The Norwalk Hour

Players, executives weigh in on trailblazi­ng hockey stars

- By Jim Fuller james.fuller@ hearstmedi­act.com; @NHRJimFull­er

There was an unmistakab­le sense of optimism and excitement when the calendar flipped from April to May.

A new batch of players were anxiously awaiting the start of their first WNBA training camp. Then, a little more than a week after news came out of CBS Sports Network’s intention of televising 40 WNBA games this season, the WNBA announced that 20 more games would be live streamed on Twitter during the 2019 season. It was the kind of news that put a bounce into the steps of league officials heading into the WNBA’s 23rd campaign. However, not all was well in the world of women’s sports.

A day after the second of those announceme­nts came word of a sport on the other end of the spectrum.

Just a couple of weeks after a crowd of 6,053 turned out to see the United States win the IIHF Women’s World Championsh­ip for the fifth time in a row came the news that many of those responsibl­e for such dominance were taking drastic measures in the hopes of following the lead of the WNBA.

More than 200 of the world’s top female hockey players will not play profession­al hockey in North America this year with the hope that when the dust clears, their sacrifice will benefit future generation­s of hockey prodigies. Many of those players made the jump from the National Women’s Hockey League to the Canadian Women’s Hockey League after salaries were dramatical­ly cut in the NWHL. Not long before the start of the world championsh­ips, the rug was pulled out from underneath them when it was announced that the CWHL would be folding effective on May 1 leading to the declaratio­n by many of the most recognizab­le faces in women’s hockey.

“Worst case is we just fall back into pedaling around the current leagues that we have,” U.S. Olympic gold medalist and former Choate hockey star Hilary Knight told the Associated Press. “That would be unfortunat­e, and I don’t think that’s going to happen. But we have a chance to create a better future. We have a chance to build, to continue to be pioneers in our sport, and we’re going to take that opportunit­y.”

The best-case scenario would be for the NHL to throw its financial support into a new women’s hockey league. It is a formula that has worked in the basketball arena. On April 24, 1996 the NBA Board of Governors announced the creation of the WNBA with league play set to begin 14 months later. While four of the original eight WNBA franchises folded between 2003-09, there is still a sense of stability with the season to get underway later this month.

“We have a solid backer and partner in the WNBA, that is always first and foremost,” Atlanta Dream President and General Manager Chris Sienko said. “We have teams that are really starting to become more financiall­y stable, maybe they aren’t making money but they aren’t moving from place to place. If you look at other leagues like Arena Football, they were in how many cities and that is why they were unstable and the same with lacrosse. It is important to have a place where there is steadfast fans that help support the league.”

Make no mistake, without the backing of the NBA there would have been no talk about a 23rd WNBA season. The hockey players realize that having the NHL’s support is imperative if there is going to a profession­al league with the ability to display some staying power.

“The trajectory of every league is different,” said Amber Cox, vice president of the WNBA’s Connecticu­t Sun and National Lacrosse League’s New England Black Wolves. “The path to success for every league is basically different and they feel like this is the best thing for them.

“I think a lot of times we are focused on what hasn’t happened and we lose sight on how well we have done in terms of progressin­g the business, we talk about the corporate success from a league level, how attendance has grown ... I looked up something the other day and something like 4,100 people saw Wilt Chamberlai­n’s 100-point game and now you get 6-7,000 for games across the (WNBA) and I am proud of that and we continue to make progress. It is just about staying the course, being patient and continuing to get new people in the building and it is true for all women’s sports whether it is WNBA, NWSL (National Women’s Soccer League), the hockey league, we know these women are talented, they are are the top of their sport, and once people watch them one time, they are probably coming back again.”

New York Liberty coach Katie Smith has scored more points than any other U.S. women’s profession­al basketball player but before her successful run with the WNBA, she won two titles in the now defunct American Basketball League.

“The experience­s I have, I have been on a team that got sold and basically how this thing can be ripped out from under you at any moment, you should enjoy the moment that you are at but always nudging it forward and doing everything you can to promote the game,” Smith said. “All of us have a role in our individual lives to promote this league, to be accessible, to do a great job, to grow this game. I do feel that on an every day basis, I feel lucky to be able to have had a job in this league, to continue to have a job in this league, but I also know I have to work hard every single day to make sure that we win the game but I am also growing this game.”

Smith reflected on that fact that this generation of basketball phenoms live in a world where they can aspire to be the next Katie Smith, Lisa Leslie, Tina Thompson, Sue Bird, Candace Parker or Diana Taurasi.

“It is unreal, you can see it, you can aspire to be it, you can dream about it,” Smith said. “You are thinking about becoming a profession­al even before this, these kids are watching it and think about it at an early age and not just the men, it is special to have that but we also want to make sure that they know they have to do their part too, you have to appreciate what has happened before you and understand how special this is and we don’t want to let it go away.”

BALTIMORE — War of Will bounced back from a bumpy ride in the Kentucky Derby to win the Preakness Stakes on Saturday, holding off a field that included a riderless horse that threw his jockey out of the gate and kept running.

Trainer Mark Casse got his first Triple Crown victory, with War of Will unfazed starting from the inside No. 1 post position for the second consecutiv­e race. War of Will endured a rough trip and was interfered with in the Kentucky Derby, which led to firstplace finisher Maximum Security being disqualifi­ed.

Casse was just thankful War of Will didn’t go down in the Derby, which could’ve been a multihorse catastroph­e.

“This is even I think probably more special given everything that we’ve been through,” Casse said. “I’m not even calling it redemption. I didn’t feel like he got his fair shot, and that’s all I wanted — a fair shot. And he showed what he had today.”

Bodexpress threw Hall of Fame jockey John Velazquez just out of the starting gate but still finished the race and did an extra lap around the Pimlico track. An outrider tried to swoop in at the top of the stretch and corral Bodexpress, but the horse sped up and passed a few competitor­s near the finish line — and kept going. Technicall­y, Bodexpress gets a did-notfinish.

“He wasn’t behaving well,” said Velazquez, who added he’s fine and would not seek medical attention. “When the doors opened, I was off right from the start and he kind of jumped sideways, and I had my feet out sideways and I lost my balance and went out.”

War of Will made a move around the final turn led by jockey Tyler Gaffalione and didn’t relent down the stretch. Hard-charging late addition Everfast came in second and Owendale third.

Casse, 58, entered a horse in the Preakness for the fifth time and came closest two years ago when Classic Empire finished second.

“I’m just very happy for Mark to get his first Classic win,” Gaffalione said. “Very happy for the horse. He deserved it more than anything. He’s so special.”

It’s also a breakthrou­gh for Gaffalione, who has become something of a rising star since being named top apprentice rider in 2015. Gaffalione, 24, was aboard War of Will for the colt’s sixth consecutiv­e race and came away with the biggest victory of his young career.

“It really hasn’t even hit me yet,” he said. “I can’t even put it into words.

Bob Baffert-trained Improbable was beaten as the favorite for the second consecutiv­e Triple Crown race. Improbable finished sixth in the 13-horse field that was the biggest at the Preakness since 2011.

It was the first Preakness run without the Kentucky Derby winner since 1996 — this time without the horse that crossed the finish line first and the long-shot Country House who was elevated to first after Maximum Security was disqualifi­ed for interferen­ce. Go back to 1951 for the last time the Preakness was run without the top four finishers from the Derby.

The race was run at a tumultuous time for horse racing.

After 23 horse fatalities at Santa Anita Park over a three-month span, there was another in training Friday, and a filly collapsed and died after a race at Pimlico on Friday. Then there was the disqualifi­cation of Maximum Security at Churchill Downs and the ensuing lawsuit filed by owners Gary and Mary West and suspension handed down to jockey Luis Saez.

 ?? Willie J. Allen Jr. / Associated Press ?? In this Nov. 12, 2017, file photo, the United States’ Hilary Knight controls the puck in front of Canada’s Meaghan Mikkelson during the second period of the Four Nations Cup championsh­ip hockey game in Tampa, Fla.
Willie J. Allen Jr. / Associated Press In this Nov. 12, 2017, file photo, the United States’ Hilary Knight controls the puck in front of Canada’s Meaghan Mikkelson during the second period of the Four Nations Cup championsh­ip hockey game in Tampa, Fla.
 ?? Jessica Hill / Associated Press ?? New York Liberty head coach Katie Smith, left, talks with assistant coach Herb Williams during the second half of a preseason WNBA game Tuesday in Uncasville.
Jessica Hill / Associated Press New York Liberty head coach Katie Smith, left, talks with assistant coach Herb Williams during the second half of a preseason WNBA game Tuesday in Uncasville.

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