When the Iafallos were growing up in Eden, New York, about 20 miles south of Buffalo, their father Tom was trying to think of new ways to help his hockey-playing kids improve their skills. Knowing that preteens can only endure so much repetition, he tried to keep practices creative and unconventional. He used weighted pucks and tried putting sand in the shaft of their sticks to build strength and help their stickhandling.
But Tom's most creative moment might have been the time they used Clementine oranges as targets when the kids were around 10-years-old. One of Tom's coaching friends had a box of oranges that went bad and he got the bright idea to put the moldy fruit to good use.
"I said, 'Let's take them to practice and we'll put them up on the net and they can knock them off,'" Tom said. "You make it fun for them. You're going to shoot 100 pucks, great.
"But now they're shooting at an orange."
Now, more than a decade later, his kids are shooting for the top with their respective hockey teams. Alex, 24, is an undrafted free agent success story with the resurgent Kings. A year ago, he was playing with the University of Minnesota Duluth against Michigan Tech, North Dakota and Bemidji State University. The Bulldogs eventually reached the championship game of the Frozen Four, losing to the University of Denver 3-2 on April 8.