Theoret, Matthew John Ross2009-04-302009-04-302009-04-302009http://hdl.handle.net/10012/4368This thesis explores how a group of 17 male youth athletes, and their families, experience competitive hockey. Many of the youths seem to forge fantasy relationships with hockey celebrities, heroes, and stars -- e.g. Sidney Crosby -- emulating them with regard to the "best" attitudes, equipment, and styles of play to have or use. Their parents invest considerable amounts of money and time into their sons' participation in hockey, not because they necessarily share their sons' dreams of athletic stardom, but because they hope that it will help instill community-defined "positive" values into their sons--tools needed to become "successful" youths and, eventually, adults.enanthropologycelebritycrosbyethnographyfamilyfanfantasy relationshipherohockeyidolizationimaginary relationshipmagicalnational hockey leagueNHLparticipant observationsidney crosbysocial anthropologysocializationsportstarthe sidney effectyouthyouth sportThe Sidney Effect: Competitive Youth Hockey and Fantasy RelationshipsMaster ThesisPublic Issues Anthropology