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Charger Blogger Discusses Fueling Your Brain for Finals
Beatrice Glaviano Ӱԭ26, a nutrition sciences major, offers her guide to brain-boosting foods for end-of-semester study sessions.
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For Ben Robert Ӱԭ81, Ӱԭ83 MBA, it is his goal to create opportunities for the next generation of athletes to enjoy hockey and excel, both on and off the ice. HeӰԭs grateful for his four years as a member of the UniversityӰԭs hockey team, and he hopes to continue to support todayӰԭs young hockey players Ӱԭ as well as current Chargers.
January 12, 2023
When Ben Robert Ӱԭ81, Ӱԭ83 MBA was growing up in Montreal, he and the kids in his neighborhood had one winter sport they were particularly passionate about: hockey. Robert, whose dad got him out on the ice when he was three years old, says it was hard not to play hockey in Canada. The sport became his passion, and Robert would go on to play as a University of New Haven Charger, and it would eventually become the focus of his career.
Robert was one of three French Canadian student-athletes recruited by Steve Lane, then-coach of the UniversityӰԭs ice hockey team, to play for the Chargers. As he adjusted to college, living in a new country, and being a student-athlete, Robert was also learning a new language. While his first semester was particularly challenging, he was determined to succeed. By the end of that November, he was able to carry on a conversation in English.
ӰԭThe good news about not speaking the language is when your coach yells at you, you have no clue heӰԭs yelling at you,Ӱԭ Robert joked. ӰԭBut once you figured out the language, you figured out he was yelling at you all that entire time.
ӰԭThere were some tough moments,Ӱԭ he continued. ӰԭBut our coaching staff was always very supportive, and therefore, there was no quitting in me.Ӱԭ
Robert fondly remembers the support of his business law professor, in particular. After starting the semester speaking very little English, Robert pushed himself, successfully completing the class. It helped him gain the confidence to excel not only on the ice, but in the classroom.
ӰԭI went to see my professor, and I asked him why he gave me a passing grade,Ӱԭ said Robert. ӰԭMy professor said, ӰԭMy job was not to teach you business law. My job was to teach you to speak English. Who am I to fail a kid who has the guts to come here, take a scholarship, and play hockey? To shoot him down out of the gate, thatӰԭs not what IӰԭm about in life.Ӱԭ I never forgot that. Afterward, it was basically DeanӰԭs List every semester.Ӱԭ
Even after realizing pursuing a career as a professional hockey player was not an option, RobertӰԭs passion for the sport never wavered as he focused on achieving his academic goals. Because heӰԭd received a four-year scholarship and earned credit for the classes heӰԭd taken at a junior college, Robert had two more years of eligibility to play hockey for the Chargers after completing his bachelorӰԭs degree. So, he decided to pursue his masterӰԭs degree. HeӰԭd earned both an undergraduate degree in business administration and his MBA (marketing) before he was 23 years old.
ӰԭI am extremely proud of my degrees,Ӱԭ said Robert. ӰԭThey got yellow over time, and I ordered new ones recently because theyӰԭre that meaningful to me. There are things thereӰԭs no price tag on, as the value is in your heart.Ӱԭ
Despite not having previous work experience as many of his classmates had, Robert began his career in telecommunications soon after graduating. He moved to San Jose, California, to work for a Canadian company, then later relocated to San Diego to accept a sales management position with .
While this position enabled him to travel the world Ӱԭ he spent a considerable amount of time in Europe and Asia and had an apartment in Paris for a few years Ӱԭ he knew this wasnӰԭt how he wanted to spend the rest of his career. While commuting from the state of California to work, he realized he no longer wanted to spend so much of his time on a plane, so he resigned.
ӰԭSomething was always missing,Ӱԭ he explains. ӰԭI was working great jobs and I did well financially, but I wasnӰԭt passionate. I figured out my passion. ItӰԭs hockey.Ӱԭ
Although Robert had planned to take a year off, he received an assist from a friend that took his career in a new direction. He called his friend, Luc Robitaille, who was president of the , a National Hockey League team, and he offered Robert to join the teamӰԭs staff. Robert served as vice president for business development, beginning the first period of his career on the business side of the sport.
A year after RobertӰԭs career change, another opportunity presented a new direction for his career Ӱԭ as well as a move halfway across the country. A contact heӰԭd known from his days in telecommunications contacted him about buying a junior hockey team in Omaha, Nebraska. He and several partners did just that, and Robert moved himself and his family to the Midwest.
Though he at first questioned whether or not he was making the right decision, Robert kept his eyes on the goal: to put a team that was struggling financially and had been overshadowed by the cityӰԭs college team back at center ice. It required rebuilding the teamӰԭs business and its arena, and Robert and his team did both, while also building a sense of community and creating new opportunities for the athletes.
Reflecting on seeing more than 200 of the athletes go to college through the , Robert says the time he spent in Omaha were among the best years of his adult life.
ӰԭEvery year I had 23 guys, and I was like their dad,Ӱԭ said Robert, who also has a son and daughter of his own. ӰԭWhen they would come to my office and tell me they had a scholarship to Michigan, to North Dakota, to Harvard, I was like a beaming father every time. I was not there to sell the game of hockey Ӱԭ I was there to sell what we were doing for the kids through the sport of hockey. This turned young boys into men, and we took care of them.Ӱԭ
Robert was ready for a new challenge when he received an unexpected phone call from a friend who asked him if he wanted to help bring an expansion team back to Quebec since the Nordiques, an NHL team, left the city in 1995 and had become the . Initially skeptical, he was told it would be his responsibility to help build the arena and try to get the city an NHL team again.
Robert spent the next two years commuting from Omaha to Quebec, successfully building the arena, but he and his partners were not able to obtain the franchise that was awarded to Las Vegas.
After returning to California, Robert was focused on consulting when he realized there was a major gap in junior hockey in the state. He set his sights on a new goal: to establish a Tier I junior hockey league in California.
ӰԭCaliforniaӰԭs professional hockey teams have done a great job of building youth hockey, but when a kid reaches age 15 or 16, they typically have to relocate to the Midwest or Canada,Ӱԭ he explains. ӰԭThey have to leave home to pursue a career or play college hockey.Ӱԭ
After presenting his project to , the governing body of the sport, Robert had to put his plans on hold. In September 2020, he was diagnosed with chronic leukemia. He says he got Ӱԭreally lucky,Ӱԭ since his illness was caught before it became acute. As winter approached and the COVID-19 pandemic surged, he was told heӰԭd have to spend eight weeks in the hospital away from his loved ones. HeӰԭd go on to have radiation, chemotherapy, and a stem cell transplant.
Leaning on his team of support, Robert says his friends and family pulled him through. He received gifts large and small: a transfusion of his sonӰԭs stem cells and text messages with quotes from one of his former Chargers teammate Scott Brazis for 100 days in a row. On Christmas Day, a nurse told him his white blood cell count was starting to go up, as his sonӰԭs stem cells were taking hold. He ended up being released from the hospital in half the expected time.
ӰԭI go to bed at night and I say Ӱԭthank youӰԭ, and I get up in the morning and I say Ӱԭthank you,ӰԭӰԭ said Robert. ӰԭOne thing I learned from a very young age is to never forget where you came from. This December, I had my two-year anniversary of my stem cell infusion, and my blood count is great. My bone marrow biopsy was great. The two-year mark is a big mark. Now I want to give back.Ӱԭ
Robert has scored a hat trick, of sorts, in finding important ways to give back. After his recovery, he was more driven than ever to start a junior hockey league on the West Coast because he wanted to make a difference in the lives of the young athletes, much as heӰԭd done in the Midwest.
ӰԭWhen I was the owner of that team in Omaha I was like a beaming father,Ӱԭ he said. ӰԭThatӰԭs what I want to do. I want to keep the California kids home as much as possible. First and foremost, I want to help grow the game of hockey on the West Coast and to provide the kids the highest standard of junior hockey.Ӱԭ
The league has received support from west coast NHL teams as well as RobertӰԭs fellow league founding members. TheyӰԭre still working out some of the logistics, and he expects the junior hockey league will be operational in October 2024.
Committed to making an impact in his home country as well, Robert has been working on a $100 million project over the past two years to build 45 acres of greenhouses in Quebec that would increase local autonomy and access to locally grown produce.
Robert has also been giving back by connecting with his alma mater. A member of the advisory board for the UniversityӰԭs alumni, he recently returned to the University to speak to current students, something he was Ӱԭhumbled and honoredӰԭ to do. It was a full-circle moment, a poignant reminder of how far heӰԭs come.
ӰԭWhen I look back at my life and at when Dr. Ceyda Mumcu invited me to speak to students, I thought about two things that reflect what IӰԭm now doing and why IӰԭm here: the University and Steve Lane,Ӱԭ he said. ӰԭHaving my coach in the audience and some of my teammates was meaningful. At the end of the day, itӰԭs the people who really matter.Ӱԭ
When Robert looks back on his time as a Charger and on his life and career since earning his degrees, he keeps returning to one word: gratitude. He hopes to continue to express that gratitude by creating opportunities for young hockey players and by supporting the next generation of Chargers as much as he can.
ӰԭI told the students I spoke to that if they need guidance, if theyӰԭre trying to get a job or an internship, IӰԭll do my best to help them,Ӱԭ he said. ӰԭI would love to help them all. I know what the University did for me.Ӱԭ
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