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Flynn Balances Life in the Air Force and Professional Hockey
Flynn Balances Life in the Air Force and Professional Hockey
By Dave Toller, Air Force Academy Athletic Media Relation
Few people can actually say they have had a dream come true.
Greg Flynn has had two.
The opportunity to serve the country he loves and the chance to
play professionally in the sport he loves.
A 2009 graduate of the Air Force Academy, Flynn is a second
lieutenant stationed at Hanscom Air Force Base, just outside of
Boston.
By day, he is a contract manager. An officer diligently working on
market research, negotiating contracts and sending them forward
through the Air Force process.
By night, he puts on the No. 37 sweater as a rookie defenseman with
the Lowell Devils of the American Hockey League. A fiercely
competitive defenseman with a razor’s edge, he goes
toe-to-toe with players who will soon be, or have been, in the
National Hockey League.
“Playing professional hockey is an unbelievable opportunity,
but I am an officer in the Air Force and very proud of that,”
Flynn said. “I cannot thank everyone involved in the process
enough. Everyone has been so supportive and for that I am eternally
grateful. To my coaches at the Academy who taught me to play at the
highest level, my commanders here at Hanscom who have given me this
opportunity and the Lowell administration who took a chance on an
unknown. A heart-felt thank you.”
Flynn was a 2009 All-American at the Air Force Academy where he was
the nation’s top scoring defenseman. His slap shot made him a
threat on every power play. But it was his tenacious style of play
that gave Air Force a toughness it needed to win three straight
championships.
In March 2009, Flynn assisted on both goals to help lead Air Force
to a 2-0 win over third-ranked Michigan in the NCAA Tournament. Air
Force reached the Elite Eight for the first time in school history
and posted a school record 28 wins.
“Greg Flynn came to us as blue collar defenseman and he
willed his way to becoming the leading scoring defenseman in the
nation,” Air Force coach Frank Serratore said. “He
started out as a big, rugged defender whose work ethic and
intensity enabled him to become the complete package. He came to us
as a two-tool player and developed into a five-tool player. He has
great balance to his game. He went from being a player who
couldn’t play on a mediocre Air Force team to being an
All-American on a team that nearly made the Frozen Four.”
Flynn’s work ethic carried over into the classroom as well as
he was a three-time academic all-conference selection. In the final
week of May, 2009, Flynn graduated from the Air Force Academy with
a degree in management and was commissioned a second lieutenant.
After taking 60 days of leave, he spent five weeks at contracting
school at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio and started his first
assignment at Hanscom. He practiced with the Devils for three weeks
before going to the Air and Space Basic Course, an entry level
module for all new lieutenants at Maxwell AFB, Ala.
Upon returning to Hanscom in early December, Flynn’s dream of
playing professional hockey became a reality. He signed an amateur
tryout contract and first practiced with the Devils, the top minor
league affiliate of the New Jersey Devils, Dec. 8. His first game
came on the road at Manchester (N.H.), Dec. 19.
“I hadn’t felt nerves like that in a long, long
time,” Flynn said. “Not even my first college game. I
think the biggest reason is that I had not played a game since
April against Vermont in the NCAA Tournament. Then once the game
started and I played my first shift, it all went away and I was
just playing hockey again.
In his third career game, again at Manchester, Flynn had four shots
on goal, the third most on the team. As of Jan. 22, 2010, Flynn
played in six games and has 12 shots on goal. He earned his first
plus as a professional in a 3-2 loss to Syracuse on Jan. 14, a game
in which he tied his professional career high of four shots on
goal.
“From the time I was a kid, I always dreamed of playing in
the NHL,” Flynn said. “I grew up a North Stars fan and
always thought to myself, ‘hopefully that is me one
day’. I think every kid that plays a sport when they are
young, dreams of playing that sport professionally.”
Flynn started playing hockey when he was seven. Not long after, his
father built a rink on the side of their home in Lino Lakes, Minn.
Flynn, and his two younger brothers, Ryan (a senior forward at
Minnesota and a Nashville Predators draft choice) and Jake (a
junior defenseman at Centennial High School) had the pleasure of
playing right in their own backyard, just a few miles north of
Minneapolis.
A two-time all-conference and an honorable mention all-state
selection at Centennial High School, Flynn was recruited by former
Air Force assistant coach Joe Doyle. Flynn committed to the Air
Force Academy while still in high school and then played one year
of junior hockey for the Billings Bulls of the North American
Hockey League.
The freshman year at a service academy is certainly challenging,
but for Flynn the hockey season was difficult as well. He did not
play in the first half of the season. His first game came on Dec.
31, 2005 against RIT. From that point on, he missed just three
games in three-and-a half years.
“Hockey was the only thing I was good at and I was failing at
that,” Flynn said. “That was the low point of my hockey
career. I worked as hard as I possibly could and I felt like my
work ethic is what got me through and helped me throughout my
career.”
Air Force was 11-20-1 his freshman year, but little did he know at
the time that a championship foundation was being built. Air Force
won three straight league Atlantic Hockey championships, played in
three NCAA Tournaments and reached the Elite Eight his senior
year.
“After my freshman year, if someone said ‘do you think
you’ll ever play in the NCAA Tournament’ I would have
said ‘absolutely not’,” Flynn said. “Going
to the NCAA tournament my sophomore year and playing against my
brother was a dream come true. After that I thought, ‘that
was cool’, but I don’t know if it will happen again.
Then to go back and go a little farther every year was
awesome.”
Similar to his days as a cadet, Flynn must find the balance between
his Air Force career and athletics and put in the commitment
necessary to succeed at both. Flynn wakes up at 5:30 a.m. and gets
to the office by 6:30. First and foremost, he must work a full duty
day. After a couple of hours in the office, he leaves for Lowell
for the Devils' practice (about 15 minutes away) in the late
morning and then returns to Hanscom to complete his day into the
early evening.
“The day is a little like playing at the Academy when I had
class and then practice and back to the dorms at about 7
p.m.,” Flynn said. “The difference is now I don’t
have homework.”
Flynn has played in five games with the Devils and has seven shots
on goal. Playing at the highest level of minor league hockey, Flynn
knows he still has a long way to go before reaching the NHL.
“The biggest thing I need to do is to adjust to the speed of
the game,” Flynn said. “I need to improve on the little
things of the game, being in the right place all the time and
trying to be a step ahead of the game. The guys in this league are
future NHL players. They know exactly where they need to be and
what they are doing all the time. I have a lot to learn on the
hockey side, but I know that my priority is the Air Force and I
take a lot of pride in that.”
The Department of Defense policy is that an active-duty service
member pursuing professional sports must serve a minimum 24 months
(Flynn’s 24 months extends through May, 2011). At that point,
an individual can apply for early release and that process is
reviewed on a case-by-case basis. There are several conditions that
would need to be met, including the individual being assigned to
reserve unit and the situation having potential recruiting or
public affairs benefits for the Air Force.
“He’s a big, tough, durable defenseman who can also
make things happen when the puck is on his stick,” Serratore
said. “His greatest strength as a pro is that he
doesn’t have a weakness. That makes him real enticing as a
pro. The way he works, and his intensity, I would not bet against
this guy in anything he wanted to do.”
From the time the seven-year old first laced up the skates, to a
college All-American, a lieutenant in the United States Air Force
and now a professional hockey player, Greg Flynn truly is
livin’ the dream.





























