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China to implement cybersecurity law from Thursday

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China, battling increased threats from cyberterrorism and hacking, will adopt from Thursday a controversial law that mandates strict data surveillance and
SHANGHAI – China, battling increased threats from cyberterrorism and hacking, will adopt from Thursday a controversial law that mandates strict data surveillance and storage for firms working in the country, the official Xinhua news agency said.
The law, passed in November by the country’s largely rubber-stamp parliament, bans online service providers from collecting and selling users’ personal information, and gives users the right to have their information deleted, in cases of abuse.
“Those who violate the provisions and infringe on personal information will face hefty fines, ” the news agency said on Monday, without elaborating.
Reuters reported this month that overseas business groups were pushing Chinese regulators to delay implementation of the law, saying the rules would severely hurt activities.
Until now, China’s data industry has had no overarching data protection framework, being governed instead by loosely defined laws.
However, overseas critics say the new law threatens to shut foreign technology companies out of sectors the country deems “critical”, and includes contentious requirements for security reviews and data stored on servers in China.

© Source: http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2017/05/29/asia-pacific/china-implement-cybersecurity-law-thursday/
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LEADING OFF: Trout gets checked, Price makes season debut

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By The Associated Press A look at what’s happening all around the majors today:
A look at what’s happening all around the majors today: ___ TROUT OUT? The Angels will see how star Mike Trout is feeling, a day after he sprained his left thumb making a headfirst slide to steal a base in Miami. Trout left the game and X-rays were negative. The outfielder was scheduled for an MRI back in California before the series opener vs. Atlanta, and hopes to avoid the disabled list. The reigning AL MVP is hitting.337 and tied with Yankees rookie Aaron Judge for the major league home run lead with 16. PRICE PRIMED Red Sox lefty David Price is set to make his season debut, starting against the White Sox in Chicago. He has been sidelined since early spring training because of a strained left elbow. The 31-year-old former AL Cy Young Award winner made two Triple-A rehab starts and gave up nine runs and 12 hits in 5 2/3 innings. Price went 17-9 for Boston last year. SKIDDING The Orioles have lost a season-worst seven in a row and been outscored 38-17 during the skid. Dylan Bundy (5-3,2.92 ERA) aims to end the rut when he starts at Camden Yards against Yankees rookie Jordan Montgomery (2-3,4.30 ERA) . KEEP TRYING Marlins righty Edinson Volquez leads the majors in losses going into this start at home against the Phillies. He is 0-7 with a 4.82 ERA. Volquez signed with Miami after going 10-11 with a 5.37 ERA last year for Kansas City. FILLING IN Oakland plans to recall righty Daniel Mengden from Triple-A Nashville to make his first major league start of the season in Cleveland. The 24-year-old missed much of the first two months following surgery on his right foot. He is 2-1 with a 2.21 ERA in four Triple-A starts this year. He reached the majors for the first time last season and went 2-9 with a 6.50 ERA in 14 starts for the A’s. Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

© Source: http://www.cbs46.com/story/35536553/leading-off-trout-gets-checked-price-makes-season-debut
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Introducing a Parameterized Test Suite for JUnit 4 Introducing a Parameterized Test Suite for JUnit 4

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This look at automated GUI tests tackles parameterized tests suites in JUnit 4, courtesty of a simple extension that provides the Runner class for that purpose.
Parameterized tests became valuable for me when I started automating GUI tests for web applications with Selenium and WebDriver: Although GUI tests are no unit tests for sure the JUnit framework is very handy for test definition, execution and result aggregation. Integration with CI is also available off the shelf. Once I had reached a good coverage of use cases in a single browser, I wanted to port these test cases to other browsers as well. Thus, I parameterized my tests with the browser being the parameter and ran these tests on Chrome, Firefox and Internet Explorer. Since all my tests should be executed on all browsers, the next logical step was to define these parameters at the test suite once instead of defining them repeatedly for every test class.
Wanting to define parameters on suite level and having the use case of test automation in mind, I implemented and published an open source library as an extension of JUnit 4. Integration is easy and uses the same patterns as in parameterization of single test classes.
Start by defining another dependency in addition to JUnit 4. For Maven:
The set of test classes in a test suite and the set of parameters the suite defines lead to two alternative execution strategies:
Execute all tests per parameter
Execute each test with all parameters in a row
The current implementation of ParameterizedSuite implements the first strategy, i.e. for each parameter all tests are run before going over to the next parameter. That way instances of parameter objects are handed over from test to test and allow to share state between tests.
Sharing state between tests became especially important in my case for GUI tests: A browser could be set up once and be reused in all tests. That way the session, cookies, current URL and history persisted.
Due to the execution order, only a single parameter instance may be accessed from the ParameterContext at once. During the test suite’s execution the test classes will be instantiated multiple times and, consequently, the method annotated with @Parameters will also be called as often.

© Source: https://dzone.com/articles/introducing-a-parameterized-test-suite-for-junit-4?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=feedpress.me&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+dzone
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Indy 500: Takuma Sato Is the First Japanese Driver to Win

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Sato had to hold off Helio Castroneves over the closing laps Sunday to deny the veteran a record-tying fourth Indianapolis 500 victory
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Takuma Sato had victory in sight once before at the Indianapolis 500. When he attempted a last-lap pass, Sato lost control of his car, crashed and Dario Franchitti went on to his third victory in “The Greatest Spectacle In Racing.”
In nearly the same position five years later, Sato leaned on lessons learned in that 2012 defeat and became the first Japanese driver to win the Indianapolis 500.
“I do feel after 2012 that I really needed to correct something I left over, ” Sato said. “In 2012, going into Turn 1 with Dario was a big risk. But you always learn something from those situations, and this time we proved we had what it takes.”
In winning for just the second time in IndyCar, Sato had to hold off Helio Castroneves over the closing laps Sunday to deny the veteran a record-tying fourth Indianapolis 500 victory. The two swapped the lead, and Castroneves made one last attempt at a pass for the win that he couldn’t make stick.
“When Helio was coming with three laps to go, on a big charge into Turn 1, we went side-by-side, ” Sato said. “But this time I ended up still pointing in the right direction and still leading. It was job done, and the last two laps the car worked beautifully.”
The win was the second straight for Andretti Autosport in the Indy 500 and third in the last four years. An Andretti driver has now won the 500 five times overall dating to 2005 with the late Dan Wheldon.
Last year, it was with rookie Alexander Rossi. This time it was with Sato, who joined the team this season and had largely been overlooked at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The Andretti camp expanded to six cars for the 500 to add Fernando Alonso, a two-time F1 champion who brought massive European interest to the race.
Six cars never seemed to spread the team too thin, and the main issue facing Andretti Autosport was the reliability of its Honda engines. Alonso put on a thrilling show and even led 27 laps but he was sent to the paddock when his engine blew with 20 laps remaining.
Still, his race was spectacular and Alonso simply fell victim to his engine late in the race. The crowd gave the Spaniard a standing ovation as he climbed from his car.
“It’s a very nice surprise to come here with big names, big guys, the best in open-wheel racing and be competitive, ” said Alonso, who didn’t rule out a return.
“The last two weeks, I came here basically to prove myself, to challenge myself, ” Alonso added. “I know that I can be as quick as anyone in an F1 car. I didn’t know if I can be as quick as anyone in an Indy car.”
The Honda teams had a clear horsepower advantage over Chevrolet, but things were dicey in Indy for more than a week and certainly on race day: Before Alonso’s failure, 2014 winner Ryan Hunter-Reay lost his engine and so did Charlie Kimball. Hunter-Reay led 28 laps and was a strong contender late.
Still, Honda had the winning engine at the end and six of the top 10.
“I’m really happy for Honda. They worked really hard to get us here, ” team owner Michael Andretti said. “I know how big this news is going to be tomorrow when they wake up in Japan. It’s going to be huge. I’m really happy for them, that we were able to give them a win with our Japanese driver here.”
In a Chevrolet for Team Penske, Castroneves briefly took the lead but couldn’t hold it as Sato grabbed it back. Castroneves was disappointed to fall short of the four-time winners club — particularly since it was his third runner-up finish.
“Being second again sucks, being so close to getting my fourth, ” Castroneves said. “I’m really trying. I’m not giving up this dream and I know it’s going to happen.”
Ed Jones finished a career-best third and was followed by Max Chilton and Tony Kanaan, the highest finishers for Chip Ganassi Racing.
A joyful Sato dumped a bottle of 2 percent milk over his head, received a kiss from the Indy 500 Princess and raised his finger in the air. Andretti ran down pit lane to reach Sato’s crew, then rushed to hug his driver. Even Franchitti made his way to victory lane to congratulate Sato, who was eager to see the impact of his win at home in Japan.
“This is going to be mega big, ” he predicted. “A lot of the Japanese fans are following the IndyCar Series and many, many flew over for the Indianapolis 500. We showed the great result today and I am very proud of it.”

© Source: http://time.com/4797101/takuma-sato-indy-500/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+time%2Ftopstories+%28TIME%3A+Top+Stories%29
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South Korea questions six rescued North Koreans as it eyes engagement

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South Korean authorities were questioning on Monday six North Koreans rescued over the weekend as they drifted in the sea off the east coast and will send
SEOUL – South Korean authorities were questioning on Monday six North Koreans rescued over the weekend as they drifted in the sea off the east coast and will send them home if they want to go, the South’s Unification Ministry said.
The rescue comes as South Korea’s new liberal government has pledged a more moderate approach to North Korea including engagement and reopening a communication channel that has been severed amid tension over its arms programmes.
The six are believed to have been on two fishing vessels, one of which was overturned, when they were rescued by the South Korean coast guard and the navy on Saturday, the coast guard said.
The six were being questioned by a South Korean team, and would be asked if they wished to be repatriated to the North, Unification Ministry spokesman Lee Duk-haeng told a briefing.
If so, they would be sent home, said the ministry, which handles ties with the North.
Such questioning by South Korean authorities is routine when North Koreans are rescued at sea.
The South returned eight North Koreans and their vessels in December after rescuing them off the east coast, in line with their wishes.
Lee said incidents such as the rescue and the repatriation of the crew were examples of why an open line of communication between the two Koreas was needed.
South Korea imposed unilateral sanctions against the North after its fourth nuclear test and a long-range rocket launch last year, in addition to sanctions applied in 2010 after the sinking of a South Korean navy ship that Seoul blamed on the North.
North Korea denied involvement in the sinking.
The sanctions cut off almost all exchange between the rival states that had been set up since 2000, when South Korea’s “sunshine policy” brought a period of cautious rapprochement.

© Source: http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2017/05/29/asia-pacific/south-korea-questions-six-rescued-north-koreans-eyes-engagement/
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Samsung SDI to launch new household ESS

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Samsung SDI will show off new residential ESS products as more homes are expected to power themselves with electric batteries.
Samsung SDI will show off new household energy storage system (ESS) products this week to meet the rising demand for electric battery use in the European market.
The company, which supplies batteries for Samsung Electronics’ Galaxy smartphones and global manufacturers’ electric vehicles, will show off its new line-up at the Intersolar Europe 2017 tradeshow in Munich that kicks off May 31.
The firm will highlight its high-capacity, high-energy ESS modules aimed at households, it said. ESS for households are usually used to save energy collected from solar panels.
Samsung previously launched its new product line, mainly for industrial use, in March at the Energy Storage Europe 2017 tradeshow in Dusseldorf, Germany.
Samsung supplies modules to end-product ESS makers to fit with cases and other components to sell as finished products. It is offering 4.8kWh per module. Up to 39 modules can grouped to one unit, giving it a maximum capacity of 188kWh that can theoretically power 19 homes a day. An average European home uses 10kWh per day, the firm said.
Samsung said its modules are highly scalable, allowing it to meet a diverse client demand. The company is currently testing them with customers, and production will begin in the second half of the year, followed by commercial application beginning in 2018, the company said.
There will be 83,000 ESS units for households by this year and this will grow to 146,000 units by 2020, according to market research firm B3. Samsung SDI globally holds 30 percent of the market.
Samsung SDI has been number one in the field in Japan since 2013, which saw demand for household ESS surge following the Fukushima nuclear disaster in 2011.
The company also supplies it modules to Tesla, which is planning to build Gigafactories .

© Source: http://www.zdnet.com/article/samsung-sdi-to-launch-new-household-ess/
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Nokia Windows Phone with Physical Keyboard Leaks

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This is an old model that got canceled before launch
One of the handsets that the firm wanted to launch was the RX-100, a device that ran Windows Phone 8 and which featured a physical keyboard, just like a BlackBerry model.
Basically, Nokia wanted to combine a physical keyboard and touch support in the same way BlackBerry managed to do earlier this year with the KEYone, trying to offer the best of two worlds to its customers.
With this model, Nokia was going after business users specifically, and in some way, it aimed at building a model that would compete against 2012 BlackBerry models with a combination of new hardware and a modern operating system like Windows Phone.
As you can see in these photos that got leaked to the web recently via WL, the phone was running Windows Phone 8, and Nokia worked together with Microsoft before the launch of this version of the mobile operating system to make sure everything was working correctly.
Additionally, the device featured an AMOLED screen, though its exact size is not known, and offered 2GB storage, which was supposed to be enough at that point. MicroSD card support was also planned for users who wanted more storage.
As far as the keyboard goes, it featured a total of 39 keys with no dedicated number row, so users had to press a combination of keys to input numbers.
Unfortunately, this device never made it to the market for a reason that we don’ t know just yet, but it once again shows that Windows Phone had huge potential but lacked OEM support.
As for the future of the platform, nothing is known at this point, as not even Microsoft seems to be working on new devices right now. Microsoft could focus exclusively on enterprises with its mobile platform, but the hardware side of the OS remains uncertain.

© Source: http://news.softpedia.com/news/windows-phone-with-physical-keyboard-leaks-516094.shtml
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UK police arrest 16th person in connection with Manchester attack

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British police said on Monday they had arrested a 16th person in connection with the Manchester suicide bombing last week.
The 23-year-old man was arrested in Shoreham-by-Sea, Sussex, “on suspicion on offences contrary to the terrorism act”, Greater Manchester Police said on Twitter.
A total of 16 people have been arrested in connection with the attack, in which 22 people died. Two were released without charge, while 14 men remained in custody for questioning, the police said.
(Reporting by Sangameswaran S in Bengaluru; Editing by Gopakumar Warrier)

© Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-security-manchester-arrests-idUSKBN18P0H0?feedType=RSS&feedName=worldNews&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Reuters%2FworldNews+%28Reuters+World+News%29
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Lacson: Get used to Duterte’s rhetoric

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President Rodrigo Duterte cannot just ignore the Supreme Court and Congress regarding martial law in Mindanao, two senators said on Monday.
President Rodrigo Duterte cannot just ignore the Supreme Court and Congress regarding martial law in Mindanao, two senators said on Monday.
“Under the Constitution, he cannot do that, ” Senator Grace Poe said in an interview over ABS-CBN News Channel when sought for comment on Duterte’s statement.
“But again, knowing the President, he’s been there for almost a year now, we have to realize that he speaks depending on who he’s addressing, who his audience is. I know the President still has to realize that whatever he utters, whether in a small, intimate gathering or a huge gathering, will have an impact on the country.” she said.
On Saturday, Duterte said his martial law declaration in Mindanao would continue until the police and the military say that the Philippines was safe.
“Until the police and the Armed Forces say the Philippines is safe, this martial law will continue. I will not listen to others. The Supreme Court justices, the congressmen, they are not here, ” the President said.
Senator Panfilo Lacson expressed doubts whether or not the President was serious with his statement.
“The better question to ask is if he meant, half-meant or didn’ t mean at all what he said. Filipinos should get used to his rhetoric by now, ” Lacson said in a text message to reporters.
“The mere fact that he complied with the constitutional requirement of submitting to Congress the written report within 48 hours shows his respect and regard to the Constitution and the duly established authorities. He is a lawyer and he knows that he can’ t ignore the SC and the Congress in this regard, ” he added.
Poe and Lacson are members of the majority bloc in the Senate.
But for Senator Antonio Trillanes IV, Duterte’s statement only proved that he had no respect for the rule of law and democratic institutions.
“Since day 1 when Duterte ordered the killing of our people in his fake war on drugs, it was quite clear that he had no respect for the rule of law and democratic institutions, ” Trillanes, an opposition member and known critic of Duterte, said in a statement.
“People should start waking up because he will keep on pushing the boundaries of his power for as long as no one is pushing back, ” the senator added. CBB/rga

© Source: http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/900560/lacson-get-used-to-dutertes-rhetoric
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How a Candy Heir Sneaked Into Pro Hockey and Made His Name as a ‘Savage’

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Nello Ferrara was being groomed to take the reins of a famed confectioner, but chose to cobble together a decade-long career with 19 minor league teams.
CHICAGO — The impostor took the ice, his face concealed, and kept his head down. He did all he could to blend in.
At a closed N. H. L. skate, a tuneup scrimmage during the lockout of 2004, some two dozen players glided about the rink in the training facility of the Chicago Blackhawks. The pros didn’ t know it, but someone else had crashed their practice.
His name was Nello Ferrara, and back then, in hockey circles, that did not mean much. Thirteen years ago, Ferrara was still just a wannabe in the sport, a 27-year-old bruiser with but a handful of junior and minor league games on his résumé.
But Ferrara had outsize dreams. Hockey, he had found, was all that made him whole, all that allowed him to escape his crumbling personal life, which existed in the shadow of his family’s business, a famous American confectionery behemoth run by more than a century’s worth of Ferrara men. Nello was the presumed heir to this candy fortune.
As his father groomed him for the position, Ferrara discovered he wanted another life. The wealth, the power, the status that came with belonging to one of Chicago’s most prominent business families — none of it ever totally captured him. What did was hockey. So there Ferrara found himself in 2004, desperate to see if he had what it took to hang with the sport’s best.
Despite limited natural skill, Ferrara had by then patched together the first season of what would become a wild and improbable career, a now-decade-plus turn through hockey’s minor leagues that has caught the eye of countless N. H. L. players and coaches.
Ferrara reasoned that if he could weasel his way into one of these exclusive skates, where Blackhawks and other N. H. L. talent scrimmaged and maintained their skills while the league resolved a yearlong labor dispute, he could at least look the part of a pro.
But how to get in?
Ferrara decided to call in a favor. He had grown close with a Blackhawks player named Kyle Calder, who had golfed and skated recreationally with Ferrara for years. If Ferrara had the stones to try this, Calder could not resist helping.
On the day of the skate, as the N. H. L. players arrived at the rink, Ferrara slipped into the facility through a door on the opposite side of the arena. “Snuck in like Batman, ” he later joked. Calder had secured all the official gear he could — Blackhawks pants, gloves, a practice jersey, any equipment he could find, Calder recalled, that would help Ferrara appear to be a bona fide member of the team.
Ferrara dressed on his own in a separate locker room. There, he said, he waited. Finally, he donned a Blackhawks helmet with a visor that obscured much of his face, and when the N. H. L. players took the ice and began to glide in circles, Ferrara opened a door to the rink. He hopped onto the ice, lowered his gaze, and hoped no one would notice.
As the cool ice passed beneath him, it was time to prove that he belonged.
The first drill began, and Ferrara gathered a puck while skating toward Blackhawks goalie Jocelyn Thibault, an All-Star who had missed time in previous seasons with concussion-related symptoms. Just two minutes into the practice, Ferrara teed up his first shot to put on net. He watched in horror as the puck rocketed away from its intended place, crashing into the forehead of Thibault’s mask.
Thibault doubled over, and all Ferrara could do was slink away and pray that nobody had seen. But as Thibault skated slowly off the ice, obviously hurt, heads began to turn.
Mortified, Ferrara spotted the Blackhawks enforcer Ryan VandenBussche, a famed pugilist most known for ending the career of Nick Kypreos during a preseason fight in 1997, glaring in his direction.
“My life, ” Ferrara thought, “is over.”
In 1900, the Italian baker Salvatore Ferrara arrived on the shores of the United States. Eight years after that, he opened a Chicago storefront selling pastries and candy-coated almonds, and over the next century his Ferrara Candy Company, which would later roll out iconic sweets like Lemonheads and Red Hots, grew into the largest maker of nonchocolate confections in the country.
By the late 1990s and early 2000s, Nello Ferrara was being readied to take over the business that carried his name. For the family, it was to be a joyous time. For Ferrara, those days were filled with darkness.
He was becoming the right-hand man to his father, Salvatore II, then the company’s president and chief executive, learning how to run each part of the flourishing enterprise. Ferrara had played three seasons of junior hockey as a teenager, and had relished his years on the ice, but suddenly there was no longer time for the sport.
Things were changing in the Ferrara family, too. In 2000, when Ferrara was 24, his parents were going through a divorce. Devastated, Ferrara sought ways to cope. He found himself in downtown bars five nights a week, downing Absolut Mandarin vodkas without regard for much else.
“I’ d pound 10 of them, then drive home at night, ” he said. “It got to the point where I realized I wasn’ t having fun while I was out. That was my escape from everything in my family kind of falling apart.”
The drinking was a sign of something more. “The person I was becoming, I hated, ” Ferrara said.
And so he needed to find a new path. By 2002, Ferrara left his office in the candy company’s headquarters to oversee its warehouse, which happened to have unused space on its floor. He built a gym, using an old hockey workout plan he found to get in shape. At first, hockey was not on his mind. He had stopped drinking and merely wanted to bring order to his life and grow stronger in body and soul.
In time, though, hockey was all that was on his mind. After many years trying to bury the feeling, Ferrara finally allowed to himself that he wanted more than the family business.
Hockey tugged at him, but he had not played since 1997, his last season in juniors, where he scored precisely one point over stints with five amateur teams. Who would possibly give him a shot?
Thus commenced the legend of Nello Ferrara, a career out of the script pages of “MacGyver, ” in which he used every trick in the book to cobble together 10 seasons in minor league hockey when perhaps he should not have had one.
For his first crack at the minors, Ferrara deployed a favored con he would use time and again. In 2003, he called up the Bakersfield Condors, a team in the East Coast Hockey League, and pretended to be his own agent, claiming he had this tough, gritty kid named Nello Ferrara the Condors ought to see. He caught the ear of the team’s general manager, who instructed the man on the phone to tell Ferrara to report for training camp.
When Ferrara arrived in Bakersfield, he was cut almost immediately, yet word got around that there was this guy trying out for the Condors who had impressed with his work ethic. He soon received a call from a United Hockey League team, the Rockford IceHogs. Ferrara shipped off to northern Illinois and played his first games as a pro.
He had traded a lucrative career at the family business for life in the far reaches of professional hockey, in outposts short on glamour and shorter still on pay. When members of his family found out, they were upset, even heartbroken. Yet Ferrara had never been happier. He was making a few hundred bucks a week and loving it.
Ferrara lasted only five games in Rockford, and that would become a trend. Though he grew to be a beloved locker-room presence and a valued teammate, he had no real prospects of becoming an elite player.
But Ferrara was enamored of the chase, dipping into his bag of tricks often to keep the dream alive. He had fun with it, introducing himself to teams using colorful agent names, like Victor Fox or Nellie LaChanse, that caused even Ferrara to crack up. The ruse worked, over and over again.
Ferrara had other ways to get by. During a training camp early in his career, he said, he approached his locker to find his name misspelled above it: F-E-R-R-A-R-O. Teammates and coaches presumed he was a nephew of Ray Ferraro, a former N. H. L. All-Star who twice scored 40 goals in a season. Ferrara did not have the heart to correct them.
Another time, a team named the South Carolina Stingrays brought Ferrara in and was somewhat confused when he arrived. He had told management that he was 27, but when the team payroll department ran his tax information, it showed he was 33. Ferrara insisted the computer was lying. The Stingrays shrugged it off, Ferrara said, and kept him on their roster, anyway.
And so it went. A few games here. A few games there. Where a box score was concerned, Ferrara made almost no mark. Between 2003 to 2014, he did more than 20 stints with 19 minor league teams, many of which no longer exist. Ferrara scored only one goal, in 2012, which he described as a one-hop dribbler that just squeaked by the goalie.
But he left in his trail a host of players and coaches smitten with his play, his enthusiasm to sacrifice his own body, his willingness to fight an opponent’s toughest player in defense of his teammates.
“I played with a lot of guys, ” said Jamie Rivers, a longtime N. H. L. veteran and Ferrara’s coach on the St. Charles Chill of the Central Hockey League. “I’ d put Nello in the top five in terms of his willingness to do whatever it took for the team.”
Ferrara’s (real) agent, Justin Duberman, added with a laugh: “Nello’s gone to great lengths to get opportunities. But, to be honest, he might not have ever gotten them without doing what he did.”
For the longest time, the legend of Nello Ferrara — who, despite plunking Thibault, never was exposed at that closed N. H. L. skate all those years ago — lived in the dark, his name bandied about locker rooms across Canada and the United States but known to none outside hockey.
Then, last August, the former N. H. L. player Paul Bissonnette shared with his nearly one million followers on Twitter the stories he had heard of Ferrara.
Other N. H. L. players who knew the legend of Nello Ferrara chimed in. “I met him by chance one day, ” wrote Colby Armstrong, a former winger in the league. “Seemed like a real weapon.” Brandon Bollig, then of the Calgary Flames, added, “He’s a complete savage to skate with in the summer.”
Bissonnette seemed to say it best, though.
“This man, ” he wrote, “should have a statue.”
One afternoon late in March, Ferrara steadied the wheel of his S. U. V. through a neighborhood west of Chicago. This is where he grew up, he noted proudly, cruising down leafy streets lined with beautiful, stately homes. Today, he lives not far from here.
He has not played a professional hockey game since 2014, though he remains obsessive about his physique and conditioning. Ferrara still scours transaction logs of minor league teams, tracking injuries and call-ups in case one of them might need a player like him. He is either in the gym or on the ice, often both, six days a week, prepared just in case a team happens to call.
“He’s always ready to go, ” Duberman said. “It would be like a boxer who spends his entire day shadow boxing and jumping rope, waiting for someone to tap him to go into the ring.”
Ferrara is 41 now, keenly aware of his declining worth to a game that values younger legs.
“I don’ t have a future as a player, ” he said soberly, seated at his kitchen island.
His wife, Laura, who married him last year, interjected. If a team called him now, she said, “he would be in the car telling me, ‘I have to go.’ ”
Hockey is, after years of grinding out a career that should never have happened, still what brings the best out of Ferrara.
“He’s just a happier person when he plays hockey, ” his wife said. “He’s not complete. His heart isn’ t full when he isn’ t playing hockey.”
Remarkably, hockey has left Ferrara in reasonably fair health, despite all those years he spent brawling through the sport. There have been changes in his life, of course. His father died of esophageal cancer in 2014. The Ferrara Candy Company is gone, too, sold to a private equity firm in 2012.
Ferrara, who continued an on-and-off career with the family business until 2010, saved every dime he could while navigating the poor-paying backwaters of hockey, living so frugally that for more than a year during his playing days he did not even have a car.
Today, Ferrara has turned into something of an entrepreneur, his savings invested in four restaurants, three rental properties and a gym, all in the Chicago area.
On a mild day early in spring, Ferrara took to a patch of ice at a rink in west Chicago for his daily skate. Under the watchful eye of a personal coach, the former N. H. L. defenseman Steve Poapst, Ferrara handled the puck and carved his way across the ice.
Midway through the practice, Poapst instructed Ferrara to weave around two pads placed along the left side of the ice. On his first two tries, he took the puck on his stick and began to maneuver, but lost his handle. Ferrara cursed, his voice echoing through the empty rink. He bent forward at the hip, perspiration dotting the ice below him, resting his stick across his knees.
Perhaps there was a lesson in the moment, about focus and sacrifice, about perseverance and resolution. Or maybe it meant nothing at all.
After a beat, Ferrara gathered himself. The legend continued on.

© Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/29/sports/hockey/how-a-candy-heir-sneaked-into-pro-hockey-and-made-his-name-as-a-savage.html?partner=rss&emc=rss&_r=0
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