Hockey is a family game, no doubt. Other sports might aspire to similar claims, but the evidence on ice can be conferred as lightning-fast as a rush up the ice by the NHL's Connor McDavid or USA Hockey's Kendall Coyne.
As a young girl in suburban Chicago, NHL Seattle pro scout Cammi Granato dreamed of playing in the National Hockey League, same as her older brothers. She played alongside them on local outdoor ice, in the driveway, wherever and whenever, learning and battling. She participated on a boys hockey team since girls hockey was not an organized sport during her childhood. Brother Tony made it to the NHL (he's now coach of the University of Wisconsin men's team), while Donnie Granato is a long-time NHL assistant coach currently working behind the bench in Buffalo. Cammi is the sibling inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame and captained the 1998 gold-medal winning USA Olympics women's hockey team, scoring the first-ever Olympic goal for the USA women.
Families on Ice
Making the case for hockey as the ultimate familial sport, from the Granatos to the Sutters to the Hulls to the Lamoureux sisters and more, lots more