Harrigan is a detective with the New York City Police Department and a defenseman on NYPD's hockey team that will face the New York City Fire Department in their 49th annual charity game April 15 at UBS Arena, home of the New York Islanders.
"The Lawyers' Cup was great, I wish we had done it sooner," Harrigan said. "You're skating with your old friends again. The program did a lot for me. I got to experience a lot of things other kids didn't get to experience. I got to play junior hockey in Canada, I got to go to hockey camps in the summer, it got me off of the streets."
Derek Richardson traveled from suburban Washington, D.C., to skate and tell old stories with his former IHIH teammates and coaches.
"It was funny because we were telling Todd, 'Twenty, 30 years ago, we were your kids, and now here we are with our kids,'" said Richardson, who served in the U.S. Navy and is now an information technology contractor. "The best part was seeing people that I knew from a long time ago."
IHIH executive director Malik Garvin also suited up for the Lawyers Cup. He was 4 years old in 1996 when he first joined the program, following his older brother into the sport.
"He and the other older guys, they inspired me and let me know that I can stick with this, that I am a hockey player," said Garvin, who went on to play 10 games as a walk-on for Western New England University, an NCAA Division III team, in 2014-15. "I looked up to them and wanted to be them. They were seasoned veterans who could skate, pass and shoot, and compete every game and who, more importantly, loved the game and became lifelong hockey players and hockey fans."
Garvin said the Lawyers' Cup, held for the first time since 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, raised more than $53,000.