Fan support key to Stars’ success STARS from page 7 first-year team.” Suderman said Lincoln residents are almost too supportive to be real hockey fans. “When we were losing 4-nothing against Omaha with nine minutes left last week (Dec. 31), the fans were cheering at every hit and at every shot, like we were winning,” he said. “If we were in any other city in the. league, the fans would’ve been booing us off the ice. “It’s kind of nice to not be strug gling and come into your own bam with the fans behind you.” Ten hours before the fans will pack the Ice Box for the Stars’ Jan. 3 game against the Dubuque (Iowa) Fighting Saints, three players slowly skate onto the ice. Hie three turn into six. Then 12. Then 18.’* Finally,' all 23 players are on the ice. Although it is only 9 a.m., the whole team must show up for the pre game skate. Exercise is light — a few laps around the arena, a few shots on the goaltenders arid some stretching. It gives Johnson a chance to remind his players of a few important points. ‘Tonight, I want all of you to give me 60 minutes of good hockey,” Johnson says to his team. What the players do before the game, he. says later, is their business. Louis Mass, the Stars’ team cap tain and a starting defenseman, said the hours before face-off are the same ev ery game. He said he usually goes home, takes a nap and has a good meal before he is supposed to show up in the locker room. “It’s like That every game,” he said. “If it’s not games, it’s practice. If it’s not practice, it’s work. “You can’t have much of a social life in this league.” Indeed, the USHL holds strict guidelines over its participants. All players must be between 16 and 19 years old before the Aug. 31 of the season during which they will be play ing, and must either hold a part-time job or be enrolled in a secondary or post-secondary school. Originally formed as the Midwest Junior Hockey League in 1972, the USHL merged with another Junior A hockey league in 1979. As one of three other Junior A leagues in North America, the goal of the USHL is to provide players and coaches an inten sive training environment and help the players to succeed to collegiate—and even professional — levels. The USHL season lasts from Sep tember to the Clark Cup Playoffs in April and March. If a USHL team is one of the three best in die league, it joins teams from two other Junior A leagues at the beginning of May in competition for the national title. If the Stars are not good enough to make either contest, their season will end after 54 games. The players must then return home and try again next year, if they are eligible. But Mass, a 20-year-old Star, will not be eligible for next season, so this will be the last year he will live like a junior league player. For now, home for Mass is a rented room in a Lincoln family’s house. Like most players, he must pay roughly $150 a month for his temporary stay with the family. The Stars organiza tion pays for any other costs — travel, food, equipment and transportation from their hometowns to Lincoln. None of the Lincoln Stars are from Nebraska—and none of them are paid for their time on the team. The team’s roster is packed with home-states from all over the conti nent: Rhode Island, Indiana, New Jer sey, Alaska, Minnesota and more. Three players — Suderman, Mazurak and forward Derek Reynolds — are from Saskatchewan, Canada. The fact that so many different backgrounds and personalities have been brought together to form a single team makes the Stars’ freshman-year achievements even more unusual. Mass attributed the Stars’ success to a combination of good team chem istry and exceptional planning on the part of the administrative staff. “I think Coach (Johnson) has done a great job gathering the guys he has,” Mass said. ‘Together, this team prob ably has further experience than most of die other teams in this league.” Before becoming die head coach and general manager of the Lincoln Stars, Johnson was part of every level of.the game. From playing NCAA D-l hockey with die University of North Dakota Fighting Sioux and professional hockey with the Vancouver Canucks of the National Hockey League to coaching die Fargo-Moorhead (N.D.) Bears of the USHL, Johnson has made hockey an integral part of his life. His time with the Lincoln Stars is becoming one of his best experiences with the game, he said. ~ : After five years of coaching in North Dakota, including his year with the Bears, Johnson said he wanted to help start a new team. “I knew there was a team coming (to Lincoln) at die end of last year,” he said. “I made it known I wanted to come here and try to get things started,” League officials came to Johnson near the end of last season and offered him the job. Johnson’s accomplish ments with the Fargo-Moorhead ex pansion team, which included a third place finish and a 28-17-1 record, made him a shoo-in for the position. Johnson said he had not been dis appointed by the team yet. “The overall organization here is much more prepared than most of the places I’ve been,” Johnson said. “They know how to pull die players together and get the fans into die stands.” But Johnson’s primary concern continues to be the players. “We’ve got a lot of good kids on this team,” he said. “We want to give them a chance to play and do what they want to do, and hopefully we can give them a hand in continuing with the game before they leave.” Mass is one player who is ready to leave. Originally from Anchorage, Alaska, Mass has played in die USHL for two seasons, leaving the Roches ter (Minn.) Mustangs to play for the Stars. “I asked to come here and play,” Mass said. “Steve (Johnson) is a good coach, and I felt like I needed a change of pace.” Now, instead of playing for his high school or for a Frontier League team in Alaska, Mass balances his position as captain of his new team and his job at a local construction company. Like all USHL players, though, Mass’ way of life is only temporary. Because he turned 20 in October, his Stars career will end with the season. But Mass is not worried. “Of course, my goal is to play pro hockey, but it takes a lot of hard work to get to that level,” Mass said. “The short term idea now is to get to col lege, play for a D-l (NCAA Division One) team somewhere and see what 1 ' - happens.” However, the possibility that pro hockey is not in Mass’ future nags at a comer of his mind, much as it does for most of the other players. “I’ve been playing hockey since I was 3,” Mass said. “I really can’t imagine doing anything else.” Neither can Derek Reynolds. The 20-year-old starting forward does not have the worries Mass has, though. Reynolds has already commit ted to play for the University of Ne braska at Omaha when its hockey team begins its inaugural season later this year. Reynolds spent the first half of this season juggling 15 credit hours at UNO and playing for the Stars. As a transfer student from Northern Michi gan University, he must obey NCAA guidelines and sit out a year before even practicing, bm, he said, “at least I get to spend that time with a good team.” Hailing from North Battleford, Saskatchewan, Reynolds has played in both Canadian leagues and on an NCAA team. His move to the Stars marks his first, and last, stint in the USHL. Like Mass, age requirements would nudge Reynolds out of the ” Stars’ spotlight regardless of his com mitment to the Mavericks. But, he said, being a part of the Stars’ first season makes him proud. “How can you not be proud?” he said. “We’ve got great fans and a good record. Coach Johnson’s got a good mix of guys here.” Reynolds said he thought the team’s exceptional record was a bit unusual for an expansion team, but welcome nonetheless. “You can give credit to any part of the team,” the USHL All-Star selec tion said. “Maybe it’s steady goaltending or good offensive or what ever, but the group here wins one way or another.” ’ . . V