Shane Hudella, who is heading to the White House next week, grew up playing pickup hockey at a Hastings park rink. He had no skates so he wore boots and played goalie. He used a baseball glove to stop the shots.
With five kids, his parents didn't have money for hockey gear that could cost hundreds of dollars.
Hudella grew up, joined the Minnesota National Guard and served in Iraq in Desert Storm. In mid-2009, he co-founded a nonprofit agency to ensure that tight finances don't stop the child of a military service member from playing hockey.
Since Defending the Blue Line was founded, First Sgt. Hudella has given away more than $500,000 worth of hockey gear, thousands of National Hockey League tickets, and hockey team fee and camp scholarships to military kids.
"There is nothing more rewarding than when these families tell you, 'If it weren't for you guys, my kid couldn't play hockey this year,'" said Hudella, 41, seated in Blue Line's basement office in Hastings. He said he loves the work because it combines his two great passions: hockey and the military.
In the past year, the nonprofit has set up a handful of distribution points around the country, and Hudella retired from active guard duty to work full-time helping kids learn and play hockey. His efforts have drawn national attention in hockey circles and even at the White House. The National Hockey League Players Association has contributed more than $150,000 worth of equipment, and Minnesota Wild players and management have provided about 3,000 Wild tickets to military families.
Last month, the White House asked Hudella to make opening remarks for a roundtable discussion led by First Lady Michelle Obama at the Air National Guard offices in Minneapolis. He was one of four nonprofit leader who discussed nonprofit work to serve military members for 45 minutes with Mrs. Obama.
Joey Hudella, 10, was one of two kids who escorted the First Lady from her plane stairway at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport as news cameras rolled and clicked.