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06-12-07
- Greek hockey - against all odds
Efforts by leaders like Kalyvas bring the Greek national team back to IIHF competitions.
If there was a gold
medal awarded for perseverance and determination to
overcome severe hardships, the national hockey team
of Greece would be a richly deserving winner. The
story of the players’ inspiring fight to keep their
team together – and keep the sport of ice hockey
alive in their homeland – has all the makings of a
Hollywood film.
For most of the last
fourteen years, the Greek team has persevered in the
face of long odds. In the 1990s, the Greek
government cut off all funding to the hockey
program. Since 2003, Greece has been just one of one
two European member countries without a viable
hockey rink in the country.
Through it all,
the Greek hockey players found ways to persevere.
Under the leadership of team captain Dimitris
Kalyvas, the players have gone to extraordinary
lengths to stay together on and off the ice. The
players pooled their own resources to continue
playing, even self-funding trips to practice and
play in the Czech Republic.
All the while,
they lobbied anyone who would listen about the need
for a rink in their country. The team also applied
to the IIHF for permission to compete
internationally for the first time since 1999.
The players’ tireless efforts have paid off. The
Greek government has approved construction of a rink
and the team now receives funding from the Hellenic
Ice Sports Federation. In September, at the IIHF’s
semi-annual congress in Vancouver, the Greek
national team received approval to participate in
the 2008 Division III World Championship
qualification tournament taking place in Sarajevo,
Bosnia and Herzegovina, from February 15-17, 2008.
Best of all, the sport of hockey has not
only managed to survive in Greece through the trials
and tribulations. It has actually grown.
“All these years, there has been an increase in the
number of players,” said Kalyvas. “We have six teams
that play inline hockey in Greece since there is no
ice rink yet, or travel to Bulgaria to play games
against other. Most of the teams have their own
websites. And the national team continues to travel
to the Czech Republic to prepare for the World
Championship qualifications.” Throughout the
entire process, Kalyvas and the other
team members have drawn inspiration from an unlikely
source: turn of the 20th Century African-American
political leader, educator and author Booker T.
Washington. A quote from Washington adorns the front
page of Team Greece’s website: “You measure the size
of an accomplishment by the obstacles you had to
overcome to reach your goals.”
...continuation
The story of the
Greek ice hockey team starts in the mid-to-late
1980s. In 1989, the first Greek ice hockey
championships took place on an Olympic-sized ice
surface at Peace and Friendship Stadium, marking the
first time organized hockey games were played on an
International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF)
regulation-sized rink. With growing youth
participation in the sport, the Hellenic Ice Sports
Federation formed the first Greek national junior
hockey team in 1990. The team participated in the
IIHF Pool C World Junior Championships in
Yugoslavia. The next year, Team Greece took part in
the IIHF Under-20 tournament held in Italy.
In 1992, the first adult-level version of Team
Greece took shape shortly before the upcoming IIHF
Pool C World Championships in South Africa. Despite
having only two weeks of serious training, the squad
won the bronze medal in the tournament. While
the Greek ice hockey community remained small (about
500 registered players of all ages), the sport
seemed on its way to gaining a niche in the country.
But in 1993, there was a change in political power
after the Greek elections. For the next 13 years,
Greek hockey received no public funding. Government help or not, the national
team members remained determined to play on wearing
the Hellas crest. The players took over funding
their sport themselves, pooling their money to rent
ice time, purchase their own equipment and travel to
tournaments abroad. Meanwhile, the rest of Greece’s
hockey-playing community supported their comrades
any way they could.
Team Greece found a way
to send entries to the 1996 European Junior
Championships, winning one of five matches. In March
1998, the men's national team went to the IIHF Pool
D World Championships in South Africa. They, too,
managed to win one game. The following year, the
team played in the Worlds for the final time.
Despite the financial and organisational
problems of Greek hockey, the players clung
stubbornly to the sport they loved. But the events
of the next several years brought hockey in Greece
to the brink of extinction.
In 2001, the
lease ran out on the land where Greece’s main rink,
called Moschato, stood. The National Bank of Greece,
which owned the land, wanted to put it to
potentially more profitable use. The rink was closed
permanently. Despite the players’ efforts to save
it, the facility was later torn down.
“The
younger players, the ones that learned the sport of
ice hockey in Greece, all quit or switched to inline
hockey,” says Kalyvas. “The number of Greek ice
hockey players went from about 500 down to 40 within
a few years.” The remaining players soldiered on as
best they could. The death of Greek ice hockey
seemed inevitable when, in 2003, the last remaining
rink in Greece closed.
Somehow, the national
team players found a way to regroup. Kalyvas led the
fight for survival along with assistant captain
Orestis Tilios, the only player who has suited up
for every version of Team Greece (both junior and
senior team) and Czech-born defenseman Ionnis Ziakas,
the other remaining player from the 1990 team.
 After the rink closures, Kalyvas and company
showed remarkable resolve and creativity. Under the
captain’s leadership, the players tied the
traditional rout of writing letters to influential
Greek politicians, including the prime minister.
They contacted newspapers. They appealed for help to
IIHF.
In between their lobbying efforts,
Team Greece found time to do what they loved most –
play hockey. In Greece, they assembled to play
inline hockey. More ambitiously, they organised
trips to the Czech Republic two or three times a
year, scraping together the funds to pay all of
their own expenses.
By 2005, there was
little tangible progress in the players’ drive to
get a new rink built in Greece. The remaining
players, already a close-knit bunch, relied on each
other to keep spirits from sagging. Leading by
example, the team leadership group tried to make
sure of it. Nevertheless, Greek hockey seemed to be
living on borrowed time.
“Each trip to the
Czech Republic cost us approximately 900 Euros each.
It was a lot of expense for us to absorb, but we
need the place to play,” says Kalyvas.
Just
as it appeared the final buzzer would sound on Greek
hockey, the very thing that nearly destroy the sport
— budgetary quibbling between rival political
politics — helped save it. With another party change
in parliamentary control in 2004, there was a
renewed push to fund Greek ice hockey. Team
Greece has received some desperately needed help to
continue the national team hockey program. The Ice
Sports Federation put up the funding for two yearly
national team trips to the Czech Republic. In March
2006, the national team formed a new tournament
called “the Acropolis Cup” held in the Czech
Republic. The team has since returned twice to the
Czech Republic and will return again this month to
play in Zlin. Meanwhile, Kalyvas intensified his
efforts to get the Greek team back into
IIHF-sanctioned competitions. “At the IIHF
Annual-Congress in Riga, Latvia, in March 2006, I
heard the IIHF Council talk about Mongolia and their
effort to keep the sport alive in their country,”
said Kalyvas. “When I came back to Greece, I sent a
very long e-mail detailing all our trips and the
efforts taken by the team since 2000. The reply by
the IIHF was amazement – they didn't know that ice
hockey still existed in Greece.”
Subsequently, the IIHF sent two Council members to
Athens to investigate the progress of the sport. The
officials were satisfied that, despite the current
lack of a rink in Greece, the sport and national
team remain viable.
At the semi-annual
congress in Vancouver the Greeks received permission
to take part in the Division III World Championship
qualification tournament in Bosnia & Herzegovina.
The Division III World Championships will be held in
Luxembourg in March.
“We’re hockey players,
and our goal is to play hockey,” said Kalyvas. “It’s
gratifying that our team and our sport will continue
in Greece, but the work has only just begun. We’re
determined to succeed.”
BILL MELTZER
|Source:
iihf.com
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