Landeskog is not allowed to practice with the team because of NCAA rules. So, he takes a few twirls and shoots a few pucks with the players beforehand, then watches practice from the bench until he must leave for his last stop. Before he goes, he signs a stick. He leaves it and his gloves in Pulver's locker for him to find later.
"It was great to have him here," Pulver says. "Hopefully he learned a little bit about what we go through, so I mean, hopefully the game means a little more."
* * * * *
Landeskog is led through the athletic complex in the late afternoon, the time of day when it buzzes with cadets practicing all kinds of sports. Each cadet competes at the Division I, club or intramural level.
"No exceptions," Silveria says. "I mean, everybody is an athlete. All of them have to take the physical fitness test each semester. All of them have to take the physical fitness test to enter and to graduate. Everybody is an athlete, because we believe in the competitiveness that you build in competing all the time, in pushing yourself, teamwork, learning about yourself, physical courage."
Each cadet must pass aquatics, which includes swimming and water survival classes. A cadet can start water survival training by jumping from the 10-, 7.5- or 5-meter platform into the pool at Cadet Natatorium and swimming under a bulkhead. The higher the platform, the more points he or she earns toward passing the class.
Landeskog strips to shorts and climbs to the top of the 10-meter platform while divers do flips and swimmers do laps. He looks down.
A long way down.
This is not virtual reality. This is not a simulation. This is the real thing. But just like that, he runs and jumps, arms and legs flailing, and crashes into the water.
He survives.
"I mean, I first get up there, and it looks really high," Landeskog says. "And then you get up to the edge, it looks even higher. And then I just said, 'Nope. Counting down from three, and then I'm going.' And I just went for it. And then once you're in the air, it's too late anyways.
"It probably wasn't the most [graceful] jump you've ever seen, but I got it done."