Times Colonist

Goalie Noah’s dancing makes him a star online

Eight-year-old’s hip-hop moves attract challenge from NHL

- PAOLA LORIGGIO

An eight-year-old hockey goalie whose hip-hop moves on the ice have made him an online sensation is relishing the prospect of being called up to the big leagues — for a dance-off.

Noah Young, who plays on a novice rep team in Brampton, Ont., has been pumping up the crowd with spontaneou­s on-ice dancing for years, his mother said Wednesday. But it was only once his performanc­e was captured on video and posted online last weekend that he drew internatio­nal attention.

The short dance routine, set to the song Juju On That Beat by Zay Hilfigerrr and Zayion McCall, has been viewed more than three million times on Facebook and even caught the eye of two profession­al players, the New Jersey Devils’ Adam Henrique, who is from Brantford, Ont., and Keith Kinkaid.

When asked by Henrique on Twitter whether he could rival Noah’s skills, Kinkaid, the team’s goalie, jokingly replied with a challenge: “I could give him a run for his money. Only one way to settle this . . . dance off.”

Noah’s mother, Paige Rowswell, said her son would be ecstatic to test his moves against a profession­al.

“He would lose it. I think he’d be crazy,” she said with a laugh.

The young goalie’s overnight fame has also attracted attention from the local profession­al minor hockey team, the Brampton Beast, and nearby junior and major junior teams, Rowswell said, adding Noah will be collaborat­ing with them in the near future.

The sudden spotlight has come as a shock to his family and friends, for whom Noah’s dancing is simply par for the course, she said. But Noah is unfazed, his mother said.

Although he has joked about becoming a celebrity, the hype hasn’t gone to his head, she said. And he certainly isn’t living a star lifestyle, she added.

“He just thought he could maybe stay up past bedtime and have a chocolate bar late and I was like: ‘No, sorry, you can’t,’ ” she said.

Hockey and dancing have always been his twin passions, she said, recalling how her son would “walk around with a goalie stick” at 10 months.

He started playing with his current team three years ago and took up hip-hop dancing lessons last year, combining both talents on the ice.

The dance that spurred his fame took place Saturday, during the team’s last playoff game, Rowswell said.

But Noah will be back on the ice soon for spring league hockey and will also soon start inline hockey, though it’s harder to dance on inline skates, she said.

He plans to keep playing, but Noah doesn’t necessaril­y have his heart set on joining the pro ranks, his mother said.

“You hear kids talking about the NHL but he talks more about playing hockey in university when he’s older,” she said.

He also doesn’t plan on giving up his trademark moves, she said. “He’ll keep dancing, that’s what he says: ‘I’m just going to keep doing what I’m doing.’ ”

 ??  ?? Noah Young in goal for his team in Brampton, Ont. His dance routine has been viewed more than three million times on Facebook.
Noah Young in goal for his team in Brampton, Ont. His dance routine has been viewed more than three million times on Facebook.

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