Chattanooga Times Free Press

3,422 goals scored in hockey marathon

- BY JOHN WAWROW

BUFFALO, N.Y. — Fatigue gave way to emotion for Les Kuntar on Monday when he attempted to put into perspectiv­e spending the past 11 days playing one continuous hockey game.

Standing at center ice and sipping a beer, the 47-year-old former profession­al goalie’s eyes welled with tears as he recalled a poignant moment that occurred early one morning during the bid to break the record for longest game and raise money for cancer research.

“A lady came and she had a bandanna on her head, so she was obviously undergoing chemothera­py,” said Kuntar, whose career included playing six games for the Montreal Canadiens during the 1993-94 season.

“At the end, she came down with a white sign that said, ‘Thank you,’ and stuck it on the glass. And we all just stopped and tapped our sticks,” he said. “It’s just amazing how many people are touched by this whole thing.”

Kuntar and 39 other Buffalo recreation­al league players — many of them in their 40s — overcame injuries, illness and countless blisters to unofficial­ly set the record. It happened shortly after 7 a.m. when the official time clock mounted in the stands overlookin­g center ice hit 10 days, 10 hours, 3 minutes and 21 seconds. The time surpassed the previous mark recognized by the Guinness World Records of 250 hours, 3 minutes and 20 seconds, establishe­d during an outdoor game outside Edmonton, Alberta, in February 2015.

Fans stood, cheered and hollered, and play was stopped briefly as players hugged on the benches and on the ice. They played for about 32 more minutes before the final buzzer sounded for a game that began at 9 p.m. on June 22 and ended with Team Blue beating Team White 1,725-1,697.

Organizers must submit the full-length game video and official 54-page scoresheet to Guinness for verificati­on.

A far more important tally came afterward when player and organizer Mike Lesakowski announced they had raised more than $1.2 million for Buffalo’s Roswell Park Cancer Institute, surpassing their goal by $200,000.

An environmen­tal engineer, Lesakowski began organizing what became the “11 Day Power Play” a year ago. He was motivated to raise money after his wife, Amy, was successful­ly treated for breast cancer at Roswell in 2009, and in honor of his mother, who died of cancer last year.

“It was hard, getting up in the middle of the night, 2 a.m., sticking your feet in an ice bucket and getting wrapped up,” Lesakowski said. “But here we are. And it feels great right now.”

The two teams were split into mostly seven-player groupings (five skaters, a goalie and one substitute), which rotated playing four-hour shifts. Play stopped each hour for 10 minutes while the ice was cleaned.

Many were forced to take additional shifts to fill in for those who became sidelined by injuries and illness because rules prevented teams from adding replacemen­ts once the game began.

All 40 finished, though goalie Ryan Martin missed several days after coming down with strep throat and had to be quarantine­d so he didn’t infect other players. Nicholas Fattey continued playing despite a broken nose after being struck by a puck.

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