Kelly Dyer Explained

Birth Date:March 1, 1966
Birth Place:Princeton, NJ, USA
Height Ft:5
Height In:11
Weight Lb:172
Position:Goaltender
Catches:Left
Played For:Jacksonville Bullets
West Palm Beach Blaze
Ntl Team:USA
Career Start:1989
Career End:1996

Kelly Dyer (born March 1, 1966, in Princeton, New Jersey, and raised in Acton, Massachusetts) is a member of the Northeastern University athletics Hall of Fame,[1] and a former ice hockey goaltender for the United States women's national ice hockey team.

Youth

Dyer grew up in Acton, Massachusetts, and was a figure skater for the younger years of her life before taking up ice hockey. On why she became a goaltender, “I grew up in a neighborhood with boys who liked to play hockey. They stuck me in goal and shot things at me,” she says. “And I liked it.”[2] Dyer went on the play with the boys during high school, and was on the same team with players such as Tom Barrasso, Jeff Norton, and Bob Sweeney.

Northeastern University

Dyer enrolled at Northeastern where she became a backstop for a Northeastern team that won back-to-back ECAC championships, the de facto National Championship at the time as there was no NCAA tournament yet. Dyer had a career 2.04 goals against average and was the team MVP her final two seasons and posted a record of 48–3–1.

National team and the pros

Dyer was a four-time member of the United States women's national ice hockey team in 1990, 1991, 1994, and 1995, amassing three World Championship silver medals.

Dyer is also one of six women to play men's professional ice hockey. She played as the goaltender for the West Palm Beach Blaze where her team won three Sunshine Hockey League championships.[3]

Retirement

Dyer retired from ice hockey in 1996 when she became a product manager for Louisville Hockey.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Inductee profile – Kelly Dyer . Northeastern University . 2010-01-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081012180546/http://www.gonu.com/hall/kdyer.html . 2008-10-12 . dead .
  2. Web site: Spotlight: Kelly Dyer. 2009-01-07. 2016-03-03. https://web.archive.org/web/20160303184358/http://www.hockeyplayer.com/paid/publish/article_269.shtml. dead.
  3. Web site: Dyer Kelly - Women's Sports Foundation . 2009-01-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100620085818/http://womenssportsfoundation.org/Content/Athletes/D/Dyer-Kelly.aspx . 2010-06-20 . dead .