Youngstown Phantoms Profiles: Jordan Tibbett And Matt Mahalak
Goaltenders are wired a little different. They usually are not the best skaters on the ice and rely on their reflexes to get their jobs done. Jordan Tibbett and Matt Mahalak are the tandem that the Youngstown Phantoms have been using all season. Any hockey fan will vouch that a teams defense makes or breaks a goalie. The more shots faced, the more goals scored, that’s just elementary. Both Phantoms goalies have done well this season but are very different as individuals. In the first-ever Paneech.com dual interview, meet the netminders, Jordan Tibbett and Matt Mahalak.
Paneech: How did you both end up as goaltenders, what was the draw?
Tibbett: I thought the equipment was cool. My dad always wanted to play but never did, so he stuck me on the ice.
Mahalak: For me, when we were playing mytes, we would rotate at goalie. One game I got in there and played pretty well and never got back out.
Paneech: Unique situation, you are on the same team, yet you are in competition for starts. How does that work? Do you get along even though you are competing or does it get competitive?
Tibbett: It gets competitive. Really, through pushing each other we really want the best for each other. The better he [Mahalak] gets, the better I have to get and I have to push myself.
Mahalak: I have learned stuff from Jordan every practice, and I just try to pick up things. We are both going for the same number one job, but we are pushing each other to get better so we can both get to the next level.
Paneech: Is there a little light in your head that goes off when you are not in and you see your counterpart get scored on three times in a period, is there a response mentally, like, “I could have stopped all of those” ?
Tibbett: Whenever I see a goal from the bench, I start to brainstorm and ask myself what he could have done differently to stop a shot. Whenever we get a TV timeout, I can talk to Matt and tell him something I may have noticed. I’m not over there going, ‘Oh Yeah! Matt is getting scored on!’
Mahalak: Same here. I am looking for something that he might not be doing in that game to hopefully help him keep his head on straight. We help each other to regroup to finish the game.
Paneech: How much do both of you rely on the defense in front of you?
Tibbett: It definitely helps. If you see ten shots from the corner of the blue line, it makes your job really easy. If you are seeing ten breakaways a game, it makes your job really difficult. It varies game-to-game. They are doing everything they can to help us out.
Paneech: Why does a coach switch a goalie instead of a defenseman if you are facing forty-plus shots per game?
Mahalak: Switching the goalie is because you are at a turning point in the game. If a goalie is getting lit up, whether its his fault or not, the team will switch just to try to give an extra boost, or to create a turning point.
Paneech: You both have little rituals. When the puck is on the other side of the ice, Jordan, you like to skate across the goal line to the boards. Matt, you usually drink water and then depart on your little trip. What is the reason to leave the crease every dead whistle?
Tibbett: It’s alot of things. Whenever I am moving around when the play is at the other end or there is a whistle, it keeps my blood flowing and helps me to stay loose. At the same time, you are getting mentally prepared. Alot of goaltending is repitition and when you are doing the same thing before every game, and during every game, you go to a familiar spot that puts your mind and body at ease.
Mahalak: I listen to the music and just try to relax. Other times, I try to really get geared up and focus. There is some superstition mixed in with all of the repitition. Doing the same things over and over makes it easier.
Paneech: You clear your head. When the puck is on the other side of the ice, you guys have the best seat in the house. You are still somewhat focused, yet you are now at ease a bit. How often do you guys look around, watch the scoreboard, and take in the atmosphere?
Tibbett: Whenever the play is stopped, I like to look up and see the replays just to get a different angle as to what is going on. It helps me to have more knowledge in the back of my head to make better split-second decisions.
Mahalak: When you get scored on, the replay is played and you see what happened. After the replay, you have to put it behind you and move on. It helps refocus and regain confidence.
Paneech: I have noticed at these USHL games, there are alot of times an opposing player will be crashing the net, stop on a dime, and spray ice flakes all over the goalie. How mad do you get, do you put the hit out when someone does that to you?
Tibbett: Players will do that in hopes of getting you in the eyes so that a puck may have a chance to get by. It is just part of the game and something you have to play through.
Mahalak: I don’t get too upset, I remain pretty calm. Usually it is the defensemen that get upset over that kind of stuff. I brush the snow off and just get back to what I am doing. If they are doing that to me, I know they are trying to get in my head, that just means that I am in their head.
One Word Answers
Tibbett Mahalak
Favorite Meal: Dinner Pre-game meal
Biggest Phobia: Heighths Spiders
Best Movie: Goonies Surf’s Up
Best All-Time Goalie: Dominic Hasek Terry Sawchuck
What On A Pizza: Meat Lover’s Meat Lover’s
Music: Anything, but Country Anything, Especially Country
Worst Habit: Mumbling Sitting Up In My Butterfly
Soft Drink: Root Beer Anything Bottled
Fast Food: Chik-Fil-A Subway
Worst Thing You Ever Did:
Tibbett: (Laughs) I had a bunch of stickers of bugs and stuck them everywhere and watched my grandfather try to kill them. It was pretty cruel.
Mahalak: I haven’t done anything wrong yet. I am the golden child.
Paneech: Jordan, what do you thin is in Matt’s future in the sport of hockey?
Tibbett: I think he is going to the NHL. His first game in the NHL will be when he is 22.
Paneech: Matt, where does Jordan go?
Mahalak: I think Jordan should be in college right now. I don’t know what he is doing messing around. He has NHL potential and hopefully he can get a scholarship this year.