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BELL CAPITAL CUP
OTTAWA INTERNATIONAL HOCKEY FESTIVAL
Visitor loves Hockey Country |
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Guam native shares passion for sport
with son on California club |
By BARRE CAMPBELL, OTTAWA
SUN
FOR HIS first 22 years on this planet, Norbert Tydingco
lived in a tropical paradise, growing up on the tiny island of Guam in the
western Pacific.
At this time of year there, the temperature reaches the 30s
(yes, Celsius) and doesn't drop much lower than the low 20s at night.
Yet Tydingco gave all that up when he moved to the San
Francisco Bay area where he fell for a Canadian obsession known as hockey.
The game means so much to him now that he's on the coaching
staff of his son's peewee team, the Santa Clara Blackhawks, competing in this
year's Bell Capital Cup.
While relatives and friends in Guam are enjoying Pacific
breezes, Tydingco is experiencing a vastly different climate here in Ottawa.
"Well, let's put it this way," he said after his team's
first tournament game yesterday at Carleton University. "I spent more time
climbing coconut trees when I was a kid than I did skating on frozen ponds."
Tydingco never saw snow until after he moved to California
and drove into the mountains near Lake Tahoe. It makes one wonder how a person
from a place so foreign to a game played on ice could become so enamoured of
it.
SHARKS FAN
In Tydingco's case, a trip to a San Jose Sharks game against
the Calgary Flames got him hooked. The diminutive Tydingco paid special
attention to one particular visiting player, Theoren Fleury.
"I couldn't believe that in what's supposedly a big man's
game, here's this little guy about 5-foot-6 and 160 lbs. going around out
there proving everybody wrong," he said. "And I was thinking, 'That's me.' "
Tydingco told his wife Christina that night that if they
ever had a son, his name would be Theoren.
And sure enough, when that baby boy came along, he was named
Theoren Nicholas to go along with Tydingco -- for the planned initials TNT.
Three months later, Norbert and Christina dressed their baby
in a white sleeper outfit and took him to his first NHL game in San Jose --
against Calgary and Fleury. He ended up getting a puck that flew into the
stands.
"I think it was (Joe) Nieuwendyk who tipped the puck and it
just started coming toward us,'' recalled Tydingco. ''There I was with a baby
in one arm, trying to get the puck with the other."
The moment was captured on the game broadcast, and Tydingco
has an image from it posted on the team's website. Wearing a Sharks jersey,
he's shown holding the puck in his right hand while cradling his son with his
left arm.
The Blackhawks, coached by Gary Bortolotto whose mother is
from Sudbury, will try to see as much of Ottawa as possible before the
tournament wraps up Monday.
But no matter what happens in the tournament, they want to
enjoy playing hockey in a city where the sport reigns supreme.
"Back home, my friends in baseball tell me to quit hockey
and concentrate on baseball, but I just ignore them," said Blackhawks forward
Mattia Bortolotto.
He's having too much fun with this bunch.
Forward Wesley Starr, who's considered the team comedian,
had a rough day because most of his equipment was left behind in California.
Luckily, he has big feet and borrowed the coach's skates, a helmet from
another California team here, and shinpads that were a few inches too short.
These are the kind of lifetime memories created by
tournaments such as the Bell Capital Cup.
As for Theo Tydingco, he'll go into the books as the first
Santa Clara Blackhawks player to score a Bell Capital Cup goal.
Despite playing with only nine skaters because some players
couldn't make the trip, the Blackhawks managed to score a 1-0 win over the
Ottawa Sting in the Major Peewee AA division game.
The lone goal came late in the third when Tydingco ripped a
shot from the right point through traffic to score during a power play.
It was a victory for the Blackhawks and northern California.
With an assist from Guam and its coconut trees and ocean
breezes.
barre.campbell@ott.sunpub.com
CHAMPIONSHIP SCHEDULE
ALL GAMES AT COREL CENTRE
(Times subject to change)
TOMORROW
- 2 p.m. -- Intermediate sledge
- 3:20 p.m. -- Girls Atom AA
- 4:35 p.m. -- Girls Peewee AA
- 6 p.m. -- Atom House C
- 7:15 p.m. -- Minor Atom AA
SUNDAY
- 7:15 a.m. -- Major Atom AA
- 8:35 a.m. -- Minor Peewee AA
- 10 a.m. -- Minor Peewee AAA Brooks
- 11:20 a.m. -- Minor Peewee AAA Neilson
- 12:40 p.m. -- Major Peewee AAA
- 2 p.m. -- Major Peewee AA
- 3:20 p.m. -- Major Atom AAA
- 4:35 p.m. -- Minor Atom AAA
- 6 p.m. -- Major Peewee A
- 7:20 p.m. -- Major Atom A
MONDAY
- 7:15 a.m. -- Minor Peewee A
- 8:35 a.m. -- Minor Atom A
- 10 a.m. -- Major Atom B
- 11:20 a.m. -- Atom House B
- 12:40 p.m. -- Atom House A
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