'My eyes are my ears': How this goalie stops the puck in a hockey series for the legally blind - Action News
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Toronto

'My eyes are my ears': How this goalie stops the puck in a hockey series for the legally blind

A new hockey series, where all the players are legally blind, began on Friday in Toronto.

1st game of the Carnegie Cup Elite Blind Hockey Series was held on Friday

Two players in yellow jerseys are visible but blurry through the chipped and dirty arena glass.
Members of the Blind Hockey League (BHL) play in the inaugural game at the Mattamy Athletic Centre in Toronto on Friday. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Most goalies struggle to see the puck as it's fired at themthrough a maze of sticks, skates and battling bodies, but Joey Cabral can't see the puck at all.

To stop it, he's gotto hear it.

"For sighted people, it's their eyes. For me, with zero vision, my eyes are my ears ... It's all about sound."

Cabral, of Toronto, is playing goal in anew hockey serieswhere all the players are legally blind. The Carnegie Cup Elite Blind Hockey Seriesbeganin Toronto on Friday and runs through the weekend at the Mattamy Centre, formerly the site of Maple Leaf Gardens.

Hockey players are pictured here during the first game of the Carnegie Cup Elite Blind Hockey Series at the Mattamy Athletic Centre in Toronto, on Jan. 20, 2023.
Hockey players are pictured here during the first game of the Carnegie Cup Elite Blind Hockey Series at the Mattamy Athletic Centre in Toronto, on Jan. 20, 2023. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Cabral,who's been completely blind since he was four due to glaucoma,saidthe series uses aspecial puck that allows the playersto hear where it is.

"It's three times bigger, I would say, and it's made out of metal and it has about eight ball bearings in it that rattle."

A charitycalled Canadian Blind Hockey, in partnership with the Carnegie Initiative for Inclusion and Acceptance in Hockey, is hosting the series.The initiative, launched a year and a half ago, is aiming tochange hockey cultureto make it more diverse and inclusive.Games are free to watch.

'Everybody deserves a chance to play'

The series is named in honour of the late Herb Carnegie, who became the firstBlack hockey player to reach the NHLin the late 1950safter facingenormousracism that hampered hiscareer for decades.The initiative triesto ensure "opportunity and access to hockey everywhere," including bringing the game to people who are visually impaired.

"Everyone deserves a chance to play," Bryant McBride, co-chair of the Carnegie Initiative, told CBC Toronto on Friday.

"It's really about exposure. It's about making sure that people know that people of all abilities can play the game. It's not just about race, it's not just about gender, or socio-economic level. It's about ensuring that people see people in all aspects."

McBride said the series is showcasingamazing athletes.

Members of the Blind Hockey League (BHL) play in the inaugural game, at the Mattamy Athletic Centre, in Toronto, on Jan. 20, 2023.
The Mercurys play the Aces in Game 1 of the Carnegie Cup Elite Blind Hockey Series in Toronto on Friday. Three games will be played in all at the Mattamy Athletic Centre. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Canadian Blind Hockey saidthe series features hockey players from Canada, the U.S. and Europe. The players have been drafted into two teams to showcase the "fastest, most skilled, and most competitive version" of the sport, the charity said. The two teams will play three games in all.

To be eligible to compete, players must have only 10 per cent vision or less, and goalies must be completely blind.

To honour Carnegie,the names of the teams in the series are a tribute to the last two minor league teams he played for in his career: the Aces and the Mercurys.

'It's really cool'

Brian Burke, who used to be thegeneral manager of the Toronto Maple Leafs and is a former Hockey Night In Canada analyst, said players have to have a "pretty severesight impairment" to play.

"I've never seen blind hockey until just now. It's amazing," said Burke,who is a member ofthe Carnegie Initiative's Canadian board of directors andis president of hockey operations with the NHL's Pittsburgh Penguins.

"I'm in awe of watching these kids. It's a new option. It's really cool."

A goaltender sitting on the bench wears an eye mask under his goalie mask.
A player on the bench at the Mattamy Athletic Centre in Toronto on Friday. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

On its website, Canadian Blind Hockey saidthe series is a pilot project that aims to create the Blind Hockey League, and it represents the "premier competitive" opportunity for blind hockey players.

"The objective of the event is to follow an NHL model by drafting the top blind hockey players from around the world to compete in the Para sport of blind hockey at the highest level possible," the group said.

"We change the lives of children, youth, and adults who are blind or partially sighted through our programs, which include school field trips, youth teams, development camps, regional tournaments, and our flagship Canadian National Blind Hockey Tournament," its website reads.

Brian Burke
Brian Burke, president of hockey operations with the Pittsburgh Penguins and a member of the Canadian board of the directors for the Carnegie Initiative, says players have to have a 'pretty severe sight impairment' to play. (CBC)

"Our programming spans the country from coast-to-coast while supporting Canadian hockey players who are blind or partially sighted of all ages, from playing on the pond to proudly standing on the podium."

Meantime, Cabral is as determined as any goalie to keep thepuck out of his net any way he can.

"As long as it's on the ice, and it's moving, you can hear it, but once it's off the ground, and it's in the air,really, it's just an instinct," he said.

After that, he said: "Hope for the best."

With files from Greg Ross