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Ecolab Mixes Fun and Winning at Eagle River

By Greg Bates - Special to USAHockey.org, 03/11/15, 2:00PM MDT

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The Madison, Wis.-based team has advanced to the title game three times in seven years

Ecolab has found the winning formula.

In seven years of playing in the Labatt Blue/USA Hockey Pond Hockey Championships, the Madison, Wis.-based team has advanced to the title game in its division on three occasions.

“We’ve got a system down,” team member Nathaniel Boies said. “Playing for seven years, you get used to knowing how you can win. We have one guy go up and one guy kind of floats and two guys stay back, one guy is always in net. The system just works for us. It’s hard for other teams to score on us.”

That was certainly the case this year when Ecolab surrendered just 27 goals in five victories to propel them to the Silver 21+ Division championship game. However, in the title contest, Ecolab faced a tough Steny’s Bar and fell 16-7. Ecolab finished 5-1 in the tournament and placed runner-up for the second time.

Ecolab prides itself on its defense. The players make sure their opponents can’t get around them to take shots. It’s a system that Boies and his teammates tweak a little every year when they get on the pond.

“You learn new things every year,” said Boies, who has played for seven years. “Like my buddy [Jordan] Lemanski was saying, every year we’re getting slower and slower, we’re getting out of shape.”

The guys from Ecolab, which changes names every year in conjunction with its sponsor, won the Silver 21+ title in 2014 as Gould Electric 1.

Hanging out with the guy is important, but so is winning. That winning mindset is infectious when a team has only dropped one game in the last two years.

“Oh yeah, we’re all pretty competitive,” said Lemanski, who has also just wrapped up his seventh year at the Pond Hockey Championships. “I wouldn’t have fun if we came up and lost. I wouldn’t keep coming back if we lost. It’s always about having fun for sure, but I’m not having so much fun if we’re not winning.”

Ecolab fields another team every year in a 30+ division. The younger Ecolab guys got involved since they have brothers on their sister team, which is comprised of players who have competed in the Pond Hockey Championships for nine seasons.

“We’ve always pretty much done things with them,” Lemanski said. “When we got of age, we started coming up. A few guys played college hockey, and we’ve played hockey our whole lives together pretty much.”

Friends since they were 3 years old, the guys on Ecolab compete in a Sunday night adult league in Madison. They make it a point to make the 3 ½-hour drive north to Eagle River, Wis., every year for the Pond Hockey Championships.

“It’s a blast,” Lemanski said. “Just look around, it’s so sweet.”

The guys range in age from 25 to 28 and enjoy their time on and off the ice when they’re in Eagle River. It’s important for them to keep a strong bond with one another.

“Just being with these guys,” said Boies about the best part of the pond hockey weekend. “I’ve played with them all my life, and just being on the ice with them is an awesome experience.”

Since it has had a lot of success in the Silver 21+ Division, Ecolab has high aspirations for its team in the near future.

“We eventually want to go up to the Gold, the top division, and see if we can win that,” Boies said. “I think just to win the whole thing, that’s why we come up.”

When the guys get a little older, will they then move up to a 30+ division like their brothers?

“We’ll see if we can even skate at that point,” said Lemanski laughing.

Story from Red Line Editorial, Inc.

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Playing hockey can play a big role in staying healthy as an adult

Adult hockey not only promotes a healthy and active lifestyle, it requires it. As adults get older, they increasingly need to emphasize regular exercise and a nutritious diet. There’s no easy way to go about it—but there is a fun, challenging and rewarding option that sticks with you for life:

Hockey.

That’s right. Hockey is part of the perfect prescription for an adults’ health regiment. Just ask Olympian and former NHL player Steve Jensen.

“Physical fitness is something we should all be thinking about as we get older,” says Jensen, a longtime certified USA Hockey coach/official. “There’s no better activity than hockey to stay in shape.”

Dr. Michael Stuart, chief medical officer for USA Hockey, says the positives of playing hockey are contagious.

“Participation in ice hockey provides all the benefits of exercise while building friendships and ensuring a fun time,” says Stuart, who is also the vice-chair of Orthopedic Surgery and the co-director of the Sports Medicine Center at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

Dr. Stuart and colleague Dr. Edward Laskowski of the Mayo Clinic Sports Medicine Center sketch out specific benefits for hockey players:

  • Prevents excess weight gain and/or maintain weight loss.
  • Boosts high-density lipoprotein (HDL), or “good” cholesterol, and decreases unhealthy triglycerides, a cominbination that lowers your risk of cardiovascular diseases.
  • Stimulates various brain chemicals that may leave you feeling happier and more relaxed.
  • Improves muscle strength and boosts your endurance.
  • Relieves stress by helping you have fun and unwind, connect with friends and family, and be part of a team.
  • Involves physical activity that can help you fall asleep faster and deepen your sleep.

“Playing adult hockey is a great way to feel better, gain health benefits and have fun,” says Stuart, who also emphasizes maintaining a balanced diet. As for safety concerns, he adds: “The risk of injury is small in no-check, adult hockey games, but players should wear high-quality, well-fitting equipment, including a helmet and facial protection.”

The Minnesota-based Adult Hockey Association is starting to see employers embrace hockey as a health and performance benefit for its workforce. Some businesses are beginning to subsidize hockey registration fees for employees because they feel the activity fits the policy of their wellness programs.

“It’s not a lot, but we’re starting to see more and more trickle in,” says Dave Swenson, the AHA’s secretary treasurer who also serves on USA Hockey’s Adult Council and Minnesota Hockey’s Board of Directors.

Swenson wants this trend to continue growing, not just to see the number of players rise, but to reward players for committing to a healthy lifestyle.

“I’m hoping employers think about that a little more,” Swenson adds. “It’s not just softball leagues anymore. There are recreational hockey opportunities out there for adults.”

Hilary McNeish, a longtime player, ambassador, and current executive director of the Women’s Association of Colorado Hockey, says she sees the positive results in women’s hockey every day.

“There are so many benefits,” says McNeish, “but the quote I hear most from ladies is: ‘It’s like working out a lot, but it’s so fun, it doesn’t feel like working out!’”

Aside from the physical health gains, there’s also a mental side to the story that’s special to hockey players.

“There are so many positive experiences that come with it,” adds McNeish. “Being able to play a sport that so many deem difficult is also great for the mind and wonderful for your personal attitude.

“It’s great to see the looks from people when you can say, ‘I play hockey’”