"And you kind of get the symbolic sense of the breeze blowing in your face, the open space, the open sky. There's no coaches, no scouts, nobody's critiquing you, there's no systems. Do whatever you want. That appeals to me and that appeals to a lot of kids hopefully still today. I know that definitely did when I was a kid growing up with my brothers."
He hopes that joy will continue. The families missed playing the Holiday Cup last winter for the first time since it started -- in part there wasn't time for Neal, playing his first full season with the Rangers, to get home during a short holiday break.
It is, however, on the tentative agenda for this winter, Nate said.
"I'd say it's a pending thing," he said. "When we get older, it gets harder. Everyone's busy. What we've talked about doing it maybe during the [NHL] All-Star break or at Christmas."
Before the next Holiday Cup takes place, Nate will be able to watch his older brother experience a new kind of outdoor game at the Heritage Classic.
"It's awesome," he said. "It's once in a lifetime when you get to play on a stage that big, outside and at something that spectacular and cool. Most people don't get to do that. I know everyone here's going to be watching and my mom is going, so it's a big deal."