After a week of practicing and living in Wesley Chapel, the U.S. Womenâs National hockey team has decided to move in.
USA Hockey announced on May 5 that the team will call the new Florida Hospital Center Ice (FHCI) its home beginning in September, and leading right up to the 2018 Winter Olympics in PyeongChang, South Korea.
The 2017-18 U.S. Womenâs National Team will move its headquarters to Wesley Chapel as it prepares to win gold at the upcoming Winter Games Feb. 9-25.
âThis is a big deal for us,ââ says Gordie Zimmermann, FHCIâs general manager. âThis is giving us international exposure, and itâs a great thing for our community.â
Zimmermann says Tampa Bay Lightning chairman and governor Jeff Vinik was one of many to congratulate him on winning the bidding rights to be the home for the womanâs team.
âHe called to say this was a great thing for us, them being here,ââ Zimmermann says.
Jay Feaster, the former general manager of the Tampa Bay Lightning and currently its executive director for community hockey development, says the upcoming U.S. team camp will be great for the area and even better for the growth of womenâs hockey in Florida.
There is currently only one elite team for girls in the Tampa Bay area, which is based out of Lakeland.
âThis is a tremendous opportunity for us in terms of trying to grow the womenâs game at the youth level,ââ Feaster says. âThe challenge is making young people aware of the game, and letting girls know that they can, in fact, play.â
Feaster said the Lightning will have a presence during U.S. training. The organization already has invested $6 million to grow the game through its âBuild The Thunderâ program, which visits hundreds of schools in the area and teaches students street hockey in order to introduce them to the game.
Now, Feaster says, that program will be able to incorporate successful, Olympic- and World Championship-winning women into the program to generate more interest among girls.
Feaster notes that the Lightning has been working on creating girls hockey leagues for aspiring players, and is hopeful of fielding an elite team to compete around the state later this summer.
âOur goal is to get it where you donât have local, talented kids that feel like to get to a Division I scholarship or make it to the next level, they have to leave the state,ââ Feaster says. âTo have this spotlight on us, itâs just a great opportunity for our female players.â
Feaster and Zimmermann both credit the efforts of Brett Strot in getting Team USA to make Wesley Chapel its home.
Strot is a longtime assistant coach with a number of the womenâs national teams, and also is the head coach of the USPHL Tampa Bay Junior (Elite and Empire) hockey clubs that play out of FHCI.
Zimmermann says that a few other cities bid to host the womenâs national team, but the combination of the weather, Saddlebrook Resort (where the players will stay) and FHCIâs multiple rinks and training facilities was too good for USA Hockey to pass up.
âIt was just a really good fit,ââ Zimmermann says.
The announcement that the team would be based in Wesley Chapel came on the same day USA Hockey announced the 23 players named to the U.S. Womenâs National team in a ceremony at Amalie Arena, the downtown Tampa home of the Lightning, that was broadcast live on the NHL Network.
The selections came at the conclusion of a weeklong U.S. Womenâs National Team Selection Camp that took place May 1-5 at FHCI, featuring 42 invited players and including a scrimmage that was open to the public.
Of the 23 players selected, 21 were on the team that recently defeated Canada to win the gold medal at the International Ice Hockey Federation Womenâs World Championships.
Also, 12 members of the new national team also were on the 2014 U.S. Womenâs Olympic team that won the silver medal, after losing to Canada 3-2 in overtime (the first time the gold medal was decided in OT in womenâs Olympic hockey). Eleven states are represented on the new roster, led by Minnesota (6), Massachusetts (4) and Wisconsin (3).
There are no Florida players on the team this year, but Zimmermann and Feaster both say they hope that someday, that will change.
âThis is truly a team of elite athletes and great role models,â Feaster says. âBest of all, they win, too. There are two programs that are the preeminent womenâs teams in the world, and thatâs the U.S. and Canada (which has won the last four gold medals). Chances are, youâll see them playing each other next year for the gold medal, too.â
Look for more stories about the U.S. Womenâs Hockey Team in future issues of this publication and on WCNT-tv.

