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mfosterftw
3/6/2009, 12:00 AM
Quick reminder to everyone in DFW that the OU hockey team is playing at the AAC this Sunday after the Stars=Habs game...

http://www.usahockeymagazine.com/story.php?left_nav=0903&article=hockey-bradford-sam-0903&right_nav=normal


Hockey And the Heisman

By Danielle Bernstein

Oklahoma Football Star Sam Bradford Has His Roots In The Ice

http://www.usahockeymagazine.com/articles/0903/Sam-Bradford-sooners.jpghttp://www.usahockeymagazine.com/articles/0903/sam-bradford-hockey-kid.jpg

It was unbelievable. Almost too good to be true. And so shocking, in fact, that it stopped Sam Bradford dead in his tracks.

With a rock solid pocket presence, the accuracy of a sniper, and a Heisman trophy to prove it, it might be surprising to think anything could have this kind of effect on Oklahoma’s star quarterback.

But that’s exactly what happened when Bradford found out he would have the opportunity to meet his childhood hero and former NHL star Pavel Bure before a practice during the Sooners’ BCS National Championship game preparation in Miami.

“It was a complete surprise to me, but a moment I’ll never forget,” Bradford says.

“I mean, I almost lost my breath there for a second. I couldn’t believe it.”

Contrary to what his football stats might suggest, Bradford was a multi-sport athlete as a kid, one of his favorites being hockey. He quickly developed a love for the game and, on multiple occasions, tried to convince his parents it should be his top priority.

Sam Bradford as a hockey player“There was a time when he was young where he tried to get his mother and I to move to Vancouver so he could play hockey,” recalls Sam’s dad, Kent Bradford.

“I told him ‘we can’t move to Canada. Our lives are in Oklahoma.’ But he was pretty set on it.”

Though a busy schedule packed with almost every sport under the sun limited the amount of practices Sam could make, he excelled on the ice, playing for the Oklahoma City Junior Blazers travel team for two years under coach Mike McEwen, who won three Stanley Cups with the New York Islanders.

“He had great vision. Really smart,” McEwen says. “He had good hands and was a good skater, but he had slow feet back then.”

Sam’s hockey sense and leadership skills landed him the role as team captain, but once he got to high school, the reality set in that he would have to narrow down his many athletic activities –– a tough choice to make for someone now known for great decision making.

McEwen, seeing professional-caliber talent in Bradford, tried to convince Kent that hockey was the path for his son, a conversation he considers to be one of the strangest he’s ever had.

“I told Kent that if he stuck with hockey, he was good enough to make the NHL,” McEwen recalls. “He basically let me make my case for about five minutes and his smile just kept getting bigger and bigger. I knew I was on a sinking ship.”

Bradford hung up his skates before getting to high school, but it wasn’t until his junior year that he really committed to football.

McEwen was able to catch a football game at Putnam City North High School, where Bradford was the 17th-ranked quarterback in the nation and noticed something he hadn’t seen in his star center a few years earlier: quick feet.

“He was tall and lanky and looked kind of awkward out there, but he was good,” McEwen remembers.

And he only got better, eventually leading an offense that broke the NCAA’s single-season scoring record while shattering every passing record in Oklahoma history in the process. Even in a game very different from hockey, Bradford is using skills he learned on the ice.

“Hockey is so fast and unpredictable that it teaches you to think quickly and make snap decisions,” Bradford says. “I think that quality translates really well to playing quarterback.”

These skills have led him to some pretty big football games, and although he didn’t win the national championship, Bradford is returning to Oklahoma next season for another shot at it.

Expected to be a top NFL draft pick once he leaves school, Bradford obviously has a very bright future in football. But hockey isn’t completely out of his life quite yet. He catches up with his favorite team, the Canucks, when he gets a chance and hopes to someday take the ice again.

“I’m not sure there are many football coaches who would give me the green light to get back out on skates even in a recreational game,” he laughs. “But I doubt if I’ve played hockey for the last time.”

OUTrumpet
3/6/2009, 12:07 PM
I know he keeps up with the OU hockey team, my sister has a pic with him at an OU hockey game she recently attended.

badger
3/6/2009, 12:15 PM
Soooo... Sam plays basketball with Blake, plays golf with Desmond Howard, and now we find out he plays hockey too.

:P The reverend tee hee probably doesn't have this many talents... in sports, I mean. We all know that he circumcised the ebola out of Africa or whatever.

jumperstop
3/6/2009, 02:11 PM
To bad hockey is a boring sport, at least to watch it. If Sam had gone first round in the NHL draft I would have never known or cared. Soooo glad he's playing a much more entertaining sport at OU.

Crimson Kid
3/6/2009, 03:47 PM
To bad hockey is a boring sport, at least to watch it.


Speak for yourself, i love hockey and it's my fav sport, hockey isn't boring if you have have followed it more then a day or two.

badger
3/6/2009, 03:59 PM
Speak for yourself, i love hockey and it's my fav sport, hockey isn't boring if you have have followed it more then a day or two.

Some of my most fun days back in elementary/high school P.E. days were days we'd play hockey.

However, I wish they had a little bit more scoring. At least with low-scoring soccer you have a wide open field and no-protection hits :D

1890MilesToNorman
3/6/2009, 04:26 PM
Hockey is great, when I was a kid, Mom took us to the OKC Blazers many many times when they played at the fairgrounds. I remember one game it was 10 cent beer night, a big *** brawl broke out as the teams were leaving the ice and a lot of fans joined in the brawl. I was just a kid but thought that was pretty cool.

I saw Jerry Cheavers, Rick Middleton and several other future NHL stars when they played in the Arena at the fairgrounds.

OUTrumpet
3/6/2009, 04:44 PM
Maybe the next time some player from Texas cries about not making it to the Big 12 championship, Bradford could pull his jersey over his head and give him a few hooks and jabs?

Hey, the guy said he was good enough for the NHL...

OUWxGuesser
3/9/2009, 01:19 AM
First time I picked up a stick I lost my front 2 teeth so hockey was out. That said, I enjoy watching North Dakota hockey up here.... pretty much the OU of collegiate hockey. Just won another division cup. Sioux Yeah Yeah!

unbiasedtruth
3/9/2009, 01:33 AM
Hockey is great, when I was a kid, Mom took us to the OKC Blazers many many times when they played at the fairgrounds. I remember one game it was 10 cent beer night, a big *** brawl broke out as the teams were leaving the ice and a lot of fans joined in the brawl. I was just a kid but thought that was pretty cool.

I saw Jerry Cheavers, Rick Middleton and several other future NHL stars when they played in the Arena at the fairgrounds.


yep good times. Mom is from Meeeeechigan and a big hockey fan, used to go to Blazers games in the old Fairgrounds too. I think she still has about 12-15 Blazer hockey pucks laying around her house.....

crimson&cream
3/15/2009, 10:42 AM
To bad hockey is a boring sport.
That's a matter of personal opinion. Many will not agree with you and we're not going to agree with you just because you think it's boring, therefore who cares that you think it's boring other to call you out for such a narrow PERSONAL opinion, and what does it serve even uttering such a opinion.
I admit people do that all the time . I can stand that band , or that movie or etc , as if we're suppose to not like them also just because that person doesn't and that they feel the need to share their dislike. Whoopie!

Crimson Kid
3/15/2009, 02:23 PM
I also grew up watching the blazers and the OKC stars, i used to love free stick nights, we would smash soda cups and play in the hallways during periods.

Good times man.