On Monday, that impact was front and center at American Airlines Center when Robertson hosted his first ever on-ice clinic for military families with children between the ages of 8 and 14 who play hockey.
It's a cause that's been important to Robertson ever since he played for Kingston in the Ontario Hockey League.
"When I was in Kingston, we lived right on a military base, so we had a big military community and my billet dad was really involved with the kids whose families were in the military and did a lot of programs with them," Robertson said. "So it kind of started there, and obviously when I moved down to Dallas and Texas is heavily military community too, my dad and I wanted to do something together and pick something to do that's kind of a little bit different than the normal stuff."
Selected by Stars in the second round (No. 39) of the 2017 NHL Draft, Robertson was in the NHL for one season when he approached the Dallas Stars Foundation to set up JR's Heroes, which selects children of currently deployed military members or those that have lost a loved one while serving overseas. Each home game, the selected child and their family receives game tickets, parking, food and beverage vouchers, and jerseys that Robertson provides. After the game, each family gets a personal meet-and-greet with Robertson.
On Monday, those kids got to skate with him.
"Just trying to have a good time to be able to go to their schools and say, 'We skated with NHL players Jason Robertson, Nils Lundkvist, Wyatt Johnston. We skated at the AAC, the big stadium,' because I'm sure the majority of the kids have never been on the ice in this big of a stadium," Robertson said. "They get to say that, brag about it a little bit, and make them feel special. It goes a lot more along the way than just skating on the ice today. It creates a memory for them, for their parents, and for their families."