Game On Magazine - April 2017 GameOn-Apr2017-P001-144-ONLINE | Page 60

RHA NATIONALS With Evan Herman you know what you’re getting every time he steps on the ice, as good a hockey player as he is, he’s an even better person and I developed a love for the game and just kept playing.” Brook, meanwhile, grew up on a cattle farm in Western Manitoba, near Roblin. “I started playing when I was three or four years old,” he said. “I started with my dad. He was a really good hockey player. He came home and got me involved. He always wanted his kids to be good hockey players. I grew up in a small town and I always got lots of ice time. Every weekend I’d be skating and practicing. I played all my minor hockey in Roblin and last year I played Triple A Midget in Parkland.” Brook is a tall, lean young kid who should grow into his body. Her- man is smaller, but he’s still a feisty player on the ice. “With Evan Herman you know what you’re getting every time he steps on the ice’” said Purdie. “As good a hockey player as he is, he’s an even better person. He’s super polite with a real good character from a real good family. Those are the kind of guys you want on a team. “When we started recruiting, there was a group of eight or 10 kids who ran together. They played spring hockey together and that group included Winnipeg’s Seth Jarvis and Brandon’s Ty Thorpe. So I’d watched Evan play a couple of times, but this year, he’s just ma- tured as a player and as a person. He’s just a hard-working guy that you can count on on every shift.” Purdie knew little or nothing about Brook, although he was cer- tainly aware of Jakob’s older brother. “I didn’t know anything about Jakob coming into this year, but I had coached his brother Josh at the Canada Winter Games,” Purdie said. “I saw Jake play in the summer and obviously he has good size. He’s a kid who has developed this year. His outside speed and his shot are at the top of the charts. He’s had a quiet year in the sense that he’s a guy who leads by example. At the same time, both Jake and Evan aren’t afraid to say something if it’s needed. “Jake has come into his own as a player this year. He has devel- oped by leaps and bounds. Good things are going to happen to both those guys because of the kind of people they are. Not just in hock- ey, but in life in general.” Brook has been thrilled with his decision to play at RHA. “It’s been really good,” he said. “We’ve had lots of ice time to do special skills. We’ve been able to get lots of tips from the people who work at The Rink and school is really good. The teachers are great with us. They get us through all the schoolwork so we can get our schooling done. It’s been great. “Coming here has been worth it. We’ve all improved a lot. It just hasn’t improved my game, but playing here has improved every- body’s game. Myself, I’ve been able to get better, but so has our whole team. The boys are working out all the time and being on the ice every day has been great for everybody. It’s made everybody better.” And with the WHL Bantam Draft a month away, that’s all these young men could have asked for. n