Inaugural year of elite Norwich Hockey Club a success on and off the ice

Dec. 26—NORWICH — When forward Felix Antoine Laflamme scored the first goal during the first home game for the Norwich Hockey Club in September, it was like he had scored a hat trick to Norwich Free Academy Head of School Brian Kelly.

The players skated to greet the frenzied fans pounding on the rink glass at the Rose Garden Ice Arena in Norwich.

"We said, 'My God, we made it. We're here,'" Kelly recalled of the milestone. "And when that first goal was scored, and to see the team go over to the glass and recognize the students, that was a cool moment for every part of it ― for the culture, for the sport, for the academics for everything. That was an amazing moment."

Kelly had three goals for the new elite, non-varsity Norwich Hockey Club which attracts international, tuition-paying students while support local youth hockey and introducing the game to students who would not otherwise experience it.

The Norwich Hockey Club's inaugural season has scored all those goals and more, bringing excitement to campus and putting NFA on the recruiting map for more than hockey, according to Kelly.

It even helped bring NFA's first Finnish student, female fencer Inka Pallasvesa, to campus when school officials met her on hockey recruiting trip.

She too stands at the glass at hockey games cheering, chanting and pounding along with the dozens of fellow student fans.

Beginning of a new era

Kelly had just arrived at NFA in the first COVID-19 summer of 2020, when campus safety director and veteran hockey coach Wayne Sheehan pitched the idea of creating an elite level team that would be affiliated with USA Hockey. Sheehan said it would attract international students and bring excitement to campus.

Kelly was intrigued but cautious, asking staff to research the idea. By the next spring, NFA was in a fiscal crisis. Enrollment was projected to drop. The pandemic closed international borders, cutting off tuition students.

Hockey was seen as a creative way to attract tuition students. The NFA Board of Trustees gave it a nod, and school leaders commissioned a team logo, with NFA's familiar red and white colors and throwback interlocking letters. The logo arrived before more than five players had committed to the team, Sheehan said.

Sheehan recruited in Canada and the U.S. He coached players at showcases in Quebec, built relationships with players and offered some a chance to shine and build a new program at NFA and get a better look from college coaches.

"Wayne did a great job really looking at this from a regional perspective," Kelly said.