Alumnus and assistant Ralph Featherstone, who joined the Cannons in the 1990s, went on to attend the U.S. Naval Academy, becoming captain of its club hockey team in his senior year. He became a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Marines, was stationed in San Diego and now serves on the Joint Staff at the Pentagon.
Marquise Cotten's experience playing for the Cannons also led to coaching, first as an assistant at Gonzaga College High School in Washington, D.C., and for Mason City of the North American 3 Hockey League this season.
Duante Abercrombie, a former Cannons player, is an assistant at Stevenson University, an NCAA Division III hockey program outside of Baltimore, and director of player achievement for the Washington Little Caps.
Abercrombie and Nathaniel Brooks, an assistant for Ryerson University's men's hockey team in Toronto, are featured in "NHL Bound," a four-part series about their participation in an internship program at an Arizona Coyotes development camp in 2021.
Abercrombie said he can't wait to see the Cannons story in the theater Sunday.
"My mom will be there, my grandparents will be there, my brother will be there," he said. "I can't tell you how excited all of the Cannons alumni and coaches and families are that they actually get to experience it in D.C., and actually in a pretty neat theater, I've been told."
"The Cannons" has traveled across the United States since its New York debut. It was screened at the Cleveland International Film Festival, the North Carolina Black Film Festival in Wilmington, North Carolina, and at the Thin Line Festival in Denton, Texas. It was shown Friday at the Pan African Film Festival in Los Angeles, one of the largest Black film festivals in the United States.