Throughout his years in youth hockey, Neil Sheehy believed the surest route to the NHL was to be the toughest player on the ice. But when he got to Harvard, he was stunned to hear coach Bill Cleary tell him that he was focusing too much on hitting and not enough on skill development.
Cleary told Sheehy that no matter how rugged he was, he wouldn't advance without honing his skating, passing and shooting. Sheehy went on to forge a seven-year NHL career as a physical, gritty defenseman, but he knows he would not have gotten there without Cleary's advice. On Thursday, he urged the wider hockey community to embrace the same philosophy.
Sheehy was among 13 high-profile minds from the hockey world at St. Paul's RiverCentre for a Player Safety Summit, held just before the Class 2A tournament began across the skyway at Xcel Energy Center. The discussion was organized by the Herb Brooks Foundation. That the late coach was quoted frequently seemed appropriate, since they all kept coming back to Brooks's philosophy of doing right by the game they all love.
The check from behind that paralyzed Benilde-St. Margaret's forward Jack Jablonski -- and growing concern about concussions among young players -- have highlighted the issue of player safety. Some have responded defiantly, insisting there is nothing wrong with the game. Others cite pushy parents, the glorification of rough play and a win-at-all-costs mentality as evidence of problems that must be addressed.
Thursday's panel suffered no such divisions. Representatives from youth-league administrators to NHL veteran Sheehy agreed that the game's culture needs to refocus on skill, safety and fun -- taking a stand that Brooks would have appreciated.
"Growing up, I heard coaches say all the time, 'Finish your checks. Make your defenseman eat glass. Play with reckless abandon,'" said Sheehy, now a player agent. "Those were all buzzwords in hockey, but maybe they need to be eliminated from the culture.
"Every time I go to the rink, I don't look at players who can hit, who are big and tough. I look for skill and speed. It's about skill development, and that's what this country needs to focus on. That's the perspective we have to get out to players and parents and everybody in this game."
John McClellan, executive director of the Herb Brooks Foundation, noted that the iconic coach championed the Olympic style of hockey. He stressed playmaking and finesse rather than bone-crushing checks. He supported eliminating checking at the pee wee level, a proposal that ignited a major rift in Minnesota youth hockey when it was instituted last summer.