SportsLife 2016, issue 1 | Page 26

Hunt Bros. turning Maginot Arena into roller hockey central By Scott Taylor, Photos courtesy Michael & Frank Hunt, Central Canadian Roller Hockey Mike and Frank Hunt with skates and a couple of roller hockey pucks If you happen to see or hear a little extra activity around Maginot Arena in St. Boniface these days, chalk it up to roller hockey. Seems a pair of ex-hockey playersturned-entrepreneurs, Michael and Frank Hunt have taken over three floors of the old arena and are preparing to bring one of the most popular forms of hockey in the United States back to Manitoba. The plan, according to Michael Hunt, is to create Central Canadian Roller Hockey as an off-season alternative for kids and adults who love ice hockey but aren’t sure they want to play the game 12 months of the year. “We are going all in to give an alternate sport for kids to play and along with that, help ice hockey players develop incredible skill sets to help the progress in their development,” said Michael Hunt. “I have permission from NHL players Bobby Ryan, Pat Maroon, Chris Terry, Cory Conacher to use their likenesses and let everyone know that roller hockey played an integral part in them making the NHL. The number of players playing in the NHL right now with roller hockey backgrounds is staggering and at some point we have to grow it as a viable sport, not only for roller hockey, but also to enhance our ice hockey players. “We have heard it forever, stop playing ice hockey year round, well here is an option. Plus we’re looking to have a year round facility.” Frank Hunt, 56, was an ice hockey goaltender who starred in the old 26 / sportslife CASH League. He played for the E.K.Elmwood Millionaires, St. Boniface Mohawks and ended his career with the Thunder Bay Twins where he led the club to an Allan Cup in 1984. He had a try out with the Jets as a 20-yearold in 1979, but didn’t make the team and went back to senior hockey. Michael Hunt, 47, has been one of Canada’s great roller hockey players. He won a bronze medal at the 2003 FIRS World Championship in Czech Republic, a silver medal at the 2004 Worlds in London, Ont., a silver at the 2005 World Championships in Duisberg, Germany and a gold at the 2008 IIHF World Championships in Bratislava, Slovakia. He has been a 13time national champion and a seventime national professional champion with the legendary Team Rink Rat. He’s also a certified hockey and roller hockey coach. Of course, he was originally a hockey player who started his career in St. James. He played high school hockey with the John Taylor Pipers, then junior with the St. James Canucks and then Senior with the Winkler Royals. But he didn’t earn international success until he moved to Boston and started playing pro roller hockey. Now he wants to give back some of the joy he’s received from the game to today’s young players. “I love this game for so many reasons,” he said. “We play four-onfour during regulation time. There is no icing, no offside and no body contact. It gives players more