(L.-r.) Gordie Zimmermann of AdventHealth Center Ice, AHCIâs Global Prospects Academy Director of Hockey Glenn Metropolit & Stephen Herr of North Tampa Christian Academy.
If both of your kids played high school ice hockey, as mine did, more than a decade ago, there was no way (or place) locally for kids who were good enough to play travel hockey to play youth or high school hockey at the highest level while also receiving a great education.
My kids both decided to play hockey, instead of the competitive sports they grew up with, after the Tampa Bay Lightning won their first Stanley Cup championship back in 2004. They werenât alone, as many outstanding young athletes at that time also either first took up or decided to focus on hockey because of being bananas for the Bolts.
Thirteen years later, the same developers who built the Brandon Ice Sports Forum â where kids from high schools in and near Tampa had been practicing and playing â finally opened Florida Hospital (now AdventHealth) Center Ice (aka AHCI), right here in Wesley Chapel.
The new place was (and still is) a palace for both hockey players and figure skaters, especially when compared with any other ice skating facility in the entire Tampa Bay area â with three NHL-sized rinks, one (larger) international-sized rink and a mini-rink, plus a great pro shop and an actual restaurant. AHCI, the largest skating facility south of New York, even offers curling, a cult favorite Winter Olympics sport.
In 2019, the Lightning were again favored to win the teamâs second Stanley Cup at the start of the 2019-20 season, despite a disappointing first-round sweep at the sticks of the Columbus Blue Jackets to close out their 2018-19 campaign, which saw them win the Presidentâs Cup for having the NHLâs best regular-season record.
Of course, the Covid-19 pandemic shortened that 2019-20 season and caused the entire Cup playoffs to be played in two âbubblesâ in Canada, but somehow, the Bolts did prevail and brought Lord Stanleyâs chalice home to Tampa. And of course, the Lightning then repeated as Cup champs to end of the 2020-21 season.
It just so happens that 2020-21 also was the first year that AHCI offered its Global Prospects Academy (GPA), combining top-notch hockey training and lots of ice time for 15 young players, as well as a full-fledged private school experience affiliated with North Tampa Christian Academy (NTCA), which is located just three miles from AHCI on County Line Rd. in New Tampa.
AHCI co-owner Gordie Zimmermann hosted a press conference on August 12 to announce the intended expansion of the rinkâs GPA program and the hiring of new Academy Director of Hockey, former NHL player Glen Metropolit, whose career included 400 games with six NHL teams (including two games with the Lightning), followed by six years of international experience with top-level European clubs.
âOur goal is to establish an elite hockey program,â Zimmermann said at the media event, âin order to keep them here in Florida before they turn 16 and move up north to Boston or Michigan to play. There havenât been any programs here with academics and hockey training.â
Zimmermann also introduced former Lightning star Brian Bradley (who still works for the team) at the event, and admitted that AHCIâs success, âalso has to do with the Lightningâs success.â He also said that he expects the rinkâs GPA program to double in size this school year (to 30 or more students) and ultimately, to 300 or more â and promised to expand the GPA to include figure skating in the future.
Stephen Herr, the Head of School at NTCA, also spoke at the press conference and said that the school will offer GPA students in-person classes at both NTCA and at the rink (with on-site teaching staff), plus Zoom classes.
âOur primary goal is the same as Advent Health Center Iceâs goal,â Herr said, âhelping students to become people of character and leaders.â For additional information, visit AHCenterIce.com/global-prospects-academy. Â
The latest addition to the Wesley Chapel District Park on Boyette Rd. in Wesley Chapel is a street hockey rink, which New Tampa resident Joe Rao drove up to try out one day recently. The rink, part of a partnership between the Tampa Bay Lighting and Pasco County, will host leagues this spring, whenever Covid-19 allows. (Photos: Charmaine George)
The Wesley Chapel District Park (WCDP) on Boyette Rd. may not be as large as the Wiregrass Ranch Sports Campus a few miles to its south (see pgs. 8-10), but its own little mini-sports campus is rounding into shape nicely.
The latest addition is a new Tampa Bay Lightning-sponsored street, or ball, hockey rink, which officially opened a few days before Christmas. It was constructed just a few steps away from WCDPâs new 17,800-sq.-ft. indoor basketball facility, which broke ground in July and is expected to open by late summer 2021.
âItâs nice to see the park growing and offering more and more opportunities for kids to play different sports,â said District 2 commissioner Mike Moore, who has coached a variety of youth teams at WCDP, but the only basketball and volleyball offered at the park has previously been only outdoors.
In a public-private partnership between the Stanley Cup champion Lighting and Pasco County, two street hockey rinks were built in Pasco â one in Holiday, at the J. Ben Harrill Recreation Center, and the other at WCDP.
The virtually-held ribbon-cutting ceremony for the rinks were held in Holiday and were attended by Tampa Bay Lightning CEO Steve Griggs, former Lightning general manager and 2004 Stanley Cup Champion Jay Feaster, former Lightning defenseman Jassen Cullimore and Stanley Cup captain Dave Andreychuk.
âWe are very proud to open these two rinks today as part of our pledge to build 10 ball hockey rinks across the Tampa Bay area,â said Griggs. âThese two rinks that we opened will give local youth the opportunity to get outside and play the great game of hockey. The Lightning would like to thank Pasco County for their enthusiasm and support in helping us make this a reality for everyone in Pasco County.â
The other rinks the Lightning have opened in the Tampa Bay area are in Hillsborough, Manatee, Pinellas and Polk counties. They are of the Lightningâs Build The Thunder 2.0 and Connect the Thunder outreach programs. In 2015, through the National Hockey League (NHL) and National Hockey League Players Association (NHLPA) Industry Growth Fund, the Lightning announced a $6 million grass roots hockey development initiative to be delivered to young people throughout the Bay area.
The NHL club finalized its agreement to build the two rinks in Pasco County last January.
Wesley Chapel already has the popular AdventHealth Center Ice â the largest indoor ice skating/hockey facility south of New York in the United States â so Pasco County was an ideal location, says Josh Dreith, the Lightningâs community manager.
âI love Pasco County,â he said. âThere is a ton of Lightning fans in Pasco, and a ton of engaged kids as well.â
The county supplied the land and built the pads the rink is built on, and the Lightning built the actual rink, which is 120 feet long by 60 feet wide, has a full dasher-board system and a scoreboard. The Lightning also is providing the equipment, and will host a series of clinics to get the program going.
The county and Lightning will then coordinate actual league play, which could begin as early as March 2021, but will be dictated by Covid-19 conditions. The rink also will offer plenty of free play time to the public.
For more information, visit LightningMadeHockey.com.
Tyriq Outen honed his hockey skills while living in New Tampa, and is riding high after an MVP performance in a major invitational tournament this summer has him a little closer to his dream of playing goalie in the NHL. (Photo courtesy of the Outen family).
The first time Tyriq Outen skated on ice at the Brandonâs Ice Sports Forum, he was 4 years old and decided immediately he wanted to be a goalie.
A few weeks later, during his first lesson, his promising ice hockey career began…with his pads on backwards.
âThen, he fell behind the net and got his helmet caught in the net,â recalls his father, Ronnie. âIt was a comedy of errors.â
That imperfect start, however, soon gave way to success at nearly every level at which âTy,â as his family calls him, has played since. He went from being entangled in the nets to starring in them, and from being a junior standout to a legitimate NHL draft prospect with a bright future ahead of him.
âI feel like this is where I belong,â he says. âI fell in love with it right away.â
Tyriq grew up in New Tampa, and attended Turner Bartels Middle School. While his friends played Little League baseball and basketball and soccer at the New Tampa YMCA, Tyriq was part of a small but budding hockey community.
He played for one of the best youth hockey teams in Florida, comprised of players from all over the state, but that meant lots of travel. He traveled by plane 2-3 times a month for big tournaments in the northeast and Canada, but mostly spent lots of time in the car with Ronnie driving all over the southeast.
Ronnie, the basketball director at the new Wiregrass Ranch Sports Campus of Pasco County, understood the lifestyle and demands for a high-caliber youth athlete. A former college basketball player who played professionally overseas, Ronnie understood it was all about exposure and training. When it was time to choose a high school, Ronnie and Tyriq moved to hockey-hotbed Boston and lived in an apartment.
âWhen we were in Boston, he was literally on the ice 5-6 days a week,â he says. âNo knock on Florida, but there was a rink in every neighborhood. Imagine if Hunterâs Green had one, and Arbor Greene and Live Oak had one, if you had 5-6 rinks in this area, think of the pool of talent youâd have to draw from. Thatâs how it is up there. That is why the competition was so good.â
First Stop â Foxboro
Tyriq hooked up with the South Shore Kings in Foxboro, MA, and began to take off as a player. He had a 3.08 goals-against average (GAA) and a 90% save percentage in his two seasons.
At the age of 17, Tyriq made it onto the coveted NHL Central Scouting list as No. 19 among all North American goalie prospects. His athleticism, Ronnie says, is off the charts â he can roll out of bed and dunk a basketball â and his skating and stick skills are exceptional. Tyriqâs vision and game management continue to improve.
Toronto Maple Leafs development camp, June 30, 2018. Mark Blinch/Toronto Maple Leafs
Once a growth spurt got him to 6-feet, 3-inches, it completed the package, making him an enticing prospect at a position where taller, athletic goaltenders â like the Tampa Bay Lightningâs Andre Vasilevskiy, who also is 6â-3â âseem to be the future.
In Boston, NHL scouts were watching every game. âIt definitely got the heart pumping,â Tyriq says.
Although Ronnie had spent most of his life playing and coaching basketball, he had married Heather, a native Canadian, who came from a family of goalies.
Tyriq was born in Miramichi, New Brunswick, where his grandfather Hugh Moar â Tyriq called him Grampy â was in the townâs Hall of Fame and his uncles were accomplished junior goaltenders.
Ronnie jokes that basketball never had a chance. Which, he adds, was fine by him.
âIt wasnât a disappointment at all,â he says. âI didnât want him growing up with anyone comparing him to me or anything like that. I was just happy that every time he came off the ice, whether after practice or a game, he had a smile, and five minutes into the drive home, he wanted to talk about the game.â
Dealing With Adversity
After graduating high school in Boston, Tyriq had to choose between pursuing a Division I college career, or signing with a major junior hockey team, which would end his amateur status.
Tyriq with “Grampy”, Hugh Moar.
With a chance to sign with the Acadie-Bathurst Titan of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL), the former team of NHL stars like Mario Lemieux, Mike Bossy and Roberto Luongo, and just an hour north from his birthplace, where his goalkeeping family had built a following, how could he resist?
It turned out to be the first speed bump in Tyriqâs career.
The QMJHL is one of three major junior ice hockey leagues that make up the Canadian Hockey League, along with the Ontario Hockey League (OHL) and Western Hockey League (WHL). Acadie-Bathurst had loaded up the previous season to win the QMJHL Presidentâs Cup, and they captured the Memorial Cup against the winners from the OHL and WHL.
Tyriq says many of the players acquired to win the title in 2017-18 departed after that season. His new team won just eight games in 2018-19, and he finished with an 0-20 record, a 5.89 goals against average and faced nearly 1,000 shots in only 1,364 minutes. After a coaching change, Tyriq was released.
âThe fact that it was (so close to Miramichi) made it even worse,â Ronnie says. âThe whole town was hurrah hurrah, the hometown boy is coming, everybody was happy for that to happen. So, it made it double the monkey on his back.â
Ronnie worried about how Tyriq would handle his first-ever adversity. âI would be lying and he wouldnât be human if I said it didnât get him down.â
Ronnie says he reached out to Tampa Bay Lightning goalkeeping coach Frantz Jean for some guidance, concerned his son might retire his pads. Jean, however, reassured Ronnie that Tyriq was still highly regarded, and that NHL scouts will be watching to see how he reacted to his adversity.
âThe ones that are successful come out the other side stronger,â Ronnie remembers being told.
Getting Back In The Pads
Tyriq got back to work. Determined to come back even stronger, rather than give up, he doubled down on his efforts. When he was tired, he thought about Bathurst. When he didnât want to work out, he thought about Bathurst.
âIâm already up,â Tyriq would say as his dad walked into his room to wake him up early in the morning.
âThat showed me just how tough he really is,â Ronnie says.
The Outen family â (l.-r) Tyriq, Kiana, Heather and Ronnie â has lived in Live Oak Preserve in New Tampa since 2006.Â
Tyriqâs bounceback started in Grand Falls, New Brunswick, in the Maritime Hockey League, a league below major junior. If playing near his hometown made the Bathurst experience more painful, then his first appearance at the Miramichi Civic Centre, against the hometown Timberwolves, offered some redemption â he stopped 34 of 35 shots in a 6-1 win.
He went on to beat the Timberwolves two more times at the Civic Centre, and stopped 145 of 156 shots the hometown team fired at him over five games.
Covid-19 ended the 2019-20 season early, so Tyriq returned to New Tampa. He worked out with the Lightning before the team entered the bubble en route to the Stanley Cup. Tyriq continued to grind, ready for his next challenge, which came when he was chosen to play at the prestigious invite-only Beantown Summer Classic in August in Exeter, NH, where NHL scouts handle the coaching duties.
âHe was so proud of having some of the Lightning playersâ phone numbers in his phone,â Ronnie says. âThat was pretty cool for him.â
The NextGen MVP!
Tyriq was the only goalie invited to play for an all-minority team â NextGen AAA Foundation, a nonprofit that offers mentoring to hockey programs in underserved communities.
NextGen, which is coached by NHL players Bryce Salvador and Mike Grier, steamrolled the competition at the annual Beantown Classic in Boston, and went undefeated to win the title. Tyriq was 4-0, and even added five assists â a shockingly high number for a goalie but a tribute to his stick skills â and was named the tournamentâs MVP.
âThat was a big deal for me,â Tyriq says. âI feel like Iâm ready to do bigger things. It was a great experience.â
Tyriq canât return to Canada right now due to Covid, but was approached by a Calgary Flames scout at the Beantown Classic, who hooked him up the Maine Nordiques of the North American Hockey League. He left New Tampa last month to begin training, and the season began earlier this month.
In three games so far with Maine, Tyriq is 2-1 with a 2.94 goals-against-average and a .924 percent save percentage.
âHe was in a bad situation before, but heâs recalibrated now,â Ronnie says. âThis is a good situation for him. Itâs going to be a good year. He is totally happy â you can hear it in his voice. And, thatâs the best thing.â
Jeff Novotny shows hockey players Danielle DiPasquale (center) and Tristina Doyle how to access the information at the Herstory Museum at AdventHealth Center Ice. (Photos by John C. Cotey)
As Marnie McClain looked around the new Herstory Museum at AdventHealth Center Ice (AHCI) in Wesley Chapel, she was grinning broadly.
An eighth-grader from Fort Myers, McClain was at the facility competing with her Florida Alliance U-14 team in the Southeast Regional Girls Hockey Championships on March 9, but the Grand Opening of the interactive Herstory Museum on the same day was an added bonus.
âI saw it on Digit Murphyâs Instagram, that it was going to be here, and I was so happy to come and see something like this,â McClain said. âIt is really cool.â
Margaret âDigitâ Murphy is a womenâs hockey pioneer and legend, as well as a champion for Title IX, the federal law prohibiting anyone, on the basis of sex, from being excluded from participating or denied the benefits of sports, or being discriminated against under any education program or activity that receives Federal financial assistance.
The interactive Herstory Museum is Murphyâs brainchild, inspired by a visit to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, OH, that left her disappointed over the lack of exhibits honoring womenâs accomplishments in the NFL.
She and Wesley Chapel engineer Jeff Novotny created it for girls just like McClain, to bring to them the stories they would otherwise never get to hear. The walls are covered with portraits of the gold-medal winning 2018 U.S. Womenâs Olympic ice hockey team that trained at Center Ice, as well as large vinyl displays for each featured female hockey pioneer. Visitors can access a QR Code, which takes you to a webpage featuring a biography and video, or you can send a text to a certain number to receive that pioneerâs website link.Â
All of the information is available online at GetHerStory.org.
The museum is located on the second floor of AHCI, next to the skating facilityâs Top Shelf Restaurant & Sports Bar. While only occupying about 100 square feet or so, plenty of womenâs hockey history is crammed into the space, which also overlooks two of the ice rinks at the facility.
Parents and players lined up against the glass to watch the action in the ice, strolling over to the exhibits on the wall during breaks in the games.
âItâs pretty inspiring to see what women have accomplished in hockey,â said Tristina Doyle, a teammate of McClainâs on the Florida Alliance U-14 team. âUsually, itâs only the men you can read about, but really not much about women.âÂ
The first display features Murphy, a former Ivy League Player of the Year at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY. She also produced seven Olympians while becoming the all-time winningest womenâs hockey coach in NCAA Division I history â with 318 wins at Brown (she is still currently 13th on that all-time wins list).
Everyone Has HerStory
New Tampa resident Marisa Martin, 55, thinks stories like Murphyâs should be shared with as many young female athletes as possible.
âI think itâs very important,â Martin said. âThe sad part is, a lot of times, these younger women donât know the history and thatâs a problem. I think itâs a shame, because theyâve been given so much privilege, they donât realize what was required to get here. I think itâs important to remember the women who came before.â
Martin has her own story. When she was 9 years old, she had to take her 6-year-old brother Lonnie Jr. to sign him up for Little League because their mother was sick that day. With a check made out to Atlantic Little League (in Jacksonville), she and Lonne walked a half-mile to sign up. A woman sitting behind a table jotted down her brotherâs name, and then looked up at Marisa and asked if she wanted to play, too.
âI was like, âAre you talking to me?,ââ Marisa said. And, with a little help from the woman, Marisa signed up for Little League baseball for the first time.
âThat woman changed my life,â she said. Marisa ended up playing Little League (and every other sport available to her) as a kid, and played basketball and softball in high school, where in 1981, she helped lead Fletcher High to the Class 4A state softball championship â 13 years before the sport converted from slow to past pitch, thanks in part to Title IX. As an adult, Marisa says she took up tennis and hockey as well.
How It Happened
After Novotny presented the idea to AHCI general manager Gordie Zimmermann, a three-year agreement was signed to bring the museum â which will be developed by Murphyâs Play It Forward Sport Foundation â to Wesley Chapel.
Murphy, a whirling dervish of energy and a fountain of hockey knowledge, was the star of the Grand Opening. But, she shared the space with interactive displays featuring Katey Stone, the winningest womenâs coach in NCAA hockey history; gold medal winners Sara DeCosta-Hayes (1998; photo) and Amanda Pelkey (2018); and Kitty Guay, the first woman to ever officiate an NCAA Division I menâs game in 2015.
Another wall in the Herstory Museum will one day feature a local hero, which could be anyone, says Novotny, but will likely be someone with a relationship with hockey. That person hasnât been selected yet, but visitors were allowed to nominate someone at the grand opening. Novotny says they will choose someone over the next few months.
Admission to the museum is free. For more information, visit GetHerStory.org and PlayItForwardSport.org.
Digit Murphy, pictured here coaching the Chinese National womenâs hockey team. (Photo courtesy of Digit Murphy via Getty Images).
Margaret âDigitâ Murphy was strolling through the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, OH, one day, and asked one of the employees if there were any exhibits about some of the women â either executives, referees or television announcers â that had left their mark on the game.
âFollow me,â the employee said, and proceeded to take Murphy on a fruitless tour. Apologizing, the employee simply said, âWell, it used to be here.â
Murphy thought for the richest sports league in the world, pro footballâs $100-million Hall of Fame would at least have something dedicated to women. But, she wasnât really that surprised it didnât.
âWe canât tell our story anywhere,â sighed Murphy. But, that sparked an idea.
Along with Wesley Chapelâs Jeff Novotny, Murphy has hatched an idea to bring those kind of stories, in this case, those specifically related to ice hockey, to the people.
First stop: Saturday, March 9, 1 p.m. at AdventHealth Center Ice (AHCI).
That day will mark the grand opening of the âHerstory Museum,â which will feature interactive displays on the second floor of Center Ice, in a viewing room next to the Top Shelf restaurant and sports bar, overlooking two of the skating complexâs ice rinks.
The grand opening will coincide with a large girls hockey tournament at AHCI, providing for a perfect backdrop. Murphy will be on hand to introduce the newest feature at the rink.
And, admission to the museum will be free.
Murphy is one of womenâs hockeyâs pioneers, as well a key force behind some high-profile cases involving Title IX, the federal law prohibiting anyone, on the basis of sex, from being excluded from participating or denied the benefits of sports, or being discriminated against under any education program or activity that receives Federal financial assistance.
She was having dinner with Novotny one night when she mentioned the idea of creating a âminiâ museum, one that wouldnât require its own building but could make use of technology to offer a wealth of important information and overlooked stories in a smaller space.
Jeff Novotny
Novotny, a project manager for American Consulting Professionals, LLC, immediately thought AHCI would be the perfect place for it, having taken in more than a million visitors in less than two years after opening, hosting dozens of hockey tournaments and serving as the home training facility for the 2018 U.S. Womenâs Hockey gold medal winners.
After Novotny presented the idea to AHCI general manager Gordie Zimmermann, a three-year agreement was signed to bring the museum, which will be developed by Murphyâs Play It Forward Sport Foundation, to Wesley Chapel.
âYou want to go to places that embrace you,â Murphy says. âWesley Chapel has bent over backwards for us.â
For Novotny, the museum is a labor of love. He has three daughters, all athletes. His youngest daughter, Madison, spurred his interest in womenâs hockey. Madison currently plays prep school hockey at the Northwood School in Lake Placid, NY.
He said bringing Murphyâs story and the Herstory Museum to Center Ice is a real boon for girls hockey.
âSheâs a legend,â he says. âIt will inspire girls who read her story.â
The room housing Herstory on the second floor of AHCI is only about 100 square feet or so. When visitors walk in, they will immediately see a virtual brick wall where they can purchase a virtual brick, with the money raised going towards running the museum and for a scholarship for a local athlete. There also will be a selfie wall, where visitors can snap self-portraits and post them to social media.
The first display will feature Murphy, a former Ivy League Player of the Year at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY. She also produced seven Olympians while becoming (at one time) the all-time winningest womenâs hockey coach in NCAA Division I history with 318 wins at Brown (she is currently 13th on that list).
At the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan, she became the first American female color analyst for a womenâs ice hockey game broadcast on television and, in 2015, along with Aronda Kirby, founded the UWLX, the first professional womenâs lacrosse league in the U.S.
Murphy and Kirby also founded the Play It Forward Sport Foundation, which is geared towards gender equity in womenâs sports.
Honoring The Legends
Others who will have displays at the museum are:
⢠Katey Stone, who today is the winningest womenâs coach in NCAA hockey history and the coach of the 2014 womenâs silver-medal winning Olympic Team;
⢠Sara DeCosta-Hayes, the goalie on the first U.S. womenâs team to win a gold medal at the Olympics (in 1998);
⢠Amanda Pelkey, the University of Vermontâs all-time leading scorer and a member of the 2018 U.S. team that trained in Wesley Chapel and won the gold medal in South Korea; andÂ
⢠Kitty Guay, who refereed games in the 2018 Olympics and most recently became the first woman to referee the famous 67-year-old Beanpot ice hockey tournament in February.
âWe just want to elevate the conversation and tell stories that donât get told enough,â Murphy says. âThey just disappear, and they shouldnât. Now, they will be there for the girls and the kids in the community. Thatâs the only way to advance the conversation and have womenâs sports matter.â
Each of the featured women will have their own large vinyl display, and visitors can access a QR Code, or send a text to a certain number, to get more information and videos about each inductee. All of the information will be available online at GetHerStory.org.
Another wall in the Herstory Museum will one day feature a local hero, which could be anyone, says Novotny, but will likely be someone with a relationship with hockey. That person hasnât been selected yet, but Novotny says that, at the grand opening, they will be putting out a call for nominations and hope to choose someone over the next few months.
Novotny says the recent success of the U.S. womenâs team, and Zimmermannâs commitment to helping advance girls hockey in Florida, makes AHCI the perfect place for Herstory. He and Murphy would like to see the concept of recognizing women in sports scaled for other organizations as well, like the new Wiregrass Indoor Sports Complex â which could do similar mini-museums for volleyball players and gymnasts, as well as for high schools and universities and even corporations.
âThe whole reason weâre doing this is for little girls to have leaders and role models,â Murphy says. âWe want them to see there have been women just like them. If you can see it, you can be it.â