Silvertips fans share 9 years of memorable moments

EVERETT — They come with loud cowbells and, sometimes, louder hairdos to cheer on Everett’s boys of winter.

Since the Silvertips skated into town nine seasons ago, die-hard supporters have smothered the club with love, enthusiasm and adrenaline from all sides of Comcast Arena.

“It’s my passion!” said season-ticketholder Dana Hanner of Arlington. “I even have a giant, antique cowbell that I had custom painted with the logo! It’s a big hit!”

The players have returned the favor by putting on a show.

The Tips opened their 10th anniversary season at Comcast Arena on Saturday against the Prince George Cougars — the same team they faced in their inaugural home game on Oct. 4, 2003.

The arrival of WHL hockey has given Everett fans chances to see spectacular goals and painful hits, at home and on the road.

They’ve witnessed the growth of future NHL players, including Peter Mueller (Florida Panthers) and defenseman Ryan Murray, selected as the No. 2 overall draft pick this year by the Columbus Blue Jackets.

We asked readers to share their favorite Tips memories. And they had quite a few.

Guy Sykes, who lives in south Everett’s Silver Lake neighborhood, reveled in the memory of hearing the goal horn sound during the first-ever home game.

“Everett was down in what we all hoped would be a win when (forward) Curtis Billsten put one in,” Sykes wrote. “It was music!”

Later that season, Frankie Wilbanks, of Marysville, traveled to Kelowna, B.C., to watch the Tips win the Western Conference. The trip up included a short stretch driving through blinding snow.

“I became known as Grandma Silvertip that first year and I love hockey and I love my Silvertips,” Wilbanks said. “Go Tips!”

Starting during the club’s rookie year, fans were excited to watch the tough-guy exploits of defenseman Mitch Love, now an assistant coach for the team.

Hanner, the fan with the antique cowbell, remembered what she called “a historic fight” between Love and Zack Fitzgerald of the Seattle Thunderbirds.

“Of course Mitch won!” she wrote.

“Amazing!” she said. “I’ll never forget it!”

Deb Nordstrom of Everett recalled Love throwing his arms into the air after his first fight as a Silvertip.

“The atmosphere was PURE adrenaline and it was AWESOME!” she wrote. “I was hooked right then.”

Nordstrom’s favorite Tips memory didn’t involve hockey players, though.

It was when she and her husband, Jerry, won the chance to enter a Silvertips fan competition that involved shooting the most goals in 30 seconds. Ahead of the March 2006 contest, her husband practiced until his elbows and shoulders hurt. He won.

Nordstrom can’t remember how much money they got, but it’s easy for her to recall the playoff game they watched from the Tips suite, part of their prize.

“We had a great time at the play-off game and brought some friends and family who had never been,” Nordstrom wrote.

Mary Chesnut was unable to take in the Tips’ inaugural season because she was deployed with the U.S. Army in Kuwait. Still, she did lend her support from overseas by wearing a Tips shirt that a friend mailed to her. Later, she was thrilled when a fellow soldier came up and asked if she knew her team was in the finals.

“I carry a Tips hockey puck when I am deployed,” Chesnut wrote. “It has been to Kuwait, Iraq and Afghanistan twice!

“I am back now so I will be able to watch the Tips this season. Go Tips!”

Craig, Kerri and Victoria Willis of Everett had trouble picking their favorite Silvertips moment. They had three.

The first: a brutal hip check by Tips defenseman Radko Gudas in November 2009 that caused Seattle’s Prab Rai to flip over.

“That hip check on Prab Rai is still one of the most brutal hip checks my wife and I have ever seen in the WHL,” Craig Willis wrote.

The second: Zach Hamill’s between-the-legs shootout goal against Seattle in December 2006.

The third, and the best of all: Victoria, Craig and Kerri’s daughter, being born on Dec. 27, 2009 — the same night center Tyler Maxwell scored a hat trick.

Barbara Gust of Lynnwood reminisced about watching Everett play their archrivals, the Seattle Thunderbirds, at Comcast one night in December 2006. Things were looking bleak, with the home team down 3-0 after two periods.

“Finally in the third, the Tips came alive, scoring twice,” Gust wrote. “(W)ith four seconds left in regulation, Peter Mueller buried a one-timer for the tying goal. The Tips went on to win the game 4-3 in a shootout.”

The biggest thrills for some spectators came on the road.

Marty and Gloria Wlazlak of Everett remember going with a group of Everett fans to a game in Vancouver, B.C., after a bitter playoff loss the season before.

“The section with 20 or so Silvertip fans was the loudest section in the arena all night,” they wrote.

Jonathan Harty scored the tying goal and the Silvertips went on to win in a shootout. Silvertips goalie David Reekie was named the first star.

“When he came out to accept the award, he skated to center ice and raised his stick to our section in salute to the fans,” they wrote. “A fantastic end to a close and emotional game.”

Gary Beane of Gold Bar traveled with his wife to a game in Portland during the 2010-11 season.

After a tough loss, Ryan Murray accepted his third star-of-the-game award, with a gift that he threw over to the Beanes in the audience.

“We opened it and it was a Portland Winterhawks T-shirt,” he wrote. “I told my wife that was awesome of him but we can’t wear another team’s gear.”

Outside, they gave the T-shirt to a man and his son — Winterhawks fans — they saw walking down the sidewalk. They told them the shirt came from Murray, whom they accurately predicted would one day play in the NHL.

“The man said, ‘Thanks,’ and the boy looked very happy,” Beane wrote.

Hundreds of stalwart Tips fans have had season tickets since day one. Zoran Rajcic, the team’s executive vice president and assistant general manager, tallied up 197 accounts with tickets for all 10 seasons — more than 500 individual tickets in all.

That loyal group includes retirees Shirley and Ron Olsen, of Everett, who always sit about five rows off the ice on the side where the Silvertips shoot during first and third periods.

A special Tips memory for Shirley Olsen came at least a year before the team was born, when she and her husband traveled to a WHL game in Red Deer, Alberta. The couple was surprised to see Everett’s then-Mayor Ed Hansen at the game.

“I knew something was up because there was no reason for him to be in Red Deer,” she said.

When she saw Hansen again at a game in Calgary, she knew her suspicions were well-placed.

“I said, ‘Uh oh, we’re going to get a hockey team,’ ” she said. “It was before they even announced there was going to be an arena.”

Fellow retirees Larry and Susan Hawk, of Marysville, have a perch on the west end of Comcast Arena, under an advertising sign in the last row in the section.

“It’s not critical for us to be right down on the glass when the boys are a half an inch away from you; that’s not our style of hockey,” Larry Hawk said.

The Hawks have been tireless Silvertips boosters from the start and even hosted forward Tyler Dietrich in their home for part of the first season.

Larry Hawk hopes the best moments on ice are yet to come.

“I’d like to see us win the Memorial Cup this year,” he said. “That would really help to put a good cap on the 10th-year anniversary.”

Everett takes the ice against the Cougars again Sunday at 5:05 p.m.

Noah Haglund: 425-339-3465, nhaglund@heraldnet.com.

Hey fans!

Are you the Silvertips’ biggest fan? Show us photographic proof and win a prize. Winners will be invited to a Tips game as guests of The Herald.

Send your contributions to newstips@heraldnet.com or post them in our reader galleries at www.heraldnet.com/yourphotos.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Sports

Arlington head coach Nick Brown talks with his team during a time-out against Marysville Getchell during a playoff matchup at Arlington High School on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024, in Arlington, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Arlington boys basketball coach Nick Brown steps down

Brown spent 18 seasons as head coach, turning the Eagles into a consistent factor in Wesco.

Players run drills during a Washington Wolfpack of the AFL training camp at the Snohomish Soccer Dome on Wednesday, April 10, 2024 in Snohomish, Washington. (Annie Barker / The Herald)
Arena football is back in Everett

The Washington Wolfpack make their AFL debut on the road Saturday against the Oregon Black Bears.

Seattle Kraken defensemen Jamie Oleksiak (24) and Will Borgen (3) celebrate a goal by center Matty Beniers (10) against the Buffalo Sabres during the second period of an NHL hockey game, Tuesday, in Buffalo, N.Y. (Jeffrey T. Barnes / The Associated Press)
Kraken leaving ROOT Sports for new TV and streaming deals

Seattle’s NHL games are moving to KING 5 and KONG, where they’ll be free for local viewers.

Lake Stevens pitcher Charli Pugmire high fives first baseman Emery Fletcher after getting out of an inning against Glacier Peak on Tuesday, April 23, 2024, at Glacier Peak High School in Snohomish, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Lake Stevens tops Glacier Peak in key softball encounter

The Vikings strung together a three-run rally in the fifth inning to prevail 3-0.

UCLA pass rusher Laiatu Latu, left, pressures Arizona State quarterback Trenton Bourguet during the second half of an NCAA college football game Nov. 11, 2023, in Pasadena, Calif. Latu is the type of player the Seattle Seahawks may target with their first-round pick in the NFL draft. (AP Photo/Ryan Sun, File)
Predicting who Seahawks will take with their 7 draft picks

Expect Seattle to address needs at edge rusher, linebacker and interior offensive line.

Seattle Storm guard Sue Bird brings the ball up against the Washington Mystics during the second half of Game 1 of a WNBA basketball first-round playoff series Aug. 18, 2022, in Seattle. The Storm’s owners, Force 10 Hoops, said Wednesday that Bird has joined the ownership group. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson, File)
Seattle Storm icon Sue Bird joins ownership group

Bird, a four-time WNBA champion with the Storm as a player, increases her ties to the franchise.

Seattle Mariners’ J.P. Crawford (3) scores on a wild pitch as Julio Rodríguez, left, looks on in the second inning of the second game of a baseball doubleheader against the Colorado Rockies Sunday, April 21, 2024, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
Mariners put shortstop J.P. Crawford on the 10-day IL

Seattle’s leadoff hitter is sidelined with a right oblique strain.

X
Prep roundup for Thursday, April 25

Prep roundup for Thursday, April 25: (Note for coaches/scorekeepers: To report results… Continue reading

Seattle Mariners star Julio Rodriguez connects for a two-run home run next to Texas Rangers catcher Jonah Heim and umpire Mark Carlson during the third inning of a baseball game in Arlington, Texas, Tuesday, April 23, 2024. It was Rodriguez’s first homer of the season. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)
Finally! Julio Rodriguez hits first homer of season

It took 23 games and 89 at bats for the Mariners superstar to go yard.

X
Prep roundup for Wednesday, April 24

Prep roundup for Wednesday, April 24: (Note for coaches/scorekeepers: To report results… Continue reading

X
Prep roundup for Tuesday, April 23

Prep roundup for Tuesday, April 23: (Note for coaches/scorekeepers: To report results… Continue reading

Seattle Seahawks linebacker Jordyn Brooks (56) is taken off the field after being injured in the second half of an NFL football game against the Minnesota Vikings in Minneapolis, Sunday, Sept. 26, 2021. The former first-round pick is an example of the Seahawks failing to find difference makers in recent NFL drafts. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)
A reason Seahawks have 1 playoff win since 2016? Drafting

The NFL draft begins Thursday, and Seattle needs to draft better to get back to its winning ways.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.