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Devils hold open tryouts for emergency goalies

NEWARK, N.J. — Steven Porzio's father was a New York Rangers fan, but he always rooted for the New Jersey Devils.

NEWARK, N.J. — Steven Porzio's father was a New York Rangers fan, but he always rooted for the New Jersey Devils. A goaltender himself, Porzio was struck by Martin Brodeur, and he dreamed of replacing the NHL's career wins leader when his days at the Prudential Center were done.

Porzio is now 27 years old and working in information technology, and he's given up hope of replacing Brodeur.

He still might suit up for the Devils on their home rink, though.

Porzio and 14 others tried out Saturday to become the Devils' emergency goaltender for this season. They were run through drills by former New Jersey goalie Scott Clemmensen at the Prudential Center, faced shots from players in the minor league system and even used a dressing room next door to the Devils' home locker room.

"You walk through the locker room area and see all the team photos, the little replica Stanley Cups," Porzio said. "That gives you chills a little bit."

This wasn't exactly fantasy camp, though. Clemmensen pushed the prospective netminders — mostly former college or junior players — through rigorous tests to evaluate their skating and puckhandling.

"Put them through a legitimate goalie clinic today, which I don't know if they were expecting," said Sarah Baicker, the Devils' director of content and communications, who helped co-ordinate the tryouts. "A couple guys looked like they're going to sleep really well tonight."

The tryouts are in response to a new league rule for this season, which mandates that teams have an emergency goalie present for all home games ready to fill in for either team. Last year, a number of clubs required backups on short notice, including when the Chicago Blackhawks called on Philadelphia-area youth hockey coach Eric Semborski for a game against the Flyers because Corey Crawford needed an emergency appendectomy.

New Jersey plans to pick a winner by the end of the week, and that goalie will need to be at all 41 Devils home games this season, plus the playoffs. New Jersey might pick more than one player to split up the schedule, though it hasn't decided yet if the emergency goalies will be paid.

The 15 netminders at the rink Saturday were selected from a pool of nearly 400 applicants, some of whom were targeted by the team.

"The skill level was pretty good, and that's what we're looking for today," said Clemmensen, now the goaltending development coach for the organization.

Among the final group was 43-year-old Anthony Felice, a hockey coach at Rye Country Day School in Rye, New York, who has been an emergency backup for the Devils' minor league teams in Lowell and Trenton. Injuries have slowed the former junior player, but he's healthy enough now to seek "a chance to do it one more time."

"To come out here and be in the big building was a lot of fun," he said.

Not all the participants were Devils fans, either. Matt Palella, a 23-year-old who played at Stonehill College in Massachusetts, just moved to the area from Chicago for a job in Manhattan a few weeks ago. He got word of the tryout and put in his name, not sure what he'd get from the experience.

"I was expecting, 'Go in the corner, figure it out,'" he said. Instead, he was surprised by how well New Jersey treated him and the others. "It was top-notch."

Palella blew out his knee late in his college career, and this was just his second time skating since the injury.

"I'm not hurt," he said. "That's all I care about. Walking away in one piece."

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Jake Seiner, The Associated Press