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Ice Hockey Families Get Creative in Solving Time, Cost Concerns

By Stephen Whyno, NBC Philadelphia, 04/11/19, 11:00PM PDT

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Many families wrestle with the time and money needed to play youth sports, but those challenges can be even more significant when it comes to hockey, with all of its equipment and rinks that are sometimes far away. For the less wealthy, having a child who dreams of hockey can look like a nightmare.

Megan Lincoln couldn't put her son into hockey right away when he wanted to play.

She didn't have the time to take off from work to shuttle him to practice or the money to pour into a traditionally expensive sport.

"Nothing is cheap," Lincoln said. "There's nothing about hockey that is cheap. Maybe some laces."

But Reggie Hunter became a hockey player when the family found out Snider Hockey was offering free equipment and instruction 20 minutes from their New Jersey home. He learned to play multiple positions over time as his great-grandfather drove him to and from the rink in Pennsauken. That was seven years ago. Hunter, now 21, went on to play junior hockey.

Many families wrestle with the time and money needed to play youth sports, but those challenges can be even more significant when it comes to hockey, with all of its equipment and rinks that are sometimes far away. For the less wealthy, having a child who dreams of hockey can look like a nightmare.

"The challenge is that hockey is a very unique sport and it's a very expensive sport," said NHL diversity ambassador Willie O'Ree, who broke the league's color barrier in 1958. "To go into a sport shop and outfit a 10- to a 13-year-old boy or girl, it costs about $800, and a lot of these families, they just can't afford the money."