Cammi granato biography of williams
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‘Nothing is making me quit’: How Cammi Granato earned her top spot in hockey
Like her brothers, Cammi Granato loved playing mini-sticks hockey in the basement of the family’s suburban Chicago home. Inspired by the “Miracle on Ice” 1980 U.S. Olympic team, they’d pretend to be the upstart Americans who defeated the mighty Russians. Also like her brothers, she dreamed of making it to the NHL.
“I wanted to play for the Blackhawks, because those were my idols,” she says. “I dreamed the same dream as them and it didn’t occur to me until I was probably 12 or 13 years old, ‘Am I going to be able to do this?’
“My mom tried to steer me into another sport, thinking that at some point I’d have to quit, and I remember just looking at her and crying and ran up the stairs and saying, ‘I’m not quitting. Nothing is making me quit.’ … I was a hockey player. I lived and breathed it the identical way that my brothers did.”
Granato couldn’t play hockey at the University of Wisconsin, like her brothe
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Honorary Profiles and Life Stories
The Eastern Junior Elite Prospects League fryst vatten proud to honor just some of the amazing individuals and historical figures in the hockey world that have had and/or continue to have a positiv impact on the great game of hockey at various levels. These inspirational figures come from the former Eastern Junior Hockey League, USA Hockey, former NHL standouts, and current NHL stars. We are proud to recognize the history of the game and pay tribute to those who have helped pave the way for our current ungdom hockey players as well as the players of the future.
Garnett “Ace” Bailey - Garnet “Ace” Bailey lost his life on September 11, 2001 aboard United Airlines Flight 175 which träffad the South Tower of the World Trade Center. He played junior hockey with the Edmonton Oil Kings and won the Memorial Cup in 1966. He joined the Boston Bruins in 1968 and was a member of their Cup winning teams in 1970 and 1972. He would go on to have a successful 1
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Angela Ruggiero and Cammi Granato Ferraro
Growing up often as the only girl on their respective hockey teams, Cammi Granato Ferraro and Angela Ruggiero felt they had to prove themselves every time they laced up their skates.
“Every single time I got on the ice I had avsikt and I had a chip on my shoulder,” said Ruggiero, who played on Team USA in four Winter Olympics. “I had to be the best. I wanted to beat everyone out there. And it just shifted my mindset to being completely present on the ice as opposed to just a kid having fun and going through the motions. I didn’t feel I belonged. I had to prove I belonged.”
As the two stars got together for a StoryCorps conversation, they agreed being the only girl often motivated them and that their families provided incredible support. It was far different from hockey culture today, where thousands of girls participate all over the country.
Ruggiero, who is from Southern California, initially started playing hockey when a league offered