Couple's ultimate Winnipeg Jets 'fan cave' a tribute to love not just for team, but for each other - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 08:03 PM | Calgary | 0.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Couple's ultimate Winnipeg Jets 'fan cave' a tribute to love not just for team, but for each other

Beausejour area couple Kyle Calder and Stefanie Sobieski have crafted a replica rink in their basement, a testament to the couple's shared passion for all things hockey.

'Hockey's a huge part of our relationship': Manitoba couple looking forward to playoffs and their wedding

Stefanie Sobieski and Kyle Calder spent about 6 months working on their Winnipeg Jets "fan cave." (Supplied)

Scoring a ticket to a Winnipeg Jetsplayoff game would be the ultimate fan experience, but getting an invite to Kyle Calder and Stefanie Sobieski's Jets "fan cave" might be a close second.

Calder andSobieski, who are engaged to be married, have spent countless hours building a tribute to their favourite team in the basement of their home nearBeausejour, Man., about 50 kilometres northeast of the Jets' home city.

Take a tour inside the Jets fan cave

7 years ago
Duration 1:22
Beausejour area couple Kyle Calder and Stefanie Sobieski have crafted a replica rink in their basement, a testament to the couple's shared passion for all things hockey.

"As I got older I did want to have something that was more along the lines of a man cave kind of thing, but I wanted my fianceto be down here as well, so[we] changed it to 'fan-cave,'" said Calder.

"I was all for it,"saidSobieski."We were always hockey fans and I loved the concept of it he's a carpenter so he has that vision."

The couple started dating sevenyears ago, around the time the Jets made their return to Winnipeg. Calder had been a fan of the original Jets team as a kid.Sobieski was a Team Canada and Edmonton Oilers fan, but that soon changed.

Calder and Sobieski joined a coed hockey team together last year. They say their shared love of the sport has brought them closer. (Submitted)
"Just his passion and seeing how creative he is, and just how much he devoted his time for his team, I definitely fell more in love with him seeing his passion for the team," said Sobieski.

When the pair moved into their home together in 2014, they knew they wanted to create a space devoted to their shared love of hockey.

"The passion that we share for hockey definitely brought us closer together as a couple," said Sobieski.

Now, a 500-square-foot area of their basement servesas a replica ofBellMTSPlace, the Jets' home arena.

It took nine coats of paint to turn theconcrete floorinto a replica ofan ice rink, complete with sideboards. Sobieski hand-painted the lines to complete the look.

The centre line leads up to the big screen TV, encased in a handmade frame to make the TV look like a Jumbotron.

"The rafters, the joists are all painted in the same sequence as the armband on the jerseys. They were colour matched right off of my actual Jets jersey," said Calder.

"The boards, I made sure they were regulation height.I was trying to make everything as to scale as possible," he said.

The fan cave takes up about 500 square feet in the basement of Calder and Sobieski's home. (Holly Caruk/CBC)

The walls of the fan cave are covered with autographed photos, ticket stubsand hockey sticks.

"I've basically been collecting items slowly since I was old enough to start watching hockey," said Calder.

There's even a corner with a net for practising slapshots, puck lights embedded in the boardsand a siren that flashes each time the Jets score.

"When I have the surround sound going, and all of the goal lights on and the lights dimmed, it's very much like a hockey atmosphere down here," said Calder.

Proposal on ice

The couple's tribute to the team is as much a declaration of their love foreach other as one for the Jets.

"Right from Day 1, it's kind of always felt as if the team was part of our relationship, and vice versa," said Calder.

"It is our main hangout. We literally come home, we get changed and we go downstairs. We have dinner and we sit in our cave," said Sobieski.

The couple now play hockey together on a coed team and make the game a part of their lives.

"I actually proposed to her at one of my hockey games," he said.
Autographed photos and other memorabilia line the walls of the fan cave. (Holly Caruk/CBC)

Calder faked an injury duringa gameto get Sobieski's attention and get her out on the ice for the proposal.

"She came out onto the ice and one of my teammates passed me the ring behind the board, and so I kinda got up on one knee and proposed to her on the ice," said Calder.

Sobieski says the stunt had her completely fooled and she rushed out onto the ice in a panic.

"Slowly out of his sleeve he pulls out this ring and he proposes to me in front of his whole team, and I was just shocked. I was not expecting it whatsoever."

Gearing up for Stanley Cup

With a wedding in the works, the couple say they may not be able to make it to a playoff game, but hope to have several gatherings in the fan cave to watch.

"[To win the Stanley Cup] would be something this city has obviously never seen, but it'd just be unbelievable," said Calder.

While the soon-to-be-married couple are hoping their team will take the NHLchampionship this season, a Stanley Cup is already in their plans either way.

Thewedding cakeat their nuptials this Septemberis set to be a life-size replica of the trophy.

"Hockey's a huge part of our relationship,"saidSobieski.

"It's definitely brought us together and so has building the Jets cave."