[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 93 (Wednesday, June 26, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H4041-H4042]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING THE CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Quigley) for 5 minutes.
Mr. QUIGLEY. Mr. Speaker, after 23 NHL Playoff games, 10 overtimes,
and 64 goals, the Chicago Blackhawks have won their second Stanley Cup
in the last 4 years. Congratulations to the greatest team in hockey on
being the 2013 Stanley Cup Champions.
The impressive regular season began with a record-breaking streak of
24 straight games with a point earned, and it ended with a Presidents'
Trophy for the most points in a regular season. This success set the
stage for an outstanding playoff run, a promise of things to come. The
Hawks made good on that promise this week in one of the most incredible
and improbable Stanley Cup Final games in NHL history.
Having already tamed the Minnesota Wild, taken down our archrival,
the Detroit Red Wings, and dethroned the Los Angeles Kings, the
Blackhawks grinded through the finals to one of the craziest and most
exciting Stanley Cup wins ever witnessed.
To say this championship winning game was a nail-biter would be an
understatement. The Blackhawks came from behind twice to overcome an
amazing effort by the Boston Bruins, scoring two goals just 17 seconds
apart in the final minute and a half of the game. Unbelievable goals
scored by Bryan Bickell and Dave Bolland ensured their names will be
inscribed forever in Blackhawk history books as well as on Lord
Stanley's Cup.
With outstanding efforts by Captain Jonathan Toews; Conn Smythe
winner, Buffalo native, Patrick Kane; the best defenseman in hockey,
Duncan Keith; and, of course, the best goalie in the playoffs, Corey
Crawford, the entire team made good on a promise that this Original Six
team is a true legend to be reckoned with.
As I have mentioned before, hockey never left Chicago, but Rocky
Wirtz brought it back. The owner of the Blackhawks has once again made
our city proud.
The entire organization is the classiest in sports, the model in
hockey. Led by John McDonough, Jay Blunk, Stan Bowman, and Coach Joel
Quenneville, they have enshrined Chicago as a hockey town for the 21st
century.
But the Blackhawks don't just unify our city, they also are committed
to serving the community and making it better. Their StreetHawks
program has worked to promote fitness and leadership skills to local
youth through street hockey initiatives and community skating
facilities.
Through the NHL's Hockey is for Everyone program, I've had the
pleasure of working with the Hawks to expand hockey access to at-risk
and LGBT youth; because no matter what your background, every child
should have the opportunity to play the greatest sport in the world.
The Blackhawks have also been strong supporters of America's veterans
and wounded warriors. Just this
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year, I joined the Hawks and the USA Warriors veterans team for an
outdoor hockey game at Soldier Field. The Hawks gave these vets--most
of whom are Purple Heart recipients--a once-in-a-lifetime experience
they will never forget.
And I suppose this is what the Hawks do best, provide their fans--
fans in Chicago and around the world--with memories they will never
forget. I look forward to the new memories yet to be made during future
Stanley Cup victories, games with Blackhawk players who are just kids
right now with the memory of shots heard around the hockey world
ringing through their heads.
Mr. Speaker, hockey is a special sport that brings people together,
improves our communities, and, most importantly, makes people dream the
impossible and do the improbable. The entire world saw that this week
thanks to the 2013 Stanley Cup Champion Chicago Blackhawks.
Go Hawks. And as always, my kind of town, Chicago is.
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