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Subject: Women-in-Hockey Digest V1 #586
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Women-in-Hockey Digest   Saturday, January 22 2000   Volume 01 : Number 586



In this issue:

   DFW women's teams
   Goalie Camps
   MINNESOTA WOMEN'S HOCKEY
   Washing Gloves Advice - thank you.
   Freezing equipment?
   Re: Freezing equipment?
   freezing equipment
   RE: Freezing equipment?
   Wisconsin Women vs. Ohio State
   re: breaking in goal pads
   Canadain Coaches Catalogue

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Date: Fri, 21 Jan 2000 18:18:51
From: Bobbie Stanfill 
Subject: DFW women's teams

Someone was asking a few weeks ago about DFW teams.
There was a new flyer at the rink at night. Dallas-FtWorth Women's Hockey
is looking for more players.
Email email@hidden  or call SCarlett 972-402-0501
Also have a new website, which I haven't checked yet
www.dfwwh.com

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Date: Fri, 21 Jan 2000 18:16:09
From: Bobbie Stanfill 
Subject: Goalie Camps

The best way to find all the camps is to get a copy of the Hockey News
special summer camp section. Or look in the American Hockey mag that comes
to all USA Hockey players. I wrote off for brochures 3 years ago and still
get them. THN will have a chart that shows if each camp offers special
girls programs or just co-ed.  I think it comes out early February. 
Jon Elkins, Gold In the Net, Kenesky Sports, Mike Gergosian's, all are good
goalie camps. If you live close enough to where the Devil's practice, check
with them. Many NHL teams run summer camps too. Last year Ed Belfour's
coach (Rick St.Croix)came to the Stars for a week of intensive training
with local goalies, in between running his own camps in Wisconsin. 

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Date: Fri, 21 Jan 2000 22:49:22 
From: "Craig Roberts" 
Subject: MINNESOTA WOMEN'S HOCKEY

MUZERALL'S HAT TRICK LEADS GOPHERS TO WIN OVER BEAVERS

Nadine Muzerall recorded her second consecutive hat trick and added an 
assist to lead Minnesota to a 6-1 victory over Bemidji State at Mariucci 
Arena.

Minnesota, 17-5-0 and 15-2-0 in the WCHA-Women's League, took a 1-0 lead 11 
minutes, 26 seconds into the opening period but Kristie Hofer evened the 
score for the Beavers, 13-10-1 and 4-10-1, three minutes into the second 
period.

Ambria Thomas gave the Gophers the lead for good by scoring goals less than 
five minutes apart to give her team a 3-1 lead with 8:17 to play in the 
second period.

Minnesota put the game away with three goals in the third period. Muzerall 
sandwhiched a pair of goals around a Kris Scholz power-play tally as the 
hosts held a 30-10 advantage in shots on goal over the final two periods.

Special teams play also proved to be a key in the game. Minnesota killed all 
four Bemidji State power plays and have not allowed a power-play goal in six 
consecutive games with 30 successful kills in a row. Meanwhile, the Gophers 
were 3-for-4 on the power play.

Crystal Nicholas made 17 saves in goal for Minnesota, earning her eighth win 
of the season without a loss. Bre Dedrickson had 33 saves for Bemidji State.

The two teams conclude their two-game series Saturday at 7:05 p.m. at 
Mariucci Arena.

Goals by Period       1  2  3  Tot
- ----------------------------------
Bemidji State.......  0  1  0 -  1
Minnesota...........  1  2  3 -  6
 
   1st period - 1, MINN, Nadine Muzerall 19 (Kelly Olson) 11:26. Penalties - 
Lisa Peters, BEMIDJI (tripping) 19:47.
   2nd period - 2, BEMIDJI, Kristie Hofer 9 (Christine Kleven, Jenna 
Grimsrud) 2:56. 3, MINN, Ambria Thomas 19 (Tracy Engstrom, Courtney Kennedy) 
7:08 (pp). 4, MINN, Ambria Thomas 20 (Laura Slominski) 11:43. Penalties - 
Lisa Peters, BEMIDJI (high sticking) 6:03; Lisa Peters, BEMIDJI (roughing) 
7:31; Angela Borek, MINN (roughing) 7:31; Courtney Kennedy, MINN (cross 
checking) 7:41; Tracy Engstrom, MINN (high sticking) 15:44; Shannon Kennedy, 
MINN (tripping) 18:30.
   3rd period - 5, MINN, Nadine Muzerall 20 (Tracy Engstrom, Emily Buchholz) 
6:48. 6, MINN, Kris Scholz 4 (Ronda Curtin, Nadine Muzerall) 10:39 (pp). 7, 
MINN, Nadine Muzerall 21 (Ronda Curtin, Courtney Kennedy) 12:34 (pp). 
Penalties - Kristie Hofer, BEMIDJI (hooking) 8:57; Kristie Hofer, BEMIDJI 
(slashing) 10:58; Crystal Nicholas, MINN (holding the stick) 19:15.
   Shots on goal - BEMIDJI 8-4-6 18; MINN 9-14-16 39. Power plays - BEMIDJI 
0 of 4; MINN 3 of 4. Goalies - BEMIDJI, Bre Dedrickson 8-6-1 (60:00 minutes, 
39 shots-33 saves); MINN, Crystal Nicholas 8-0-0 (60:00, 18-17). Referee - 
Jay Mendel. Asst referees - John Stiff, Mark Van Guilder. A - 755.


- --------------------
Craig Roberts
Assistant Sports Information Director
Women's Intercollegiate Athletics
University of Minnesota
Check out our website at www.gophersports.com
Or call the Diet Coke Gopher Sports Hotline
  612-626-STAT (7828)

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Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2000 03:58:07 PST
From: "Christine Hill" 
Subject: Washing Gloves Advice - thank you.

Thanks to all those out there who gave me advice on how to clean my smelly 
gloves (I posted it about two weeks ago). Some people asked me to post my 
results - well, I ended up hand-washing them in warm water with a liquid 
detergent ("Woolmix" - for wool and silk).  I rinsed them thoroughly and 
spun the water out using the washing machine. Dried them on the clothes line 
and put leather dressing on the palms ("Dubbin"). I will buy some "Febreeze" 
if I can find it too, as everyone recommended it. It was released in 
Australia a few months ago - we get these really awful Febreeze ads on TV 
now - awful because they're US ads dubbed over with Australian voices.  Very 
obvious and very badly done!
Regards and thanks
Christine.
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com

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Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2000 10:14:05 -0500
From: "Roehr, Susan N" 
Subject: Freezing equipment?

Does anyone know what the freezing/cracking temperature of plastic is?  I
usually air out my hockey equipment on our backporch, but it's been sub-zero
out there lately, and I don't want to damage my helmet.  

Cheers,

Si.

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Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2000 14:19:53 -0500
From: Louise 
Subject: Re: Freezing equipment?

At 10:14 AM 22/01/00 -0500, Roehr, Susan N wrote:
>Does anyone know what the freezing/cracking temperature of plastic is?  I
>usually air out my hockey equipment on our backporch, but it's been sub-zero
>out there lately, and I don't want to damage my helmet.  

There isn't any simple answer to this.  Most plastics (like most ceramics
and metals) become more brittle at low temperatures.  This means that if
you apply a force to something very cold (if you hit it, or try to bend it,
for example), it is more likely to crack than it would be at a higher
temperature.  (When you are packing your very cold equipment back into your
hockey bag, you should be gentle with it.)  

But since hockey equipment is all supposed to resist significant loads at
the temperatures in arenas, it's not at all likely that it will be damaged
just by sitting in the cold without being banged around.

Louise, 
materials professor

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Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2000 14:52:45 EST
From: email@hidden
Subject: freezing equipment

Good question for the manufacturer of the equipment to answer, I think. They 
order plastics to certain specs. High impact designed into the helmet doesn't 
neccesarily mean the plastic can stand extremes of temperature.

In Texas we have to worry about the other extreme, too hot. Temps in a car 
can reach 160F in the summer. I had a helmet strap holder rip loose from the 
rivet when I was putting it on because the plastic had been heated too much 
sitting in my bag in the car. 
It would seem that too cold could also cause this to happen. Freezing the 
plastic and and then trying to manipulate it could cause it to fracture, if 
you don't get it closer to room temperature. 

The purpose of the helmet is to dissipate a shock wave to your head, and keep 
it from being transmitted through the skull to the brain. If the helmet is 
like a frozen mackrel, is it going to perform that function effectively? I 
think not.  Force is conducted through solids much more efficiently than 
through liquids or air. Freezing the helmet is in effect making it more 
solid. The helmet may not crack or fail when force is applied to it, but it 
may also not do what it was designed to do either, stop the shock from 
penetrating to the skull. The other issue to think about when it's that cold 
the sweat freezes into the equipment and is still there when it thaws...yucky!

Another consideration about storing your gear at freezing temps: the velcro 
tabs will wear out prematurely. Velcro doesn't do what its supposed to do 
when frozen. It is almost impossible to get it to release at freezing 
temperatures. A skydiver in Manitoba back in '78 found that out with fatal 
consequences, jumping Nov 11th, at sub zero temperatures (I was there). 

Terry Pendergast
Houston, Tx

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Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2000 16:57:13 -0500
From: "Roehr, Susan N" 
Subject: RE: Freezing equipment?

Just to clarify--it's certainly not at freezing temperature when I put it
on.  I'm not going to put on a set of frozen pads or a frozen helmet, that
would be too uncomfortable.  It spends an hour in my car on the way to the
rink so I can't imagine it would actually be freezing when I got dressed.

Si.

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2000 17:28:56 -0600
From: "Paul Capobianco" 
Subject: Wisconsin Women vs. Ohio State

Wisconsin Women*s Hockey Ices Buckeyes

Madison, Wis. * Kelly Kegley scored twice in a 10-second span on her way to her 
first career hat trick as the Wisconsin women*s hockey team defeated Ohio State 
6-2 at the Dane County Coliseum on Saturday.

Special teams were key for the Badgers where they scored twice on seven power 
plays and were a perfect three-for-three on the penalty kill.

"I was really pleased that we only took three penalties," said head coach Julie 
Sasner. "We*re working hard to stay out of the box and we were able to get a 
couple of goals on the power play."

A five-on-three in the first period enabled the UW to score the game*s opening 
goal. Leslie Toner slipped a shot by OSU goaltender Melisa Glaser at 9:24. Sis 
Paulsen collected the first of three assists on the game, while Kerry Weiland 
was also given an assist.

Weiland made it 2-0 on the five-on-four at 10:39 on a spectacular goal. The 
frosh received the puck at the blue line from Bridget Buchholz, and stick-
handled her way past three OSU defenders, before snapping a shot into the left 
upper corner.

Liz Jankowski made it 3-0 with a breakaway tally at 14:14. Paulsen found 
Jankowski with a flip pass by an OSU defender at the Buckeye blue line.

Lindsey Steblen scored unassisted at 5:54 for OSU to open the second period. 
Kegley responded with her first of the game from Jankowski at 10:07, but OSU 
crept back within two at 4-2 when Melissa Pirie off the rebound of a point shot 
for Ohio State.

The Buckeyes outshot Wisconsin 15-6 in the third, but it was Wisconsin scoring 
two late goals to seal the victory. Kegley scored her second of the game with an 
empty net tally at 19:39. Kegley completed the hat trick off the ensuing face 
off ten seconds later. Weiland collected her third point of the night with an 
assist on the play.

"Kegley was the player of the game," commented Sasner. "She plays so hard on 
defense and is so responsible defensively and to come up big on offense is great 
for her."

Jackie MacMillan sparkled in net for the Badgers with 29 saves and improved to 
5-3-1 with the win. Glaser stopped 15 shots for OSU to drop to 2-12-0.

"Jackie played a great game in net," added Sasner. "She got a lot of action. 
Ohio really pressed us. It was a closer game than the score indicates."

The Badgers (11-10-2, 8-6-1 WCHA) face the same Buckeyes (4-18-1, 4-10-1 WCHA) 
on Sunday. The contest is slated for 1:05 p.m., at the Dane County Coliseum.

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2000 15:32:49 -0800
From: "Tanya & Patrick Martin" 
Subject: re: breaking in goal pads

I think the advice you have already been give the advice about tying them
up.  That is what I am doing with mine plus I sit on them while watching TV
(toe end on floor and I sit on top) to further compress them.  As for trying
to stop the big rebounds I haven't found any really good advice but here is
some passed on to me when I asked on the now defunct goalies mailing list:

Lay them flat on the floor and hit with a baseball bat or hockey stick.

Bounce hard rubber ball off them (flat on the ground)

The best as far as humour is concerned:

Drive over them with a light weight car.  The advisor apparently used his
parents care and backed over the pads a couple of times and he really
recommended it but did acknowledge that it effected the appearance of the
pads.

Good luck,

Tanya, #35
Vancouver Valkryies

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2000 16:11:49 -0800
From: "Tanya & Patrick Martin" 
Subject: Canadain Coaches Catalogue

When I lived in Canada I received a catalogue from I believe the coaching
association that had books, training material and clothes.  Does anyone have
a phone number or email for the originator of the catalogue (I think
Canadian Coaching association)?

Thanks,

Tanya, #35
Vancouver Valkryies

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End of Women-in-Hockey Digest V1 #586
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