had that night when he couldn’t reach his mother-in-law, convinced he had left her to die. It’s hard not to replay that night over and over in his head, searching for things he could have done differently.
Together, they have been to counseling, although both say things are getting better.
“The smell of smoke still bothers me,’’ says Kim, who is 47 and works as medical assistant in Wesley Chapel. “And, when I see a fire on TV, I turn away or change the channel.”
She said one day recently, in their new home, she swore she could still smell the bitterness of the smoke that still pervades their old house. It turned out to be David’s wallet.
“I had to buy him a new one,’’ she says.
David, 49, who works as an agent for USAA Insurance in Tampa Palms, is hopping around on crutches. He broke his right foot that night climbing the stairs to get to Wendy. He doesn’t remember how, he just knows that when he got outside he could see the bone pushing against his skin. He remembers laying on the ground outside, his foot propped up on a chair, as firefighters fought to put out the blaze.
“There was no stopping it,” David says.
Though the personal items lost in the fire don’t matter now, David says, the losses were quite significant. The house still has a pungent burnt odor that hits anyone walking in. The desks and computers in the office at the front of the home look as if they have been coated with a black matte finish. The garage looks like a scene out of Iraq or Afghanistan.
A 2020 Ford F-150, a 2015 Toyota Corolla, a 2005 Yamaha V Star Classic and a John Deere riding mower were all burned beyond recognition, the tires melted into oblivion. Almost all of David’s prized tool collection was destroyed. The wreckage is jolting, but Kim says, “The pictures don’t do it justice.”
Tampa Fire Rescue District Chief Mark Bogush says the Tassinaris were fortunate the garage was not embedded into the house. But, that’s also why the fire was able to build up and why the smoke didn’t get immediately into the home.
David wonders if he had had heat sensors installed, maybe the alarms would have gone off sooner. But, Bogush says smoke detectors are more accurate, though heat sensors can be useful over things like a gas oven and dryers, where there is typically high heat and no smoke.
The Tassinaris’ ordeal started with an alarm going off around 2 a.m. on Nov. 1, as David and Kim slept in their bottom-floor bedroom, and Wendy was sleeping upstairs, almost directly over the garage.
David and Kim thought maybe their son, Ethan, had come in late and forgot the alarm system was set, accidentally tripping it. “I didn’t think anything of it,” Kim says.
David got out of bed and went to check. The front door was closed, so he walked towards the laundry room, and noticed bright orange flickers under the door leading out to the garage. When he opened it, the raging fire charged through and nearly knocked him over.
Kim could hear noise and thought maybe someone had broken into the home, and that David was fighting them. She reached for her glasses and started calling 9-1-1. David then dashed back into the room, and to the bathroom, where he was trying to open windows. He screamed at Kim to call 9-1-1. She still had no idea what was happening.
David had already checked to make sure Ethan wasn’t in his room, and then ran to the stairs. He yelled for Wendy, and tried to fight the fire on his way to her room.
“When I got to the top, I couldn’t breathe,’’ he says. “I was seeing stars. My foot was broken. I couldn’t go any further, I was afraid I would pass out. At that point, I didn’t know what to do.”
David came back down the stairs, where Kim, now fully aware of what was happening, screamed at him to get out. She asked about her mom; David said “I couldn’t get to her.”
They stood in shock near their front lawn.
“I’m standing in the yard thinking my mom is inside burning,’’ Kim says. “I was hysterical.”
It was the longest minute of their lives, before Wendy emerged “without even a single hair singed,” says David, who can now smile about it.
“She walked out like, ‘I’m here, am I late for tea?,’” he says, laughing.
Kim says her mother only remembers bits and pieces of that night. Wendy says she smelled smoke, but thought someone was making something in the kitchen and had burned it. She recalls hearing David yelling.
Then it dawned on her: “I gotta get out of here.”
Wendy remembers briefly being on the stairs, and then walking outside.
David jokes that they call Wendy the “Mother of Dragons,” a reference to the Daenerys Targaryen character from HBO’s “Games of Thrones.”
David thinks maybe a roof or wall collapse diverted some of the smoke and flames, clearing the way for Kim to get out of the house.
A friend suggested that perhaps Kim’s sister, who passed away last year, may have assisted with a bit of divine intervention.
“It’s like she floated out,’’ Kim says. “How she came down those stairs and made it through that….we don’t know. We’re just glad she did.”
The Wiregrass Ranch High boys soccer team, a state semifinalist in 2015, is poised to have its best season yet. (Photo: Andy Warrener)
Below are five teams we’re watching closely this winter high school sports season:
1:Wiregrass Ranch High (WRH) Boys Soccer — Head coach David Wilson says that the 2017-18 team could potentially be the best he’s ever had. That’s saying a lot from a coach who brought his team to the state semifinals in 2015 and hasn’t lost a game against a Pasco County team in four years.
“When you have a strong and talented group of seniors that have played together for three years on varsity, there’s potential for great things,” Wilson said.
A trio of senior veterans coming off All-State seasons form the down-the-middle strength for the Bulls. Center back Jackson Trudel controls the game from the back line. Center-mid Royce Luedde is 6-foot-4 and controls the air, the middle of the field and is great on set pieces. Midfielder Ian Flores is one of the most highly-recruited players Wilson’s ever had, with 60 colleges having contacted him, including Rutgers Univ. in New Brunswick, NJ, which has offered him a scholarship.
The youngsters aren’t bad either – freshman Justin Amis and junior Rafael Silva scored three goals apiece in a 13-0 preseason win over Hernando, with sophomores Noah Leonard and Jake Bierhorst pitching in two goals each.
2:WRH Boys Basketball — The Bulls have had the unenviable situation to be mired in Class 8A, District 8, which is brutally tough, with the likes of perennial New Tampa powerhouses Freedom and Wharton, as well as defending state champion Sickles. If the Bulls continue to build on their 2016-17 arc, they might be ready to pull even with that triumvirate of top-tier teams.
“Eight seniors return for this year’s team,” says Bulls head coach Jeremy Calzone. “So, if there’s a year to do it, it’s this one. It’s the most experience we’ve ever had to start a season.”
Senior forwards Jayden Wilson (6’-9”) and Justin Rush (6’-6”) give the Bulls great size. Junior guard Elijah Howell is the team’s best shooter and leader on the floor. Senior guards Val Garcia and Jordan Miner also are veterans who have been on varsity since their freshman years.
3:Cypress Creek Middle High (CCH) Girls Weightlifting — New program starts from scratch, right? Not so much. Four-year Wesley Chapel High (WCH) girls weightlifting coach Tico Hernandez has 24 girls on the team to start the season.
Like their coach, sophomores Addison Metcalf and Megan Faysash, who is already emerging as the team leader, come over from WCH. Junior Neely Peterson didn’t lift in 2016-17, but is a fierce competitor, according to Hernandez. Freshman Emily Speck is the team’s spark plug and is working to perfect her skills and technique.
4:Wesley Chapel High (WCH) Girls Basketball — The team’s toughest opponent this year likely will be adversity.
Coming off their best record (15-9) since the 2009-10 season with everyone poised to return, the Wildcats lost their top returner to an ACL injury, and CCH’s opening just four miles away took some of WCH’s other key players.
“We lost 80 percent of our scoring from last year,” Livingston said. “We only return three kids total from last year’s varsity team.”
But the toughest adversity will come in the form of getting over the death of a family member. The Monday prior to tryouts, assistant coach Marcellus “Coach Shack” Shackelford was killed in a car accident.
Shackelford was the only assistant four-year head coach Peter Livingston ever had.
“There’s a lot of adversity we’re trying to overcome this year,” Livingston said. “We also want to celebrate him (Coach Shackelford) and try to get ready for the season.”
5:WCH Boys Basketball — Last season was a down year for the typically steady Wildcats boys basketball team. After a 21-8 season two years ago, WCH managed just a 9-17 record in 2016-17.
They should bounce back this season, as they get a shot in the arm from the school’s football team. Division I-A senior football recruits Chaz Neal (who is 6’-9”) and Isaiah Bolden will take to the hardwood for the ‘Cats in 2017-18.
Neal played in seven games for Armwood a year ago, averaging three rebounds.
Dr. Greg and his friendly professional staff will make sure your children smile every time they visit the dentist.
With a visit to Children’s Dentistry in the Cory Lake Professional Center on Cross Creek Blvd., kids get to see Greg Stepanski, D.D.S. — a pediatric dentist with more than 25 years of experience in the New Tampa/Wesley Chapel area — and a demeanor and office that kids and parents alike seem to recommend without reservation.
“I recommend Children’s Dentistry to all my friends,” says Carla Schoolfield. “They’re great. From the minute you walk in, everyone is so nice and greets you by your name. “They are definitely an A-plus in customer service.”
Carla’s not the only one who thinks so. With 142 Google reviews, Children’s Dentistry’s overall rating is 4.9 out of 5 stars.
“I have other friends who went there when they were kids,” she adds. “Now, they’re taking their kids there. I think that’s a testament to Dr. Greg and his staff.”
Carla’s son is five and has been seeing Dr. Greg — as his patients and their parents call him — since he was just one. Her daughter is only nine months old and will be ready for her first visit soon.
Carla is glad she took her son to Dr. Greg early in his childhood.
“I think it’s great because it gets your child used to going,” she says. “It’s not anything invasive. Dr. Greg is so gentle and such a good doctor, and now my son loves going to the dentist.”
Dr. Greg, who earned his Doctor of Dental Surgery (DDS) degree from the Ohio State University College of Dentistry in Columbus, says, “We are encouraging children to have a dental home by the age of one.” He also earned a B.S. degree in Biology from the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, IN.
Dr. Greg explains that age one is now recommended by both the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry and the American Academy of Pediatrics for a child’s first dental appointment.
“It’s preventive,” he says. “Now we’re seeing more and more patients at age one and seeing less problems. We’re also seeing a little bit less tooth decay.”
Dr. Greg says he has a good relationship with many of his peers in the area, and even runs a study club where quite a few pediatric dentists get together for discussion, speakers and continuing education.
“The club has been going on forever,” he says. “I inherited it in 1991.”
That’s when he purchased an existing pediatric dentist office on E. Fowler Ave. in Temple Terrace. He moved that practice to its current Cross Creek Blvd. location 14 years ago.
His many years in practice don’t mean any outdated equipment or procedures, though. Dr. Greg says this year, he added a new, digital panoramic X-ray machine.
“We’ve been using digital X-rays for many years because there’s lower radiation and better clarity,” Dr. Greg says. “The new panoramic machine takes amazing pictures and has the added benefit of allowing us to do bitewing X-rays externally for those kids who may have a gagging response to having the bitewings in their mouth.”
Dr. Greg says the new equipment is so good, some orthodontists send their patients to him to get X-rays taken.
Community Outreach
Dr. Greg’s office is more than just a place to get your children’s teeth checked. He and his staff say it’s like a family, and they host events to build that community feeling, as well.
“They do a lot of things outside of being a dentist,” says Carla. “They do holiday parties and events every year. I think that says a lot. It’s not just them taking my money, but they say, ‘I want to appreciate you for giving me your business.’”
Every year, Carla’s kids and Dr. Greg’s other existing patients are invited to visit Santa at the practice’s annual Christmas party.
“Our families bring their kids all dressed up and take their family Santa photos with our professional photographer,” says Dr. Greg, who adds that there also are fun activities for the kids, such as face painting, a balloon artist and crafts. “It’s become quite an event.”
This year, Dr. Greg says, “We have to expand the venue because so many of our patients have said they’re coming.” He says there will be tents in the parking lot, but it’s important that he holds the party inside the office, too.
“We have it here so the kids can see that it’s a fun destination,” he says. “They can interact with me and the staff while we’re having fun, not trying to do a filling or fix a tooth that was knocked out.”
In addition to the Christmas patient appreciation party, Dr. Greg and his staff typically also host a spring bowling party, which is open to the community, too.
“It’s an opportunity for our patients to bring their friends and introduce us,” he explains. “They get to see me not with a mask and a mirror in my hand, but like a normal person.”
Besides his office’s events, Dr. Greg reaches out to the community in many other ways. He brings “Tommy the Toothbrush” — a character who stresses good dental hygiene — to visit local schools during February, which is Dental Health Month.
“We give toothbrushes to all the kids,” he explains, “Some of them might not have one.”
He also has provided dental care for migrant children and does a program each fall where he donates a Thanksgiving turkey to Metropolitan Ministries in the name of any pediatrician or dentist who refers a new patient to him.
“We like to give to Metropolitan Ministries,” he says.
Dr. Greg also is a charter member and past president of the New Tampa Noon Rotary Club, an active church member at St. Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church and a fundraiser for Corpus Christi Catholic School in Temple Terrace, where his wife Sue has taught kindergarten for 15 years.
For appointments and more information about Children’s Dentistry (10317-B Cross Creek Blvd.), call 973-3100, visit DrGreg-ChildrensDentistry.com, or see the ad on page 28. Most major dental insurance plans are accepted.
The first of two Crystal Lagoons in the “Connected City” is getting closer to completion in Metro Development’s Epperson community off Curley Rd. (Photos courtesy of Metro Development Group)
If the Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce (WCCC) was looking for someone to end its 2017 series of Economic Development Briefings with a bright, energetic look to the future, the Chamber found the right man.
Kartik Goyani, the vice president of Metro Development Group, painted a picture filled with Crystal Lagoons, autonomous cars, hyper-fast internet speeds and even better education, health care and solar-, wind-powered and WiFi-enabled street lights.
While it isn’t exactly the flying cars many of us thought we’d be driving by now, Goyani’s presentation to local business leaders created a buzz that has many looking forward to the new year…and beyond.
By then, Goyani hinted, the first Crystal Lagoon in North America — at Metro’s new Epperson development off Curley Rd. — will be filled with water and frolickers.
He showed some drone video of the current state of the lagoon, but it was a picture of someone with a large hose standing in the lagoon, with its inner lining in place, filling it with water, that drew a few audible gasps.
“We are hoping to stay ahead of schedule so the lagoon opens up early next year,’’ Goyani said.
The new year also will see the hi-tech community project, billed as the first smart giga-bit development in the country — with lightning-fast internet speeds 200 times faster than most homeowners receive now — finally get an actual name. Goyani said the project was dubbed “Connected City” by the Florida Legislature after approving it as part of a 10-year pilot program, but that name was always just what Goyani called a “placeholder.” In January, it will be branded with a different name.
While the Crystal Lagoon is driving sales of homes “through the roof” in Epperson, it is just one of many amenities that Goyani says will make the Wesley Chapel community one the rest of the country will try to mimic.
The “Connected City” is a 7,800-acre area running north from Overpass Rd. in Wesley Chapel to S.R. 52 in San Antonio, and east from I-75 to Curley Rd., that will one day feature thousands of new homes and much more.
While Epperson will have as many as 3,000 homes upon completion, the “Connected City” project, which is expected to take 7-10 years to complete, will have as many as 37,000 new homes, up to 12-million-sq.-ft. of office space, a second lagoon in Metro’s Mirada development, and hundreds of dedicated miles for autonomous vehicles.
“I don’t think I’ve seen a project anywhere else in the U.S. that has that,’’ Goyani said. “We are creating something really really exciting in Pasco County that will draw people from everywhere.”
But, the Crystal Lagoons are the crown jewels of the “Connected City” project.
“We didn’t want to build a larger clubhouse, or a bigger golf course, we wanted to totally reimagine it,” Goyani said. “That’s what we did with Crystal Lagoons.”
As for the most commonly asked question about lagoon access — “Can we go, too?” —Goyani says that Epperson homeowners take precedence. Over the next 7-10 years those 2,000 homeowners in Epperson will pay for the maintenance of the lagoon.
While there are currently only 30 homes or so in the community, Metro Development will be picking up some of the tab to keep the homeowners’ maintenance bills low.
That may create some opportunities for controlled access to the lagoon, as members of parties or events held there.