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Goalie gear paying off for Geneva's Peters

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Geneva resident and hockey player Sidney Peters will be competing in the U18 World Championships in Finland. (Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com)

GENEVA – It was not the typical request a dad might anticipate from his young daughter, but Sidney Peters was adamant – she wanted hockey goaltending gear.

Initially, it was a tough sell for Peters, who said she was about 10 years old at the time.

“I always wanted to play goalie, but my dad kind of opposed the idea because he didn’t want to have to pay for the goalie pads, which are super expensive, and he didn’t know if I’d like it,” Peters said. “But once I finally talked him into it, I knew it was what I wanted to do, and I’ve loved doing it ever since.”

These days, Doug Peters is still forking over money because of his daughter’s zeal for hockey, but the haggling has stopped. The debate is over. His daughter is a natural.

Peters, a 17-year-old Geneva resident, is scheduled to leave today for Finland, where she will compete with the U.S. 18U team at the Women’s Ice Hockey World Championships. It is the second straight year she has represented the United States in the World Championships after the team took second place at last year’s event in the Czech Republic.

Peters has attended Geneva schools since elementary school but is taking a detour as a high school senior. She is spending most of the school year at the North American Hockey Academy in Stowe, Vt., an academy for elite, young female hockey players that also has an academic component.

She will return in March after her season with her NAHA team is through, and plans to complete her high school career with her fellow Geneva seniors. Peters already has committed to play collegiately for the University of Minnesota, the top-ranked women’s hockey program in the nation.

Peters played for the Chicago Mission travel hockey program the past five years before joining some of her Team USA teammates in September at NAHA.

“[Geneva High School] has been great with all the classes she missed because she missed like 20 days last year,” said Karen Peters, Sidney’s mother. “The school was phenomenal with it but as far as trying to make things up, she was either trying to catch up in her classes, or she was tired, so we thought this would be a way where she could combine [school and hockey]. She wouldn’t have to have the commute and always be playing catch-up.”

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