凹凸视频

Hockey Sticks and a Few Jelly Beans

A group of men play ice hockey

If you follow hockey at 凹凸视频and wonder how it began, you might start with the consistory of an Edmonton, Alberta, church.

The preacher, Reverend John Piersma, was a big-time hockey fan who found a way to speed skate through consistory meetings so he and those elders similarly inclined could sprint over to the arena and catch the third period of the Edmonton Flyers game鈥攆ree admission after the first two periods.

Jan Van Niejenhuis was one of those elders. He had immigrated from the Netherlands only a few years earlier and, back then, knew next to nothing about ice hockey. Still, he was so taken by the game that when a neighbor down the block sold his black-and-white console TV, Van Niejenhuis bought it, then set it down in the living room so the whole family could watch the National Hockey League (NHL) on Saturday nights.

Anje and Jan Van Niejenhuis鈥檚 three sons, Bert (鈥68), Herm (鈥71), and Cecil (鈥77), started slapping pucks around on Christian school ice when they were kids. They got themselves hooked but good on the national sport of Canada.
In time, all three boys came to Dordt. Moving from Edmonton to Sioux Center is quite a trek.

Fifty years ago, loads of 凹凸视频students lived off-campus. When Herm, the second son, finally got his 凹凸视频application in, the dorm was full, so he had to live a block east of downtown Sioux Center, where he shared an upstairs apartment in a house owned and occupied (downstairs) by a lovely grandmotherly homeowner named Mrs. Gerrit Pluim.
It鈥檚 possible to say that match was made in heaven; young Herm could speak Mrs. Pluim鈥檚 native Dutch, so they got along royally. When, later, a room in the dorm opened, he wasn鈥檛 particularly interested.

鈥淚 wandered over to the dorm to visit, and it just seemed to me four people in such close quarters made it a crowd,鈥 he says. So he stayed put downtown with Mrs. Pluim, who laid out sweet rolls on mornings when he and his roommates were a bit late for class.

Soon enough, he had a girlfriend named Deadra 鈥淒ee鈥 Plowman (鈥71), who suggested he needed a haircut and sweetly volunteered to do the job herself. He told her to come over, and she did, ascending the stairs. Such proximity would have been verboten in dorm life. They鈥檝e been married now for 50 years.

That first year of college, Herm had taken his skates along to Iowa because brother Bert had said there was a rink in Central Park; but he got those skates out only once, for an ice-skating social at the Sioux City Auditorium. Whoever sponsored the skate promised a few minutes to whoever wanted to take along a stick and puck. That was the only time his skates came out of safekeeping during his entire freshman year. But that night he鈥檇 begun to see that he wasn鈥檛 the only 凹凸视频kid who loved hockey.

The next year, the college鈥攚hich was little more than a decade old鈥攚elcomed one of the biggest classes ever. Included in the new crowd were more than a half-dozen guys who loved hockey and played as if they did, even an honest-to-goodness goalie named Keith Vanderzwan (鈥73), who remembers having to drive all the way to Winnipeg, Manitoba, to buy goalie gear. To Canadian hockey players, Northwest Iowa was the last frontier.

Soon, a roughshod league was formed from club teams at Drake University, Iowa State University, and Graceland College, along with the brand new 鈥淪ioux Center Blades.鈥 The 凹凸视频administration wasn鈥檛 sure what to do with a bunch of yahoos who played for fun, smoked a bit, and were known to tap a pitcher or two at Shakey鈥檚 after the game.
凹凸视频had a team and a name. They had a schedule too; all they needed was a rink. So, they built one鈥攚hy not?鈥攐ut at Tower Park, in what was back then the southwest edge of town.

Ever since, hockey has been a first-rate attraction at Dordt, even before the sport became popular in the United States. Why? Well, some like to think that, with every game played, a few conventionally sweet Sioux Center pieties got knocked silly by all that bodychecking.

鈥淧eople like to think,鈥 Herm says, 鈥渢hat hockey exists somewhere out there on the very edge of total depravity.鈥
It always was rough. Even Herm, Vanderzwan will tell you, found it difficult not to take some shots. 鈥淗erm was a great skater and thus, a good hockey player, a smart player, not dirty, but willing to mix it up for control of the puck,鈥 he says.

Still, to a ton of American innocents, all that banging going down on and off the boards didn鈥檛 feel much at all like turn-the-other-cheek righteousness. Some holy eyebrows were furrowed every time those Canadian boys came out to circle the ice.

A picture of a person playing ice hockey

Some 30 years later, Herm Van Niejenhuis, as strong a skater as anyone in the olden days, had become Pastor Herm Van Niejenhuis. In the later years of his ministry, he and Dee returned to Sioux Center when Herm accepted the call to Covenant Christian Reformed Church.

People at 凹凸视频hadn鈥檛 forgotten that, hockey-wise, Pastor Herm was there way back in the beginning. So, with one of the finest skaters and players the college had back in town, the administration, who had taken ownership of hockey, came knocking: the 凹凸视频Blades needed a coach.

鈥淚 told them I鈥檇 never coached hockey, but they said that was okay,鈥 says Herm. In the old days, neither had Professor Case Boot, who鈥檇 stood behind the bench for years and never done much more than lead in prayer before games.
Herm says it sounded to him like a sweet offer. He couldn鈥檛 help but enjoy hanging around a rink again, even being able to get out on the ice himself in an arena right across the street from Dordt, a place that had been built, at least in part, for community hockey.

He says he didn鈥檛 really 鈥渃oach鈥 the Blades. He鈥檇 encourage kids, and he loved just being with them, felt a bit of the old enthusiasm every time Dordt鈥檚 first line hit the ice before the first buzzer.

Thirty years after the Blades played home games at the Sioux City Auditorium, the team was now not only acknowledged but even supported by the college. But what he discovered quickly was that players had changed. They weren鈥檛 just a bunch of kids slapping a puck around on ice laid out on the Christian school playgrounds or frosted streets in front of the house. Today, he says, they come out of community or school hockey teams, echelons of supervised leagues, years of learning and playing. Today, it鈥檚 a whole different operation, more business-like, less spontaneous.

鈥淢y mom and dad never saw me play hockey,鈥 he says, matter-of-factly. 鈥淗ockey was a kids鈥 thing, camaraderie with my friends. My parents would be out of place beside a hockey rink. When we played hockey, we did it on our own.鈥 Back then, it was pure kid stuff.

Still, coaching, at least what he was able to do of it, was a great experience, he says. When he was nudging up close to his sixties, he enjoyed hanging out with the teams, maybe especially on long trips into Canada, which the team often took during Christmas breaks, public relations trips that were a venue for recruiting students.

Before one of those trips, the campus pastor once told him he鈥檇 heard someone in authority say that all those guys required someone鈥檚 supervision. 鈥淗erm鈥檚 watching out for them,鈥 someone else said, but then the guy said, 鈥淏ut, who鈥檚 going to watch out for Herm?鈥

Even Pastor Herm likes that kind of role. 鈥淚鈥檓 a bit of a rebel,鈥 he says, 鈥渁lways was, still am.鈥

All these years later, he鈥檒l admit feeling a bit more stressed by hockey鈥檚 almost inevitable rough housing. After all, he was the coach, not to mention a preacher in a local church. He had responsibility for the players, whether he liked it or not. His years wielding a stick were behind him, but he had to look after the Blades.

One Saturday at Casey鈥檚 Bakery, he says he was waiting for cheap donuts when he felt someone tugging on his sleeve. He turned to look. It was a woman he didn鈥檛 recognize.

鈥淗ey,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e the coach of the hockey team.鈥

When she eyed him closely, he didn鈥檛 show it, he says, but he winced. He didn鈥檛 know her. He believed he was about to take a hit.

鈥淲e just love hockey at Dordt,鈥 she told him. Big smile. Then she sidled a bit closer. 鈥淲e especially like the fights.鈥
He didn鈥檛 get her name.

The Van Niejenhuises had a blessedly successful ministry in Sioux Center all those years later, even got himself a little time on the ice. Today, filling pulpits hither and yon (including a Florida stint in January), he and Dee live on a quiet street in Willmar, Minnesota, where Dee has lots of family.

When Pastor Herm and Dee Van Niejenhuis retired from Covenant, goodbye wishes from church families were recorded on video. When Andy (鈥98) and Rachel (Bakker, 鈥97) Landman lined up, there were only four of their five kids on the lawn posing. Hannah, the oldest, was missing. Rachel said Hannah, who was in middle school at the time, refused to say goodbye to a pastor she didn鈥檛 want to leave.

This fall, Hannah Landman will be a sophomore at Dordt.

鈥淧astor Herm had a jelly bean machine in his office at church, but it wasn鈥檛 the jelly beans I valued,鈥 she explains. 鈥淲hen I refused to wave goodbye, I was really thinking of Pastor Herm鈥檚 generosity, his kindness. I didn鈥檛 want to lose the compassion and generosity I had found behind the jelly bean machine.鈥