âLeading by example is a big thing,â Kalscheur said. âI was constantly out there for hours every day, and it almost turned into a job. But the end result and seeing everyone use it kind of touches my heart, in a way. Itâs kind of like, oh, it was all worth it.âÂ
Chafe estimated 30-35 players in the Middleton hockey program helped in some capacity during the project.Â
Building the rinks as a team really built camaraderie with the players. The seniors bonded with the underclassmen and showed them the ropes in being successful athletes on and off the ice.
âItâs a great way to kind of band together and put all your efforts towards one thing, even if it might not be like a win or playing hockey â but it still has the same general kind of meaning behind it,â Ruhly said. âIt was working together and just kind of executing it as a team. I think I made a lot more connections with freshmen than I wouldnât have otherwise through the project. I feel like everyoneâs a little closer as a group now because of it.âÂ
From the first day the rinks were able to be skated on, they attracted plenty of interest.
âThe biggest surprise has been how much just community people have come out there,â Chafe said. âI thought there would be one or two people out there from time to time, and thereâs usually 10 or 20 people out there from time to time.â
âMYHA appreciates the work that Steve and the high school players did to get these rinks up and running,â Middleton Youth Hockey Association communications director Aubrey Starr said. âWe have even had new members join MYHA that had kids getting exposed to hockey on those sheets of ice.â
The new rinks also benefited another good cause. The popular Super Noah hockey game was held on Feb. 13 to raise money for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. Organized by Middleton High School hockey player Ava Jambor, the third annual event was started as a way to support Noah Sanger, who was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia when he was 4 ½ years old. The youngster has been cancer free since March 2020.
The Middleton hockey players have been able to get onto their outdoor rinks a couple times to compete in some 3-on-3 games.Â
The Middleton youth hockey team ended up having a season this year, competing in a shortened season, but the players were happy to just get on the ice. It was payoff for completing their community project.Â
Finishing up the rinks was a relief. Along the way, the players ran into some hiccups: air bubbles in the sheets of ice, one rink sprang a leak and the players didnât get to flood on the day they planned. But through it all, the players pushed through and learned some valuable life lessons along the way.
âSometimes youâve just got to roll up your sleeves and do it,â Chafe said. âSometimes you donât know whatâs going to happen and sometimes you fail. I think another great lesson is that you learn as much or more from your failures than you do your successes. They kept bumping into obstacles and they just persevered and were able to get to the other side.âÂ
Said Ruhly: âI think we did a really good job. I think we did better than my expectations, which is great. I think the community really enjoyed what we did and hopefully itâs here to stay for a while, because weâre donating everything to the city afterwards.âÂ
Story from Red Line Editorial, Inc.