Lance Pitlick has built two careers from his passion for hockey



Similar documents
How To Get A Job At A Community College

15 Toughest Interview Questions and Answers! Reference: WomenCo. Lifestyle Digest,

Rock-N-Happy Heart: The Devotional By Yancy. by Yancy

What does student success mean to you?

Life With Hope I m Not An Addict I M NOT AN ADDICT 147

The One Key Thing You Need to Be Successful In Prospecting and In Sales

MIDDLETOWN FAMILY FINDS ITS NICHE IN NURSING FIELD

Ididn t think I was an alcoholic. I thought my

The Money Jars Activity Lesson Use with Camp Millionaire and The Money Game

Chapter 2. My Early Days Trading Forex

Connectedness and the Emotional Bank Account

IN A SMALL PART OF THE CITY WEST OF

Student-Athletes. Guide to. College Recruitment

KEY ENGLISH TEST for Schools

Recruiting-101 s Five Steps to a Scholarship Offer June, 2008

English as a Second Language Podcast ESL Podcast 292 Business Insurance

I have always been good at school. I enjoyed it, and did very well. I think that is why I never got a diagnosis of Asperger s Syndrome until

She Wants Out Part II. Female gang members are second-class citizens. The guys sometimes throw

Parable of The Prodigal Son

THE ENVELOPE BUDGET The Easiest Budgeting Tool I Know By David Dopp

Interviewer: What is your business, first of all? What do you do, and what is it like being a pastor and businessman at the same time?

Dear Expectant Mother,

Exchange Semester at Daniels College of Business

How To Be A Women'S Pastor At Community Bible Church

How To Create Your Hot Hook In 3 Minutes Flat So Clients Want To Hire You On The Spot!

N Ways To Be A Better Developer

Entrepreneur s M&A Journal Episode 25

FITNESS AND ATHLETICS AND THE AVENUES CHELSEA PIERS PARTNERSHIP

A Learning Paths Whitepaper. Rapid Onboarding 3 Keys to Success

PRE-TOURNAMENT INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT: Tuesday, January 27, 2015

GEORGIA REGENTS UNIVERSITY

Student Essays on NASA Project

Joseph in Egypt. Genesis 39:2-3 the LORD was with Joseph and gave him success in everything he did.

To understand OPEX you must first understand James Fitzgerald as he is the visionary force powering OPEX as its owner and founder.

Chapter 11. The Forex Trading Coach Is Born

Women Are Sneaky: Behind every successful business there is a good woman

Weaving the Pieces Together

pack promise. committed to your success

Hotel Operations Partner

Retaining Teachers: The Principal as Motivating Factor

Mammon and the Archer

My name is Jim Felstiner and I graduated from the University of Toronto, Factor- Inwentash Faculty of Social Work in 1961.

Learning Leadership with Thoughtful Courage

Q&a: Why Trading Is Nothing Like Playing A Competitive Sport Markets...

ISI Debtor Testimonials. April 2015 ISI. Tackling problem debt together

Warm Market Scripts Ideas.

Self-Acceptance. A Frog Thing by E. Drachman (2005) California: Kidwick Books LLC. ISBN Grade Level: Third grade

top ten mistakes WE ALL MAKE MISTAKES... MADE WHEN BUYING LAND #1 Buying More Than You Can Afford

Club Accounts Question 6.

Copyright Top Agent Magazine

A: We really embarrassed ourselves last night at that business function.

A lawyer and her client weigh in on the overtime scam

LONG-TERM ATHLETE DEVELOPMENT INFORMATION FOR PARENTS

Written Testimony of Sonia Ellis Submitted to the Special Committee on Aging United States Senate Hearing on the Jamaican Lottery Scam March 13, 2013

PHOENIX HELPING YOUTH RISE ABOVE

flight attendant lawyer journalist programmer sales clerk mechanic secretary / receptionist taxi driver waiter/waitress

Game or bike? Movie or shoes? Chocolate sundae with extra rainbow sprinkles on top?

RECRUITERS ON RECRUITING

Riding to Recovery. With her injuries, she was not in good shape, Morford said.

Three Hot Tactical War Room Strategies That Will Explode Your Sales

Emergency Volunteer. by counselors and other people I talked to that I would be required to do Service

Guide to Preparing for the Recruiting Process

THE STATESMAN. A GWC Student Attends Law School. New 2005 George Wythe College Campus. Happy Holidays! From George Wythe College. On Campus Seminars:

Oklahoma Bank and. Commerce History Project

Moses. July 11-12, God has a plan for us. Exodus 2-4; Jeremiah 29:11

The Psychic Salesperson Speakers Edition

Chunking? Sounds like psychobabble!

GameRoom of the Month

EAGLES WINGS DISC GOLF ZAMBIA MISSIONS TRIP REPORT MACHA ZAMBIA, MAY 18-29, 2016

Episode Five Debriefing: Teacher Guide

Skill # 3: Ice Breakers: Rejection Free Approaching

Life with MS: Mastering Early Treatment

Team Announcement Teleconference

WHAT ARE THE KEYS TO SUCCESS?

FOR. 14 Recommendations from a Top Futures Broker. Stuart A. Vosk. Center for Futures Education, Inc.

Building A Winning Team" Marketing and Management for Farm Couples After Program Evaluation Gender: Male

So what does it mean, really, to be a Lifetime Member of the Association of the Wall and

ONE DOLLAR AND EIGHTY-SEVEN CENTS.

HEARTS &MINDS. Consumer Study. Understanding Long-Term Care Buyers. Mutual of Omaha Insurance Company United of Omaha Life Insurance Company

10 common problems professional photographers face - and how to overcome them

Profiles of Mechanical Engineers

Tom Torlino, Ziewie, and the Student Experience

Living with dying Patients and carers experiences of living with lung cancer. Dr Donna Fitzsimons, Lesley Rutherford & Jill McAuley

Hi-tech. Language focus. First conditional. Second conditional. eat. 'd give / wouldn t

True Stories: My Debt Crisis

Top HR Interview Question and Answers

SOLUTIONS. new territory. Payroll services give many firms a new way to grow. Read a few key reasons to join them. david Hensley s

1. The landlord just rented the apartment when I got there.

As heroin takes another life, a mother fights back

I was born and raised in Post Falls, Idaho and graduated

Transcription:

cover story l by Liz Kohman // Photos by Silas Crews Lance Pitlick has built two careers from his passion for hockey H ockey coach Lance Pitlick was trying to teach his team to improve their stick handling skills, but he couldn t keep their attention. Never mind that Pitlick skated for the Minnesota Gophers and had a career playing professional hockey for several NHL teams, his current team of second- and third-graders wouldn t focus on his lessons about the fundamentals. So Pitlick started thinking about how he learned the basics. He remembered lining up rows of evenly spaced hockey pucks about a foot apart and guiding a puck through them for hours. He knew that wouldn t translate to ice time with his team -unless he wanted to spend hours of practice chasing pucks and lining them up over and over again. So he took an old hockey stick, and drilled some pucks along the side of it. He brought it to practice, set it down on the ice, and taught his team some stick handling drills. It kept their attention and they loved it. Parents and other coaches started asking about the make-shift training tool. Pitlick talked a buddy into going into business with him. And Pitlick became the CEO of Sweet Hockey Products, which he runs from his home. But if you had told Pitlick 10 years ago that his future held an invention and an entrepreneurial enterprise, he would have told you to find a new crystal ball. Pitlick grew up in Blaine and New Hope, and he s been skating ever since he can remember. He always played hockey, but he never thought of it as a potential career. In high school he was captain of the hockey team during his junior and senior years at Robbinsdale Cooper, and the University of Minnesota recruited him to play with the Gophers. They were the first ones and the only ones that really came after me, says Pitlick, who was the captain of the Minnesota Gophers during his senior year. I went there on half a scholarship and didn t even think I d be able to play after high school. I felt very fortunate. 2 MARCH 2008 PLYMOUTH MAGAZINE Reprinted with permission of the publisher. 2008 Metropolitan Media Group, Inc., all rights reserved. Any reproduction of this document is strictly prohibited. For reprints call 952-767-2600.

PLYMOUTH MAGAZINE MARCH 2008 3

cover story l Team Players > He makes them love hockey, says Lisa Pitlick, Lance s wife. With every practice, he makes it fun, so the kids can t wait for the next practice. Pitlick on Retirement: I feel fortunate to continue working in the sport I love, to have kids that love the game and to be surrounded by friends and fellow coaches who share the same passion. He met his future wife, Lisa, in the gym at the University of Minnesota. She was a gymnast, and the hockey players and gymnasts often worked out at the same time in the summers. Both of us were always hurt, so we met in the training room, Pitlick says. Pitlick left college to play with the National Hockey League with a year left before graduating much to Lisa s dismay; she encouraged him to finish, and he did eventually earn a degree after nine years of chipping away at it. Lance and Lisa married in 1992. Lance says he knew he wanted to marry Lisa after spending so much time apart, while he was on the road and she finished school. Lisa says she knew early on that Lance was the one. He s just a good person through and through, she says. Lance played in the minor leagues for the first 5 years of his career, and he counts his first National Hockey League game as one of his best moments. By that time Pitlick was 27 years old, and it was unusual for someone his age to get a shot in the pros. He was playing for the Ottawa Senators, and the general manager asked the team s photographer to snap a photo of Pitlick during the game because it would be his last game, but Pitlick had different plans. He went on to play 393 games for the National Hockey League throughout the course of eight seasons. I was not the most talented person by any stretch of the imagination, but I found a niche, and if you work for something and stay with it, sometimes it works out, Pitlick says. Lisa followed him to the cities his career led him, but they came back to Minnesota every summer. We would make home wherever we were playing, he says. We just loved moving. It s tough, but we got pretty good at it. We could fit everything into our car and a 5-by-8-foot trailer we lived pretty simply. After the couple started having children, they set up a more permanent home in Minnesota. Pitlick played until 2002 his 13th season then realized his body just couldn t take it anymore. He was playing not to get hurt, and that s not how he wanted to play. He retired after four weeks of training camp with back, hip and knee problems. He came home, a 34-year-old retiree, and realized he d have to find a new place for himself in the world. He had thought a little bit about what he might want to do after hockey, though. I ve always read business books, and I had a counseling degree, so I prepared myself the best I could, he says. But if back then anyone had said to me I d be doing what I m doing, I d have said no way. 3 Quick Questions with Lance Pitlick What do you hope your kids will learn from you? // A respect of others, the value of hard work, and setting goals and going after them being passionate. How do you define success? // Loving to get up every morning and do what you re doing. When you get to the point where you don t have enough hours in the day, you re doing something right. What s a typical day like? // A lot of times I ll get up at 3 o clock [a.m.], and I ll work until the kids get up for school. Then I ll lay down in the afternoon for an hour. I can do that a few days a week. I m a napper. Pro-athletes do that. 2 4 p.m., you don t call. 4 MARCH 2008 PLYMOUTH MAGAZINE Reprinted with permission of the publisher. 2008 Metropolitan Media Group, Inc., all rights reserved. Any reproduction of this document is strictly prohibited. For reprints call 952-767-2600.

Pitlick & Hockey: If it s coaching on the ice, researching drills and coaching philosophies, flooding my outdoor rink, sharpening skates or building the Sweet Hockey Products business, I love it all. It is the greatest game in the world. A Dream Career > After five years in the minor leagues, Lance Pitlick went pro in the National Hockey League and played for eight more seasons before retiring in 2002. family time > Lance Pitlick and Lisa, a former elite gymnast, with Rem, 10, and Rhett, 6. Lisa says one of the reasons she and Lance are so close is they ve shared successful athletic careers and struggled with injuries collectively they ve had 16 surgeries. Pitlick s retirement changed the whole family dynamic, and there was a period of adjustment. They say it takes about two years before you plan out and figure out what you re going to do, Pitlick says. You ve got to kind of find your path. A lot of guys really struggle with what they re going to do. It s much like when someone retires after working a lifelong job, and now what are you going to do? You can only eat chips and watch soaps for so long. The Pitlicks had hired independent builder Mike Michelson to remodel their cabin, and Michelson hadn t found anyone to help him with the job, so Pitlick volunteered. I didn t know anything about construction, but asked if I could help him, Pitlick says. I ended up working the next two years remodeling cabins and helping him build his current house. Every weekend Pitlick drove home to see his family or the family would visit him at the cabin. By the time his children Rem, 10, and Rhett, 6 were both in school, Pitlick was back at home full time and coaching children s hockey. There s nothing better than being on the ice with a kid that wants to get better, says Pitlick, who has coached for about six years and had his own hockey school in the 1990s. Pitlick wants every player he works with to improve and hopes he s teaching his players to enjoy the game, whether or not they play in high school or beyond. I m just trying to get them passionate about something, if it s hockey or anything, Pitlick says. It s not just about coaching; you re teaching them life lessons of having something to shoot for and working for it. Pitlick loves being on the ice. He bought the Plymouth house he lives in because it had a pond in the back yard that becomes a rink for his kids in the winter, and coaching allows him to stay connected to the game. Wayzata gets a couple of hours of ice for all the coaches on Thursday nights, and we just play pick-up hockey, Pitlick says. I go there every once in a while... Last night I think there were 30 guys there they just love hockey. That s all you really look for. SWEET HOCKEY PRODUCTS web: www.sweethockeyproducts.com email: lance.pitlick@sweethockeyproducts.com phone: 1-877-793-3883 - 1-877-SWEET-83