gonna be working on Nahl Dirk's (he/him/his) character sheet for today's stream! if you didn't catch the new schedule: 7 PM to 12 AM CST!
we're also 4 followers away from unlocking our first stream buddy! 💚

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gonna be working on Nahl Dirk's (he/him/his) character sheet for today's stream! if you didn't catch the new schedule: 7 PM to 12 AM CST!
we're also 4 followers away from unlocking our first stream buddy! 💚

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
my friend is on a separate flight than me to el paso for our band event and said that shes seated by a hockey player. she went MIA to airplane mode like 40 mins ago, but i desperately want to know what member of the (assuming) el paso rhinos she is sitting next to (i really want to know his stats)
Nahl Sûresi, 126-128.
Inspiring others by representing culture, using tilde in last name
Marco Treviño, 40, is the new coach of the United States Hockey League's Tri-City Storm. Â
"I want people to understand. You come from a Latin background -- in my case, being full Mexican -- it's not something you see in the game. I want people to see it, so they say, 'This guy did it. This guy played for a long time, and now he's coaching for a long time.'"
Treviño wants to share that part of his family story -- to represent, educate, and inspire.
Marco grew up in the Detroit area, where his parents, Bernardino and Gloria, still live today. Bernardino was born in Linares, Nuevo León, Mexico, and immigrated to the U.S. at 17 years old; Gloria was born in Michigan after her parents moved from Linares to Detroit.
Treviño family
A former defenseman, Marco picked up hockey for the same reasons many kids try the sport: he grew up near rinks, and his older brother, Juan, played first. At a time when relatively few Mexican-Americans played high-level hockey, Treviño reached the USHL with the Waterloo Black Hawks and Sioux City Musketeers.
Treviño family
On Dec. 3, 2024, Treviño was elevated from assistant coach to head coach. Treviño believes the promotion is rooted in crucial lessons he learned while coaching AAA hockey based in suburban Detroit.
"I was able to build a bit of a reputation there -- this is where that second-tier player should go, who's not the most heavily recruited, to get better and stronger and work their way up to the [North American Hockey League]," Treviño said. "A lot of those guys, I still keep in touch with."
Treviño's development philosophy is also informed by his most important role: father to three children, including 18-year-old Tristen.
Tristen was born in 2006, shortly after Marco turned 22, and is now a defenseman with the Bismarck Bobcats of the NAHL.
"I think that's helped me as a coach, knowing what people are telling these kids," Marco said. "My son's been up and down, the [NAHL] and USHL. Knowing what pressure is on these kids: Division I scholarships, which colleges are talking to him, is he in the lineup tonight. …
"Having those conversations with my son on a personal level, and knowing exactly what he's feeling, is what allows me to have empathy in those same conversations with my guys."
Treviño family
Treviño's approach was rewarded when the Storm named him as their 10th head coach.
"When I started coaching, this is the level I always wanted to be at," he said. "This was the goal, to be a USHL head coach. I feel like I can give the most to players -- and players need the most support -- at this age, with things going on in their lives. Moving away from home, not being with their families for the first time, but they're all Division I committed, so there's a hurry to get to college.
"I know when I played, it was a very tough time for me. This is where I feel like I can offer the most support to players."
Treviño family
Marco has made countless trips to Mexico to visit relatives there; Bernardino has seven brothers and seven sisters) Family remains at the center of Treviño's life despite the challenges of working in hockey. The Tri-City Storm is based in Kearney, Nebraska, but Marco's wife, Keila, and their children remain based in the Pittsburgh area; Marco had coached there for the Pittsburgh Penguins Elite program before joining the Tri-City coaching staff.
The current Colorado College associate coach, recommended that Tri-City general manager, hire Treviño as a Pittsburgh-based scout. When then-Storm assistant departed the organization, the Tri-City general manager offered Treviño the opportunity to replace Nies.
"I knew the opportunity doesn't come around very often, so I had to jump and take it," Treviño recalled. "It's been great, but it's tough. I live away from home … I have a 6-year-old with autism, so the programs he's in -- counseling and schooling -- everything's already set up there, so we weren't able to really move. It's not an option to move him."
Like many of the players he's coaching, Treviño had to move away from home to pursue his hockey dream. That's yet another common experience as he seeks to build connections with his players.
"Being empathetic, putting myself in other people's shoes, and saying, 'This is what's going through an 18-, 19-, 20-year-old kid's head,'" Treviño says. "Thinking about it in a supporting role, instead of a dictating role, and guide them through the process.
"Making the experience positive, teaching them life lessons they can carry on to Division I, to pro -- that's where I'd like to think I have success, trying to get through it with them."
Treviño family
Marco Treviño is making a name for himself, one that more people in the hockey world will learn with each game. And with Tristen committed to play college hockey at Robert Morris, there will be more opportunities to write about the Treviño family.
Game 5 of a best of 5 series.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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A little noodling with the Fairbanks Ice Dogs logo as a bit of a soul-balm for @holtbys-left-eyebrow, with some constellations that are visible from Alaska for good measure 💙
I mean👀
ANCHORAGE IS GETTING AN NAHL TEAM ALASKA HOCKEY SUPREMECY