Summary of today\u2019s show: Brian Boyle has reached the apex of his profession, a career that many young kids dream about, as a professional hockey player with the NHL\u2019s New York Rangers. Scot Landry and Fr. Matt Williams talk with Brian and his father, Artie, about his faith journey, how his father\u2019s struggle with and miraculous cure from cancer affected him, the discipline and commitment it took to get where he is today and to stay there, and how his faith, family, and friends as his top priority in life keep him in grounded in the sports media spotlight.\nListen to the show:\n\nToday\u2019s host(s): Scot Landry and Fr. Matt Williams\nToday\u2019s guest(s): Artie Boyle of Boston Catholic Development Services, Brian Boyle of the NHL\u2019s New York Rangers\nLinks from today\u2019s show:\n\n\n\n\n\n\nToday\u2019s topics: Brian Boyle of the New York Rangers\n1st segment: Scot Landry and Fr. Matt Williams caught up his busy summer. Last week, they had a retreat called Witness to Truth, a leadership retreat for high school students. Next Thursday they are doing a similar program for middle school students. For middle schoolers who are interested should check out the Office for the New Evangelization of Youth and Young Adults website at .\nToday\u2019s show is a followup to two shows they did last summer interviewing Artie Boyle about the miraculous cure of his cancer. Today Artie returns with his son Brian Boyle, NHL player and one of Artie\u2019s 13 children.\n2nd segment: Scot said there\u2019s been a tremendous amount of feedback on the shows with Artie last summer and asked Artie if he had any updates. Artie said the good news is that his health is still good. He said he also just came back from Medjugorje with a group of young people, including his two youngest sons who went for the first time.\nScot said he\u2019s heard that Brian didn\u2019t know how ill his father was when he was going through it. Brian said he remembers as a teen being floored by the news when he was at a church in Hanover and his father gave his witness to a confirmation group. In the talk, his father said he thought he was going to die and Artie had protected his kids from that news.\nArtie said he thinks its more difficult for the spouse and children of the sick person to go through with it than for the sick person himself. He said his family was busy with their own lives. Artie said he had just been diagnosed with the metastatic cancer and Brian had just been taken into the junior NHL hockey league in Canada and so he went up to Canada with Brian to experience it with him.\nBrian said he can\u2019t imagine what his father went through with all the people in his life he\u2019s taking care of. As he gets older, he understands even more what Artie did and how he kept everyone together. It\u2019s amazing how his dad traveled with him to a remote area in Canada on two or three planes and a long bus ride.\nScot asked Brian what it was like to go to Medjugorje knowing it was the place where his dad was likely healed of his cancer. Brian said it was impressive, especially how far it took to get there. He was 18 years old, right before the NHL draft and after high school graduation. He was under a lot of pressure, but going over there he felt a lot of peace. He understood the most important part of life. It was easy to walk up the mountain and be consumed in prayer.\nFr. Matt said we often talk about the importance of a mother and father in being handed on the faith. Brian said it\u2019s just impressive how they got everyone out of bed and to church on Sunday morning, but it\u2019s important because it became part of his life and as he got older he got more out of it. He learned to work hard at school and sports and be self-motivated because it was a gift from God and he had a responsibility.\nFr. Matt said our humanity is the bridge by which people can encounter Christ. He said it\u2019s amazing to see their selflessness in the lives of their kids and how it translates into so many ways they shaped their faith. FR. Matt asked how going to Medjugorje further shaped his prayer life after he returned. Brian said the confession in Medjugorje was the biggest change. Before, he was afraid of the sacrament, especially having to verbalize what he had done. But over there he went to confession and realized he could release the burden he didn\u2019t even know he was carrying. Going over there opened up for him all the things it can do for you.\nScot said Artie said last year he\u2019s never said no to invitation to share his story. Scot said he\u2019s sure thousands have come to a deeper relationship with Christ through his store; how does he feel to know his story has helped his own children. Artie said it\u2019s humbling. He and his wife Judy want nothing more than his children to believe in Jesus Christ and to follow him. Artie said every time he gives his talk, it feels like he\u2019s being healed all over again. He always says Yes because he someone may need to hear the story. Artie said their children are passing on the faith to their own children. Their one responsibility as a parent is to pass on the faith to their children. You can\u2019t force it on them. All you can do is live it as a witness.\n3rd segment: Scot said Brian went to St. Paul in Hingham and St. Sebatian\u2019s in Needham for high school. In his senior year, he was invited to participate in the NHL draft. Brian said it was very stressful, measuring yourself against the others, wondering which team would pick him, what round they would pick him in. He said it helped him mature a lot before going on to college. He flew down a couple of days early to Nashville for the draft. He had to do workout drills and they pick them apart and strip them down for their strengths and weaknesses. There were 30 from the family down there total. He was picked 26th overall. It was a whirlwind after that and finally later it all sunk in. Unlike the other leagues, when you\u2019re drafted in the NHL he can choose to go to college. Going into the draft, Brian knew he was going to Boston College. His first year in college was tough with many ups and downs. He\u2019d known being drafted was no guarantee, but he knew he would make it to play in the league. Those experiences helped him with his work ethic and being able to take ups and downs.\nScot said at Boston College the team made it two championships but never won. He asked how the closeness of family helped him. Brian said it was a dream of his to play for Boston College. He\u2019d always cheered for them. In senior year when they lost to Michigan State was the worst loss for him and took longest to get over it, but being with his family helped him through. He said his dad took it even harder.\nArtie said he grew up playing all sports. He played hockey goaltender in college and still plays. He said hockey players are a little more caring for their teammates than the other sports. Scot noted that he\u2019s seen the Bruins have always been a little more down to earth than the other athletes. Brian said he\u2019s found that among every hockey team he\u2019s played on. Selfish players are weeded out early. He said it\u2019s difficult to understand that you\u2019re always fighting for your job, but the culture is still caring for the whole team. They don\u2019t care who gets the goal as long as the team scores. It\u2019s one reason there\u2019s fighting in hockey with guys standing up for each other.\nScot said after college Brian played in Manchester in the minor leagues and then went to the LA Kings. He was asked to play a different position as defense instead of forward, which he\u2019d played all his life. Now with the Rangers he\u2019s back to his old position. Brian said he was a center his entire life until the last eight games of his senior year when injuries on his team forced him to play more defense. When he turned pro he was put on defense and had to spend a lot of time trying to understand the brand-new position. Over 30 games in Manchester he played D and it did give him an understanding of the position and how to use that as a center in the defensive zone. In the long run, that\u2019s helped it become a big part of his game.\nScot asked Artie about reports of a meeting between Artie and the general manager of the Kings, asking him to trade him East if he\u2019s not going to use him the way he should. Artie said he\u2019d known Dean Lombardi socially as a friend of a friend and so when he heard he was coming to Boston and arranged a meeting. They met for an hour at the airport Hilton to tell him about Brian, talk about his character and makeup so they wouldn\u2019t try to make him something he isn\u2019t. He understood Brian as a goal scorer. He asked if they plan to trade him to trade him East so they could see him play. A month later they traded him to the Rangers.\nScot said Judy, his mom, had been praying a novena to be traded East. Brian said he wasn\u2019t aware of his father talking to the general manager of the hockey club and when he heard about it he was nervous. Dean was understanding and was willing to do what was right for Brian. He\u2019s very happy in New York and thinks it\u2019s the best place to play, within an hour of home without being in front of the hometown crowd. Artie said his first night in New York, his mother told him she couldn\u2019t control herself, crying because he was so close. He didn\u2019t realize until he came back how much he missed his family and being close to home was a huge plus for him.\nFr. Matt asked what it\u2019s like to make it to the professional level and play in New York, night and night out with the pressure, and media scrutiny, and how he gets through it, especially with his teammates. Brian said he\u2019s been on both sides of the scrutiny. He said the fans have been supportive of him in New York. He said there\u2019s pressure even inside the locker room with the coaching staff and other players. they make sure your attitude doesn\u2019t change at all and that you remember you\u2019re part of a team. For Brian, he downplays everything else. He always remembers that they\u2019re just a bunch of guys playing the game, that they\u2019re all human. If you lose today, there\u2019s another game tomorrow, and if there isn\u2019t another game tomorrow, then leave it all out on the ice.\nScot said when you get to the apex of your profession, how complete is it for you? What can he say to teens about the balance of his life. Brian said it was always his dream to play in the NHL. Being able to do that, he\u2019s always striving to be better and then to achieve the ultimate goal of the Stanley Cup. Hockey is a huge part of his life, but it\u2019s not who he is. The biggest part of his life is family, friends, and faith. Those have been with him through the ups and downs of life. The best games are when he can talk to his dad after the game or to have his family there. Hockey is more fun when his family is part of it. And they\u2019ve taught him that his faith is number one.\nFr. Matt asked how he lives his witness as a Christian on the ice, off the ice, in the media room or wherever. Brian said hockey is funny because of the violence in it. Before every game he prays, right after warm up. He says the novena to St. Jude because that was his confirmation name and they prayed it when he was struggling in freshman year in college. He then goes out with then intention to do his best to glorify God with the gifts he as given Brian. In his interviews he gets to tell people how blessed he is to play in the NHL with the NY Rangers.\nScot said New York is the media capital of the world and asked Artie what it\u2019s like to deal with the ups and downs in the NHL, especially when they saw a cheap shot on Brian in the playoffs that knocked him out of playing for a few games. Artie said he was at the game and was concerned that he\u2019d been hurt after he disappeared off the ice. After the game, they were called into the locker room. He saw the nasty hit on replay. Brian had a concussion and it took him a while to recover from that. They temper the ups and downs, scoring and getting hurt, playing too little and too much. Artie said he gets so personally involved that his wife Judy says he\u2019s playing in his son\u2019s body.\nFr. Matt asked Brian about the discipline he goes through to go for excellence and how he stays motivated. Brian said the best example is getting up early on a Monday morning to drive an hour in July when the season just ended and next season is months away. It\u2019s a challenge but he also has seen what happens to guys who don\u2019t put in the work. The way he\u2019s been brought up and the way he\u2019s learned all along the way that he has to make this priority, that you have to work hard and not give in to temptations.\nScot asked Brian what advice he has for kids playing in whatever sport about reaching the apex of the sport. Brian said the number one thing is that winning as a team is more important than personal accomplishment. Teams want winners who\u2019ve contributed their individual effort to the ultimate prize. Brian said he\u2019s always been passionate about victory at the end of the day. You can\u2019t accept losing in yourself and always look to improve yourself for the next time.\nBrian\u2019s younger brother was just drafted by the NHL. He said he was even more excited for that than for his own draft. Artie said his others kid include a doctor with seven kids, a real estate broker, school teachers, retail, an MBA, two in high school, and the drafted hockey player going off to college.