Chu conceded that she was a "nerd" and a "dork," but they were so close as a team that she didn't mind and the team didn't either. Lawler admitted that she wanted out of hockey a few times growing up, and that her Mom had to push her to continue playing and to go to prep school for a year just to give it a try. "You see, hockey gives you these big leg muscles, and a big butt," said Lawler. "I wanted to have thin little legs that everyone looked at...I wanted to be the girl that boys looked at, not the girl that played on the same team." These were the kind of uninhibited comments you would never hear in a typical press conference.
Far Hills and Bernardsville are the richest towns in the richest county (Morris) in the richest state in the richest country. Weiland tried to get across how unusual her background was. "I come from Palmer, Alaska, farming country just north of Anchorage," she explained to the students who were wearing their uniforms of skirts for girls and blue blazers for boys. "I grew up on a farm, now how many of you have ridden a horse?" Nearly half of the students shot their hands toward the gym ceiling, something Weiland did not expect. Most of the Far Hills riders were trained on English saddles for dressage and riding exhibitions, which is not the kind of horse riding Weiland was referring to, but a connection was made.
Far Hills loves their hockey: they play on co-ed teams, practicing a few miles away at a "Hunt club" (think English saddles chasing hounds) on a rink with no roof. It's quite a romantic throwback, as are the women Olympic players--true amateurs who make lots of personal sacrifices to keep playing the game they love. Marvin talked about growing up in Warroad, Minnesota in a hockey family. "I had skates on at one and a half or two," she said, telling everyone how normal that is in northern Minnesota. "I could stand in my back yard and yell, and they can hear me in Canada, that's how close we are to Canada."
Chu spoke about how special it is to play in Canada, and why she is so geeked for playing the Olympics north of the border. "They love hockey so much in Canada, that they fill NHL rinks when we play them. 18,000 people are rooting against us, but they are rooting FOR women's hockey. It's so loud when we play them, but when we score, the place goes silent, you can hear a pin drop. Now that's cool, silencing 18,000 people." The students were in awe.
When asked about being nervous before games, Weiland and Lawler spoke about concentrating on their breathing to help them stay present. Cahow said that if she weren't nervous before a big game it's time to find a new passion. Chu said that nerves were normal, and a good thing before games. "I get more scared picking up a microphone like this, and speaking in public." Now Julie is a forthright person, but I suspect she was fibbing here to make a point. USA Hockey officials and her father Wah think that politics, maybe even presidential politics, is in her future. She was the youngest class-president at the prestigious Choate-Rosemary Hall prep school, and has NEVER been shy in front of a mic.
I pulled Cahow aside and asked her about the recent stretch that has seen Canada take 3 of the last 4 against the U.S. in impressive fashion. "There's a progression going on," she said, making a hand gesture of a line graph moving up. "It's not where you are in November, it's where you are in February."
So, less than 48 hours after a painful loss, followed by a transatlantic flight into prevailing winds, these 5 athletes were anything but glum. Fresh from a lengthy spa session with ample time perfecting hair and makeup, these girls were the brightest and most energetic faces in a school full of amped up bright lights. Fans and hockey insiders who might have expected gloom and doom were swept up in the enthusiasm and positive energy that is the trademark of American women's hockey.
Now if only they could solve Team Canada's latest addition, scoring sensation Megan Agosta from Mercyhurst College in Pennsylvania. With four goals in her last four games against the U.S. and speed to burn, she is the X-factor that is tipping the scales in Canada's favor these days. 1998 Olympic gold medal heroine Shelly Looney said that Agosta was easy to root against. "According to others, when she was looking at schools, she made lots of demands, like time on every power play. At least that's what I heard."
Cahow had a fresher outlook. "She (Agosta) has learned to be a team player now that she's playing for Team Canada." Cahow conceded how tough she is to play against. They must neutralize her if they are to win the gold.
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