Feature: Fox a Dangerous Offensive Player
The following feature article on former Union forward T.J. Fox appeared in the September 30 issue of the Worcester Telegram & Gazette. The complete article can be accessed via the Telegram & Gazette Web site by clicking here.
By Bill Doyle
TELEGRAM & GAZETTE STAFF
wdoyle@telegram.com
WORCESTER- T.J. Fox has led
his teams in scoring nearly every season since he began playing
hockey at the age of four.
But topping his team this season will be his biggest challenge. It
might even take him until next year.
Fox is a rookie center for Worcester Sharks, just a few months
removed from college. Fox signed a two-year contract as a free
agent with the parent-club San Jose in March after his sophomore
season at Union College in upstate New York.
It's quite a leap from Union to professional hockey, especially the
American Hockey League. But Fox has the speed and skills, if not
the experience.
Fox, 23, had 37 points in 36 games last season to tie Union's
Division 1 record and share fifth in the ECAC. The year before he
was leading Union in scoring when he was suspended for the rest of
the season on Feb. 12. Fox didn't want to get into details about
the suspension, except to say that he had violated a team rule.
"We were in the wrong place at the wrong time," he said. "I'm a
completely more mature person coming in to Worcester this year than
I was two years ago going into college."
Before coming to Union, he was the top scorer for his junior A
team, Chicago of the U.S. Hockey League; Salisbury Prep in
Connecticut and several of his youth teams in Syracuse and his
hometown of Oswego, N.Y.
Leading the Sharks in scoring would be his biggest
accomplishment.
"That would be nice," said Fox, who played in Worcester's
exhibition game against Providence last night, 4-3 shootout win at
the New England Sports Center in Marlboro. "I just want to come in
and have a solid first year, not put any expectations number-wise
on me, just work as hard as I can. Hopefully, the numbers will add
up for me."
"If he scores 20 goals," Sharks coach Roy Sommer said, "that's a
heck of an accomplishment in this league."
The Sharks hosted Providence last night in a preseason game at the
New England Sports Center.
Fox's best shot is a snap shot into top right corner, but he
realizes he can't shoot every time he has the puck.
"Over the past couple of years," he said, "I've tried to balance
out my game, giving and receiving. You can't always be one-way
scorer. You have to look to your teammates and dish it out to them
as well."
Fox has always been a strong skater. His father, Tom, never played
hockey, but he made sure T.J. did by buying him his first ice
skates, helmet, knee pads and elbow pads when he was 2-1/4.
"He said I fell a few times," Fox said, "but I got up myself and
kept on going."
Power-skating schools helped Fox learn the proper technique.
"They're not fun," Fox said, "but it's something you have to do if
you want to play well."
Things worked out so well, when Fox has a son he plans to have him
skating at 2-1/4 and training in power-skating schools as well.
Fox must learn to harness his speed in the pros.
"It's more of a controlled possession game up here," he said,
"where you don't really have a lot of time to use your speed. You
control yourself, you get the puck and then you use your speed.
That's what I really have to work on right now because I'm being
told I'm too hyper on the ice, I just want to go, go, go."
"There's a time and a place to speed up," Sommer said. "He hasn't
figured that out yet."
A few years ago, Fox's hockey career was going nowhere. While
leading Salisbury Prep in scoring, he left to play junior hockey
for Green Bay in the USHL. A scholarship offer from a Hockey East
school somehow disappeared so he had to spend two more years in the
USHL with Chicago before enrolling at Union. As a Union freshman he
was 21, the same age as most of the seniors. He could have tried to
sign with an ECHL team and work his way up, but he wanted to at
least start his college education. An economics major, he plans to
get his degree one day.
"I was questioning my decision to go out west," Fox admitted, "but
in the end I went to the right spot and I played well in the right
spot and it got me to here. I'll play well here and see what
happens."
A couple of weeks ago, Fox experienced his biggest thrill in
hockey, skating in a San Jose scrimmage with Jeremy Roenick.
Although as a child, Fox considered Roenick his favorite player, he
couldn't bring himself to tell him.
He didn't want to make Roenick, 37, feel old. If Fox gets promoted
to San Jose some day and scores against the Boston Bruins, that
would become his new highlight. He and his father were big Bruins
fans - until Fox signed with the Sharks. They used to attend Bruins
games in Buffalo.
Fox would love to become the second member of his extended family
to make it big in the pros. The second cousin he grew up playing
baseball with in Oswego starts at catcher for the Atlanta Braves
and played in the last two All-Star Games, Brian McCann.












