Francisco X. Rivera had one thought when the Los Angeles Kings held a youth hockey camp in Mexico City Nov. 12-14: Finally.
The Mexico City Jr. Kings camp marked the Kings' return to Mexico's capital city since they hosted their first youth hockey camp there in October 2018.
Logistical issues and then the coronavirus pandemic forced the Kings to put their Mexico plans on hold three times since that first visit.
"We had been waiting for so long, but we finally made it," said Rivera, the Kings Spanish-language play-by-play announcer, a team consultant and NHL.com/es independent correspondent. "For me, growing the game or helping to grow the game in my native country was just so important."
Los Angeles made up for lost time with former Kings forwards Derek Armstrong and Brad Smyth, and Rivera putting nearly 45 players ages 5-16 through their paces at Mexico City's Centro Comercial Santa Fe rink.
Smyth, a team ambassador, scored 28 points (15 goals, 13 assists) in 88 games for the Kings, Florida Panthers, New York Rangers, Nashville Predators and Ottawa Senators from 1993-03. Armstrong, the Kings director of community and hockey development, scored 221 points (72 goals, 149 assists) in 477 games for the New York Islanders, Rangers, Kings and St. Louis Blues.
"The kids were fantastic, just their willingness to learn, their enthusiasm for actually getting on the ice," Smyth said. "Their talent level would be similar to a lower-end competitive or higher-end house-league ability at this point. You can see there's a certain percentage of the kids that have been on the ice a lot more than the others and they're way further ahead."