The Denver Post

Degree from DU icing on the cake Shore enough

- By Mike Chambers Mike Chambers: mchambers@denverpost.com or @mikechambe­rs

Among the University of Denver’s hockeyplay­ing Shore boys, the third one is the charm when it comes to earning a degree.

Senior center Quentin Shore is on pace to graduate in June with a degree in finance, beating older brothers Drew and Nick — who left college early in 2012 and 2013, respective­ly, for profession­al hockey careers — to the chase.

Quentin’s NHL rights are owned by the Ottawa Senators, and he too might play at the next level. But he won’t need to hire financial advice.

“A lot of things the finance department teaches you is how to manage your wealth, so that’s something I look forward to doing in the future,” he said. “Hopefully, I’m going to be a pro hockey player and get a bunch of money. I’ve learned how to put it in the right places.”

Drew and Nick left DU after their junior years, Drew signing with the Florida Panthers and Nick with the Los Angeles Kings. Drew is playing for the Calgary Flames’ American Hockey League affiliate in Stockton, Calif., and The Denver-born Shore brothers who have played hockey for the University of Denver: Player Years GP Goals Pts. Drew Shore 2009-12 123 50 118 Nick Shore 2010-13 115 34 93 Quentin Shore 2012-current 125 31 76 Nick is the Kings’ third-line center.

Quentin said his brothers are pursuing their degrees with online classes, but neither will be done before him. Drew is majoring in communicat­ions, Nick in finance. Quentin is pursuing a minor in communicat­ions.

Their parents, David and Sarah, met while attending law school at DU, and the couple raised their sons in the Denver area. A fourth brother, 16-year-old Baker, also is a standout hockey player.

Quentin and the rest of the Pioneers are hoping to bounce back from last weekend’s two losses at North Dakota. The newly named Fighting Hawks rolled to 5-1 and 4-0 victories to give the Pioneers (7-5-2, 3-2-1 National Collegiate Hockey Conference) their first NCHC setbacks of the season.

Wednesday, DU coach Jim Montgomery said his players have had a poor week of practice heading into this weekend’s series against visiting St. Cloud State (12-4, 6-2 NCHC).

“Hardest thing as an athlete is to gain confidence, and it’s the easiest thing to lose. You have a couple bad games, and all of a sudden you start doubting yourselves,” Montgomery said. “Right now we have too many guys doubting themselves.”

The best way to move forward, Montgomery said, is to remember how North Dakota dominated.

“They have their best players playing 200foot hockey,” he said. “They were stripping us from behind — and it was their best players. Their hustle, work ethic and team commitment is really impressive.”

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