|
The first rule in hockey is simple. Keep your head up. Charlie broke that
rule, first by watching his pass, and then by watching the shot. That’s
why he didn’t see Jake and Liam come at him — and they took full
advantage, delivering a thunderous check that drove Charlie backwards into
the boards. Jake followed that up with an elbow to his jaw, while Liam added
a nasty cross-check to his ribs for good measure.
Charlie lost it. Rather than skate back to the point, he stormed after Thomas,
who had regained the puck behind the net. Thomas slid a pass back to Pudge,
who one-timed it to Jake at the top of the circle. Charlie threw himself at
Thomas, but Thomas saw him coming and neatly sidestepped the check. Charlie
smashed into the boards and fell to the ice.
He looked up and groaned. Jake, Liam and Matt were charging up the ice, and
he was lying on his back, totally out of position. The red forwards had been
pressing when Charlie lost his temper and took a run at Thomas, so they were
also caught behind the play.
Poor Scott was faced with a three-on-one. Jake, Liam and Matt bore down on
him, as he backed up, furiously hoping to poke the puck away. He wouldn’t
get the chance. Liam cut across the blue line and dropped the puck to Jake,
who in turn sent it to a hard-charging Matt. Matt took the pass in full stride
and cut sharply towards the goal. Scott turned and tried to hold him up, but
he had been caught off guard by Jake’s pass and was unable to stop him.
Matt waited until the goalie had committed himself, and then shovelled a pass
across the crease to a wide-open Liam. The mischievous winger didn’t
put it in, however. With a big grin, he held the puck close to the line. The
goalie and Scott dove at him together, and when they did, Liam slid the puck
back across the crease to Jake, who slammed it into the net.
All the while Charlie could do nothing but watch. Everyone on the blue team’s
bench leapt to their feet, cheering and banging sticks on the boards. He knew
the goal was his fault. Jake and his crew had made him look like a fool. Neither
coach was going to be impressed by his little temper tantrum, and Charlie wondered
if he’d just blown his chance to make the team.
From Off the Crossbar. Text copyright © 2006, 2009 by David Skuy. All rights reserved.
|