James Downie is in a hurry. The 21-year-old netminder has high hopes for the future and is enjoying his first season in the Elite League with the Manchester Storm. Last week, the former Australia U18 international sat down with BIHÂ to discuss suiting up for his dadâs former team, the mental challenges of playing in goal, and his first impressions of life under Ryan Finnerty.
James Downie Q&A:
I feel like we should start in Manchester⦠how do you feel your first season with the Storm is going so far?
Itâs going well, Iâve definitely played more than I signed for. I think Iâve taken advantage of that and played well in the games when I got an opportunity to play. So, yeah, Iâm really enjoying it right now.
How do you get in the right mindset to play when a lot of your minutes have come through injury or in relief?
Basically, by just being ready as if youâre playing the game. Going into it with the mindset of just being there to sit on the bench isnât good, it takes you out of the game mentally. I feel like always just get prepared in the same way every game and just get ready.
You never know when itâs going to happen, right? So, you should always prepare for that.
Your dad [Colin] played for the Storm in 1995-96, it must be special to play for the same team at this point in your career?
Yeah, of course, itâs awesome. He always told me about it when I was younger, so being here is a very cool thing. It means so much more to me through that, yeah.
I was looking at both of your Elite Prospect pages earlier, am I right in thinking he was your goalie coach for a couple of years back in Sydney?
Note: James represented the Sydney Bears between 2014 and 2017.
He actually started coaching me when I was like four until I was about 10, so Iâve always really had him as a coach. We did all the drills after practice and stuff, he actually kind of forced me to be a goalie â I always wanted to be a player, scoring the goals.
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James Downie x Colin Downie #WeAreStorm | #Manchester pic.twitter.com/rlCCItDmXO
â Manchester Storm | #WeAreStorm (@Mcr_Storm) January 5, 2022
But, yeah, when we moved to Australia, he was our team coach but also registered as the goalie coach too. Heâs a good goalie coach, so itâs nice to have had him around helping me out, thatâs for sure.
Were you always a goalie or did you move to the position later on?
I moved to the position after two years of playing hockey⦠all I was doing was cross-checking people because I couldnât skate. Still to this day, as a player, I cannot skate. I think I was five the first time [I played in goal] and I started skating when I was three. So, I moved over from [being] a player â I was terrible.
Life in the Australian Ice Hockey League:
Youâve played five seasons in the Australian Ice Hockey League (AIHL), can you run us through what playing in the league is like? Obviously, the teams are further apart than in the EIHLâ¦
There are only two practices per week, three if [teams] can and the rink is available. Most of the ice time back home is taken by public skating â so yeah, they only practice three days a week with two games at the weekend.
Most people have jobs, I have a job when Iâm home. I think this year Iâll be mining on the side because the teams canât pay you, they just supply with skates and sticks and that stuff. Honestly, itâs a pretty simple league. You travel to Perth, which is the furthest trip â itâs a five-hour plane ride.
For example, if you play for Newcastle, Canberra, is just a bus drive. Sydney is an hour and a half, so just drive yourself or grab the bus.
I really enjoy playing back home. Itâs nice to be able to have the extra season when it finishes here to get back in the gist of things instead of sitting at home or just working out. Itâs good to be on the ice, getting back in the game, especially for the early parts of the season.
Just to double-check⦠[do] you work as a miner during the summer?
Yeah, this year will be my first time doing a mining job in the shafts, which Iâm pretty excited about. I heard itâs dangerous but I should be able to enjoy it. Previously, Iâve worked as a plumber and my certification is in that, itâs just a little bit of extra money on the side.
Looking to the Future:
What are your aspirations for the future, what does the future hold for you?
I hope good things!
I really want to progress and get a little bit better in Manchester, I think itâs a good spot for all the young Brits. For example, weâve got Ben Solder, [Jacob] Lutwyche, Finlay [Ulrick] â theyâve all progressed. Youâve got [Joseph] Hazeldine as well, everyoneâs progressing pretty fast and getting up to speed [with the EIHL].
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James Downie ?? and the 2021/22 season squad take on @DundeeStars tonight at the Storm Shelter and we need ??? to make some noise as we battle for valuable Elite League points! ?#WeAreStorm | #Manchester pic.twitter.com/25Iri3Gn1k
â Manchester Storm | #WeAreStorm (@Mcr_Storm) November 13, 2021
My aspirations at the end of coming out of the Elite League is definitely trying to go to Finland or Sweden, somewhere like that â maybe the Allsvenskan. Just a pretty high level of pro would be pretty nice. Itâs going to take some time, but I should get there in the end.
You mentioned that there are a lot of young British players in Manchester, which is quite rare for the Elite League. How is being on a team where a lot of your teammates are at a similar point in their career?
Itâs good, definitely â I think it brings everyone closer. Say you have a situation where you need to take someone, the older guys are all good. But if you need someoneâs opinion thatâs the same age as you, Iâll ask.
First @officialEIHL pro win â
First pro assist â
Big saves to close out the match â
Man of the match â
Celly of the year âHave yourself a night, @JamesDownie30 ? pic.twitter.com/4s4x2VkEjv
â Manchester Storm | #WeAreStorm (@Mcr_Storm) November 13, 2021
Itâs also good on the ice [for] keeping the competitive level up. I think itâs one of the best things we can be doing right now, having a whole bunch of Brits on the team to develop them. I mean, it makes the IIHF team even better in the long run. Yeah, just the competitive level of the young Brits â itâs good to have.
What are your objectives for the end of the season?
Just to make the playoffs, weâre not looking down the ladder right now. Weâre looking up, trying to chase teams in a playoff spot. Weâve been playing really good hockey lately, just come short a few times with a couple of bad bounces.
Related: Forecasting the EIHLâs Intense Playoff Race: Elite League Takeaways
I donât think our play right now is even close to where weâre sitting in the table. Weâve had a couple of unfortunate games, things definitely went wrong â but that happens and we just have to prepare for these games and win them.
If you are to qualify for the postseason, do you think you could maybe surprise one of the top four?
Absolutely, we have the team to do it. Thereâs no reason why we donât have that in us. We have three really good forward lines and a solid defence. Jason [Bacashihua] is a top goalie, heâs played where heâs played [including the NHL], he knows the game very well. I truly believe that we could, yeah.
Mastering the Psychological Side of Goaltending:
You mentioned the other goalies on the team, have you learned anything from them in particular? Itâs been a difficult year with injuries for the group â but what has been your main takeaway from the year so far?
Of course, it is a development year â right?
We had [Matt] Ginn at the start of the year. Unfortunately heâs not on the ice anymore because of his injury, but I was learning quite a lot from him. He has a style that I wanted to learn.
[Jason] âBashâ, for example, has a different style of play to me â itâs very much old school â so I learn more about the mental side of the game, how to deal with certain situations, from him.
For example, we were playing Sheffield and werenât having the best game, and he came over to me and let me know the mental side of it. And that honestly goes a long way, I think itâs one of the most important things about hockey as a goaltender.
Ginner works with me after practices, these guys have played high-level pro â so itâs good to pick their brains.
You mentioned the mental side of the game as being as important as technical and physical aspects. How do you stay on top of the mental side of the game â because itâs perhaps even more difficult when your minutes are spread out?
When things arenât going well mentally, you just have to continue doing the same things that you always do. Thereâs no reason to do things that you donât usually do, thatâs usually when it gets even worse for you.
I donât really know, itâs just about always being in it. You canât really care about save percentage or goals or anything like that.
For me, this year, Iâm really not thinking about any of that. Itâs my first year in the league, Iâm just worried about the ice time and how well the teamâs doing.