{"id":40057,"date":"2011-12-06T05:00:33","date_gmt":"2011-12-06T11:00:33","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=40057"},"modified":"2020-08-24T21:22:50","modified_gmt":"2020-08-25T02:22:50","slug":"california-love-western-michigans-golden-state-septet-a-tight-group","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2011\/12\/06\/california-love-western-michigans-golden-state-septet-a-tight-group\/","title":{"rendered":"California Love: Western Michigan’s Golden State septet a tight group"},"content":{"rendered":"
It’s becoming less and less unusual for college hockey players to come from non-traditional recruiting areas, with players coming from places like Arizona, Florida, Texas and even California.<\/p>\n
Western Michigan is a prime example of how players don’t need to come from the Midwest or East Coast to make an impact. The Broncos have seven players from California on this season’s roster.<\/p>\n
Yes, seven — as in almost 25 percent of the roster. New coach Andy Murray also has experience out West from his time behind the Los Angeles Kings’ bench.<\/p>\n
All seven players — forwards Chase Balisy<\/a>, Brett Beebe<\/a>, J.J. Crew<\/a> and Robert Francis<\/a> and defensemen Dennis Brown<\/a>, Garrett Haar<\/a> and Matt Tennyson<\/a> — all wound up in Kalamazoo with a different story to tell.<\/p>\n With a Toronto-born father, hockey has been in Balisy’s blood since birth.<\/p>\n Literally.<\/p>\n “My dad was the one who really got me started playing hockey,” Balisy said. “He grew up in Toronto and played growing up, so he got me started. Hockey really wasn’t that big back when I was playing in California. There wasn’t even a AAA team and now I know there are a few AAA teams down there. My dad was probably my biggest hockey influence in California and my dad used to get season tickets to see the Ducks, so just going to those games and watching pro hockey really influenced me when I was younger.”<\/p>\n Balisy, the second U.S. National Team Development Program alumnus to play for the Broncos (teammate Greg Squires is the other and North Dakota transfer Mike Cichy will be the third next season) and played for the Long Beach Junior Ice Dogs and Anaheim Junior Ducks as a youth, winning two state titles along the way.<\/p>\n Once he wound up in Ann Arbor donning the red, white and blue, getting a Division I scholarship wasn’t as easy as it seemed to be for some of his teammates. He committed to WMU just a few months before last season and was drafted by the Nashville Predators last summer.<\/p>\n “After my two years at the NTDP, I really didn’t have too many offers and wasn’t sure where I was going for the next year,” Balisy said. “[Former Western Michigan] coach [Jeff] Blashill got the job at Western and he offered me and I knew I would have a chance to play right away and that was something that I was looking for.<\/p>\n “I would definitely say that the California kids on the team all have that California pride. We all love being from California and stick up for Cali when the haters on the team start to take some shots at it.”<\/p>\n When Beebe first started playing at the Squirt level, he estimates there were probably two AAA teams at the Pee Wee, Bantam and Midget levels and one was usually a national contender and the other a doormat.<\/p>\n “As I grew older, the number of AAA teams grew to four or five in the state and each team was very competitive,” said Beebe. “The amount of talented players seemed to get larger every year.”<\/p>\n Like many Californians, Beebe started playing roller hockey and gradually evolved into an ice hockey player when he was 10 years old.<\/p>\n “I started playing roller hockey on a school parking lot next door to my house in a small league,” Beebe said. “My next-door neighbors were older than me and played ice hockey and I wanted to fit in with them, so I took up the game. I started playing ice hockey when the Kings opened their new practice facility in El Segundo, just a few minutes from my house.”<\/p>\n Beebe’s biggest thrill as a youngster was winning a 16AAA national title with the California Wave. He also said that adversity shaped him into who he is today.<\/p>\n “You grow very close with your teammates in California because everyone usually comes from pretty far away and we face a lot of the same adversity,” Beebe said. “We traveled so much and practiced at terrible times because there were only so many rinks in the area, so we missed out on a lot of the things normal kids get to do like high school proms, football games, parties and having strong friendships with kids at school. Your teammates become your best friends and those friendships are things that I consider highlights of my minor hockey experience.<\/p>\n “Everyone involved with the LA Selects and Wave hockey programs were extremely influential in my youth hockey journey. My family was the biggest with how much they sacrificed so that I could pursue my dream, especially my sister who didn’t get to go on normal vacations, but instead tagged along to my hockey tournaments that were usually in cold locations.”<\/p>\n Now in his junior season with the Broncos, Beebe said three years ago when he took his official visit to Kalamazoo while playing for the USHL’s Chicago Steel, he “immediately knew it was the right fit.”<\/p>\n “I visited a lot of other schools and none of them had the feel that WMU did,” Beebe said. “Having other California kids on the team makes every day at the rink a lot easier, mostly because we get teased as being “beach bums” or whatever, so having six other guys have my back is always nice. I think everyone is just jealous. I spend a lot of time with a couple of the California guys when we’re at home. We skate and work out together in the summers and definitely have grown closer at school.”<\/p>\n To be able to play for Murray is just the typical icing on the cake.<\/p>\n “Coach Murray is the best coach I have ever played for,” Beebe said. “He’s so detail-orientated and such a great motivator. He just wants everyone to give it their best every day and that’s something that I’ve always strived to attain. I loved watching the Kings when he coached them in LA and it’s cool to see some of the systems he used in the NHL be implemented into our team.<\/p>\n “Coach Murray teaches us a lot about hockey, but even more about life and how to be a good person. He puts values as a person and player above wins and losses, which is something not seen very often in collegiate or professional sports these days.”<\/p>\n Brown said he chose WMU after playing at the U.S. Select 17 Festival, where he was coached by former Broncos assistant coach Marc Fakler.<\/p>\nChase Balisy, Rancho Santa Margarita, Calif.<\/h4>\n
Brett Beebe, Redondo Beach, Calif.<\/h4>\n
Dennis Brown, Cypress, Calif.<\/h4>\n