The Grizz and I: A Journey from Colorado to Utah
Or, how my dad kindled my love for hockey in the Mountain West.
When I was seven years old, my father took me to what would be the second-to-last Colorado College hockey game at the original Broadmoor World Arena in Colorado Springs, CO. Colorado College defeated Western Michigan by a score of 3-0 in Game 2 of the first round in the 1994 WCHA Tournament. One of my first hockey games was a postseason win for the home team!
Alas, the CC Tigers couldn’t pull it out in the best-of-three opening round. A deciding Game 3 yielded a 3-2 overtime loss for Colorado College, the second first round tourney exit in as many seasons. The Tigers left its 56-year-old venue in March 1994 and it was demolished shortly after.
As an impressionable young kid, I was doubly devastated in having my favorite hockey team lose early on in the postseason and hearing their arena was being torn down. It would be the last hockey game I’d watch in Colorado for over 25 years, with my dad moving our family to the Salt Lake City suburb of Sandy, Utah in the summer of ‘94.
HOCKEY BACKGROUND BETWEEN THREE STATES
I have lived in Colorado, Idaho, and Utah for the majority of my life on this planet. The last is where I was born back in 1987 when my father was attending Salt Lake Golden Eagles games (more on this later). My family then bounced back and forth between states before ending up back in Utah. Oddly enough, as my family moved from Colorado to Utah, a pro hockey team was looking to soon do the same.
As chronicled in a previous article, the Grizzlies played one season in Colorado before the NHL’s Quebec Nordiques were purchased and moved to Denver in 1995. The newly named Colorado Avalanche needed a home in McNichols Sports Arena where the Grizzlies played, and essentially pushed the IHL team out of the Denver market. The Grizzlies then moved to Salt Lake City for the 1995-96 season.
And, I was there to witness that first Utah Grizzlies home game.
LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON
I have been wanting to write an article chronicling how my love of professional hockey began in The Beehive State when I was just eight years old. However, timing is everything when it comes to journalism, and it never lined up when it came to sitting down and writing it out. Finally typing out these words, however, reminded me just how much my dad and I both began our love of pro hockey in Salt Lake City (albeit at different times).
My father fell in love with the game while in the mid-1980s, becoming a fan of the Golden Eagles and short-statured centerman Doug Palazzari (who so happened to play his university years at…Colorado College). It makes sense that he carried this love of hockey over to Colorado Springs and the Tigers, and eventually, getting his only son in on the action as well.
PRO HOCKEY IN SALT LAKE
Let’s rewind for a brief history. The Golden Eagles played between three leagues from 1969 to 1994, mainly skating at The Salt Palace Arena for 22 of those 25 years along the Wasatch Range. After local businessman Larry H. Miller put up private financing to get a new arena built in 1990-91, Salt Lake played their final three seasons at the Delta Center before the franchise was sold to a Michigan-based ownership group and relocated to Detroit in 1994. After a year without pro hockey, the Grizzlies moved over one state to fill the void left by the Golden Eagles.
Thus, the door opened for the Delta Center to once again receive a pro hockey tenant, this time in the form of the rechristened UTAH Grizzlies. The club opened the season on the road against Phoenix on Friday, September 29, 1995, taking the Roadrunners to a shootout and earning a 6-5 victory (this was ten years before the NHL abolished the tie and instituted shootouts itself). The Grizzlies’ home opener was one week later on October 6, hosting the Peoria Rivermen at the aforementioned Delta Center.
WITNESSING THE FIRST UTAH GRIZZLIES HOME GAME
It was an odd feeling, walking up to such a massive arena for a hockey game. As previously mentioned, I was used to catching Colorado College on their home ice at the initial iteration of the World Arena. The intimate seating of an NCAA facility that only sat 3,000 fans paled in comparison to the then four-year-old Delta Center that sat 18,000 plus for both basketball and hockey [Looking back, the arena only hosted the Grizzlies for three seasons before Utah moved into the Maverik Center (formerly the E Center) ahead of the 1997-98 regular season].
I’ll be honest, I don’t remember much of the game itself. The opening video package with the Grizzlies skating with the Turner Cup is all that sticks out from the 25-year-old memory of the match-up. I recalled Utah winning, but that was about the extent of it. I had to do some research to find out the final result, a 4-2 victory for the Grizzlies. What a way to instill the love of the pro game into a young kid’s heart!
LIKE A ROLLING STONE
My family moved back to Colorado in 1996, right when the Avalanche were in the midst of their Stanley Cup Playoffs push. The Grizzlies became an afterthought for me as I sat in front of the television, watching Uwe Krupp blast a shot from the blue line and clinch an NHL championship for the Avalanche in Game 5 of the 1996 Stanley Cup Finals. We moved to Idaho in 2000, and the WCHL’s Idaho Steelheads then became the closest in-person game to watch. With a favorite pro team in the Avs and local team in the Steelies, it was easy for me to not keep tabs on the Grizz until they joined the ECHL (another foreshadowing alert).
Fast forward to November 2017. My love for hockey translated into a writing position, covering Idaho as a credentialed correspondent. In my two seasons covering the Steelheads, I witnessed Idaho face off against the Utah Grizzlies ten times in the regular season and once in the preseason. The Grizzlies and Steelheads (bears and fish, get it? Natural rivals!) have been foes since Utah joined the ECHL in 2005. With 15 years of bad blood, the fervor between the two clubs is palpable (especially with former rivals Alaska and Colorado no longer residing in the ECHL’s Mountain Division). They have to be the best of enemies; they’re all that’s left in the Mountain Time Zone in the ECHL (save for Rapid City, but they joined the league in 2014, still early in developing rivalries).
CONCLUSION
Time has a funny way of bringing you back to the beginning.
Now back residing in Colorado (with the Avalanche & Eagles close by and the Grizzlies now an ECHL affiliate of the two), the symmetry is definitely not lost on this sports writer. In fact, it’s only fitting that I came over to cover the AHL’s Colorado Eagles after I moved to Denver in 2019. Plus, during the 2019-20 season, Utah celebrated 50 years of minor league hockey between the Golden Eagles and Grizzlies combined. My dad (who passed away in December 2015) would have been proud of it all, no doubt.
As Utah celebrates 25 years between the IHL, AHL, and ECHL in 2020-21, I find myself once again connected with the market that got me into professional hockey in the first place. Even with all the uncertainty of the ECHL season due to the global COVID-19 pandemic, I can still find some solace in the connections (and re-connections) I’ve made between Colorado, Utah, and the sport of ice hockey.
It’s all we can do in these times: focus on the positive, take it one day at a time, and look for the connections that bring you back to the start of the things that you love.
This article was originally published on December 7, 2020.