NHL linesman Vaughan Rody has worked his way back from a career-threatening injury. Rody suffered a back injury that required spinal surgery and a lengthy recovery. There were times he wasn’t sure he’d ever be back on the ice. He returned to the NHL in February. Now, not only is he back officiating, but he’s also resumed teaching power skating to kids at his Pro Edge Skating Hockey School.
From the Prince George Citizen:
“We’re trying to teach some kids the difference between being good and being great,” Rody said. “Skating takes forever to learn how to do it right, and if we can teach them at six we won’t have to be teaching them at 14 or 15. If we can create some good habits now, hopefully it elongates their career.
“We have to get the basics down first and what happens if you throw a puck on the ice, that’s where everybody’s attention goes to and they forget about what they’re supposed to do. There’s five basics of skating – there’s proper arm movement, there’s an elongation of stride, there’s good core strength and a knee bend, and a toe flick at the end, and the bottom line is they need to be fit. If they’re not fit, they’re just not going to play.”
NHL Linesman Vaughan Rody (#73)
Rody moved to Seattle when he was a WHL linesman and makes his home at Lake Stevens, Wash., close to his wife’s family roots. He started out at age 14 working games for six- and seven-year-olds and quickly climbed the ranks. He spent four full seasons in the WHL and is now one of 66 active NHL linesmen.
“I realized I wasn’t going to make it anywhere as a player and thought maybe I could remain involved in the game somehow,” Rody said. “It’s a long process, playing and refereeing are completely different. When you’re playing you’re so puck-focused and when you’re officiating you’re not puck-focused because 75 per cent of the penalties happen away from the puck.”
Acting on the advice of his father, Rody has always been a linesman. Back when he was breaking into the league the two-referee system did not exist. There was just one referee and two linesmen and choosing to line doubled his odds of making it in the pros.
“You never switch, you get hired as one or the other and if I wanted to go back to being a referee I’d have to get out of the NHL and go back to the American League and take a couple hundred thousand dollar pay cut and work my way back to the NHL.”
NHL salaries range from $127,000 for first-year linesmen to $300,000 for the veterans. NHL referees make between $152,00 and $400,000, with bonuses for working the playoffs. Each official is expected to work 75 games per year. In the WHL, the money ranges from $125 per game for linesmen to $225 for referees.
For aspiring NHL officials, he said the best thing they can do is play hockey as long as they can.
“Play the game and learn the game and understand the tendencies when somebody comes on the ice and there’s a separation of goals by two or more in the last three minutes that there could be some problems,” Rody said.
He also has words of advice for parents when they overstep their boundaries and become too vocal in their criticisms of young officials at minor hockey games.
“We do a lot of (officiating) clinics for young kids and the toughest part of it is when parents become financially involved. When you’re financially involved you look at this game differently and you look at these people as the enemy, and they’re not,” he said. “They’re out there trying to do the best job. They’re not trying to oust anybody, they’re just trying to make it fair and do their best for $16 or $18 a game.”
Here’s a look back at Rody’s camp from 2013:
Read the full story via the Prince George Citizen.