Alves, one of the Carolina Hurricanes equipment managers, played goalie in a 3-1 loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning on Saturday.
Tweet from @MikeSundheim: A dream comes true. Proof that good things happen for good people. #HipHipJorge #Canes pic.twitter.com/nu20NfFZM6
Signed to a professional tryout contract as an
when Eddie Lack got sick earlier in the day, Alves dressed behind starter Cam Ward but didn't expect to play.
Tweet from @MikeSundheim: The mask Jorge Alves will wear tonight features his fellow equipment managers. Erik Huffine drew caricatures. Jorge painted it himself. pic.twitter.com/PHympx1LhC
"It's unbelievable," the 37-year-old said. "I was actually heading back down the tunnel when I heard coach call my name. I couldn't believe it. I think it was (7.6) seconds or something. I just looking down the ice and seeing the puck in the corner and just hoping it would stay in the corner.
"When I did realize it was going to happen, it was kind of disbelief. For years it's always been kind of a joke around the locker room that I might go in today, and for it to actually happen. That was an amazing experience."
Tweet from @NHLCanes: When the backup goalie is sharpening skate blades during play #HipHipJorge #CARvsTBL pic.twitter.com/DBfeTgKoUL
Before the game, Alves got choked up talking about the support he's received from his wife Amanda throughout his career.
Tweet from @CanesOnFSCR: "You're starting to make me emotional."@NHLCanes #HipHipJorge Alves, who played for NC State, signed a Professional Tryout for #CARvsTBL pic.twitter.com/9UgT4hxpoH
But he didn't let all of the excitement take him away from his regular job.
Alves painted his own mask, (a tribute to fellow equipment managers Skip Cunningham, Bob Gorman and Dave Paul drawn by Erik Huffine, the brother of Hurricanes video coach Chris Huffine) and sharpened skates during the game, just as he would if he weren't wearing full goalie gear.
"I can't shake the habit; seriously I have a duty with the team and I wasn't going to change that," Alves said.
A native of Massachusetts, Alves has worked with the Hurricanes since the 2003-04 season. A U.S. Marines veteran, he played for the North Carolina State club team and in the ECHL and Southern Professional Hockey League.
"It was obviously a big day for him," Hurricanes center Jordan Staal said. "He's worked hard for us, he's been at practice a lot and taken a lot of high heat from us. He deserved a day like that."
It might have taken him 364 days to get there, but Alves finally had the professional highlight of his year.
"The guys were really excited for me and that meant a lot to me," he said.