- Three-fourths of Utahns say attending a sporting event is expensive rather than affordable.
- The price of tickets for professional and college sports in Utah are going up.
- Utahns are split over whether there are too many sports streaming platforms.
College Sports
Is the cost for a college or pro sporting event too expensive? – Deseret News
Three-fourths of Utahns say attending a sporting event is expensive rather than affordable. The price of tickets for professional and college sports in Utah are going up. Utahns are split over whether there are too many sports streaming platforms. The Utah Jazz are raising season ticket prices for the 2025-26 season. The University of Utah […]
The Utah Jazz are raising season ticket prices for the 2025-26 season. The University of Utah is doing the same for football ahead of its second season in the Big 12 Conference. Prices jumped at BYU when it joined the conference and fans last year paid more for football tickets than any time in the school’s history.
Not everyone can afford season tickets, but many would like to attend a game or two.
The average cost of single-game tickets is hard to pin down in any sport but can come with a hefty price tag. How big depends on who the home team is playing, when you buy, date of the game and seat location, among other factors. You’ll pay more to see storied franchises like the Boston Celtics or Boston Bruins, for example. The same goes for high-demand Real Salt Lake matches.
There’s no question that the cost for taking in a live sporting event in Utah is going up, regardless of whether it’s professional or college.
And that isn’t lost on sports fans in the state.
A new Deseret News/Hinckley Institute of Politics poll found slightly more than three-fourths of Utahns say it is expensive rather than affordable for the average person to attend a sporting event in-person in Utah. Only 12% see the cost as somewhat affordable, while even less than that, 3%, say going to a game in person is very affordable.

The online survey of 845 Utah adults was conducted May 16-21 by Harris X. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.4 percentage points.
Broken down by income, 82% of survey participants making $50,000 to $99,000 a year say tickets to sporting events in the state are very or somewhat expensive, the highest response among income categories.
Younger people found sports tickets more affordable than older people, according to the poll.
The average price of a Utah Jazz ticket this past season was $218, according to Barry’s Tickets, an online resale marketplace. But the get-in price is considerably lower than that, especially for games against teams that lack star power. So, if you don’t mind sitting a little farther away from the action, there’s probably something in your price range.
By comparison, the Los Angeles Lakers had the highest average ticket price at $702, while the Indiana Pacers had the lowest at $82, per Barry’s.
Jazz season tickets for the 2025-26 season run $11,352 for a lower bowl, center court seat to $3,216 for the upper reaches of the Delta Center, per the team. Mammoth season tickets for the pasts season are comparable, at $10,920 for lower bowl, center ice seats to $3,024 in the upper bowl.
Smith Entertainment Group principal Ryan Smith acknowledged the high ticket prices for hockey games last year, saying the trend in sports is for player salaries and ticket prices to go up.
“We’re trying everything we can on that front,” he said.
The Mammoth had no trouble selling out of season tickets in its inaugural year, with demand, in fact, exceeding availability. Single-game tickets were expensive but the team also offered more affordable options in the second half of the season, including limited-view $10 tickets for students and shoppers at Smith’s grocery stores. Every ticket came with a hot dog and a bottle of water.
SEG, which owns the Mammoth, Jazz and Delta Center, also offered cheap food at the arena on what it called the “Mountain Menu” — hot dogs, ice cream, popcorn and nachos for $3 each and Dasani bottled water for $2 — among more costly arena concessions.
Utah also has a wealth of other pro and college sports for fans who just want to enjoy a game, including soccer, baseball, rugby and lacrosse — often at more affordable prices.
Salt Lake Bees tickets start at $13 for outfield berm but go up sharply from there to sit in the stands. Some club level seats go for more than $150 and include food and drinks.

For those who don’t attend games in person for whatever reason, there’s always television and streaming — if you can find the service that meets your needs and interests.
Utahns are split when it comes to their thoughts about viewing live sports on a screen, according to the Deseret News/Hinckley poll.
The survey found 42% believe watching or streaming live sports is easy and accessible, while 39% saying there are too many separate television and/or streaming platforms needed to watch live sports.
Poll participants ages 18 to 49 broke roughly the same as the participants as a whole. More than a quarter of those over 50 didn’t know whether live sports was accessible or if there are too many platforms.
The proliferation of streaming services can make it difficult to find what you’re looking for, especially when it comes to non-major sports. Those platforms have also raised prices, making it costly to subscribe to multiple services.
In 2023, SEG launched Jazz+ to stream Jazz games and followed that with Utah HC+ after the NHL team arrived last year.
The Motley Fool’s State of Streaming survey earlier this year found that 62% of respondents said there are too many streaming options. That’s up from 53% in 2022, per the financial services company.
Yahoo Finance reported last year that in addition to Fox, CBS and NBC, a football fan would have to subscribe to several streaming services to catch the entire NFL season.
“The NFL season is just one example of how fragmented the sports landscape has become as legacy media players and more recently tech giants compete for pricey media rights deals,” Yahoo Finance reported. “The reason: Sports content is highly desired by media companies looking to gain access to massive audiences of loyal viewers.”
College Sports
Steve Howey Cast As Phil Graham In Amazon Series
EXCLUSIVE: Steve Howey (Shameless, High Potential) has been tapped for a major recurring role on Amazon MGM Studios’ college-set romantic drama Off Campus, based on the best-selling book series by Elle Kennedy. There are 5 books in the series, which depicts the elite ice hockey team, and the women in their lives, as they grapple […]

EXCLUSIVE: Steve Howey (Shameless, High Potential) has been tapped for a major recurring role on Amazon MGM Studios’ college-set romantic drama Off Campus, based on the best-selling book series by Elle Kennedy.
There are 5 books in the series, which depicts the elite ice hockey team, and the women in their lives, as they grapple with love, heartbreak, and self-discovery — forging deep friendships and enduring bonds while navigating the complexities that come with transitioning into adulthood.
In the vein of Bridgerton, each of the first four novels tells the love story of a hockey player, with the fifth being a novella collection of all four couples. Season 1 of the TV series, based on the first book, The Deal, follows the unlikely romance between Hannah Wells (Ella Bright), a wry, hockey-hating music major, and Briar University’s playboy star center Garrett Graham (Belmont Cameli).
Howey will play Garrett’s dad, Phil Graham, a former hockey legend famous for his temper on the ice who pushes his son to be the star player he is today. The character is prominent in the first book and, like Garrett, also appears in the second, The Mistake.
Other Off Campus series regulars playing hockey players who would each take turns as a lead in subsequent seasons include Antonio Cipriano (Logan from The Mistake), Jalen Thomas Brooks (Tucker from Book #4, The Goal) and Stephen Kalyn (Dean from Book #3, The Score), with Mika Abdalla as Dean’s future leading lady, Allie. Fellow series regular Josh Heuston plays the Season 1 love rival role of Justin.
Off Campus was created by Louisa Levy and Gina Fattore who will serve as executive producers and co-showrunners. Also executive producing are Temple Hill’s Wyck Godfrey and Marty Bowen and James Seidman, Leanna Billings via her banner Billings Productions, Neal Flaherty, Silver Tree, with Temple Hill’s Annika Patton and author Kennedy producing. Deanna Brigidi and Andrea Bunker served as casting directors.
Howey was recently tapped as a new series regular on ABC’s hit new procedural drama High Potential as police Captain Jesse Wagner. He is probably best known for his role as Kevin Ball on the long-running Showtime comedy-drama Shameless. Howey also was a series regular on the hit WB comedy Reba and, most recently, led the CBS action series True Lies, executive produced by James Cameron and McG. He is repped by Independent Artist Group.
College Sports
Deion Sanders’ NIL proposal is nothing but a thinly veiled excuse
During Big 12 media day, Colorado football coach Deion Sanders repeated a narrative that’s dominated college football recently surrounding NIL. Essentially, he said the teams that spend the most money end up in the College Football Playoff, according to ESPN’s X account. While that’s true for most of the teams in the field, Arizona State’s […]

During Big 12 media day, Colorado football coach Deion Sanders repeated a narrative that’s dominated college football recently surrounding NIL. Essentially, he said the teams that spend the most money end up in the College Football Playoff, according to ESPN’s X account. While that’s true for most of the teams in the field, Arizona State’s NIL budget wasn’t nearly as hefty as Colorado’s last year.
Yet the Sun Devils received a first-round bye while the Buffaloes got blown out in the Alamo Bowl against BYU. This is an interesting perspective from a coach who has heavily benefited from both NIL funds and the transfer portal. Last season, Travis Hunter and Shedeur Sanders, the top two players on Colorado’s roster, had a combined NIL valuation over $11 million.
For context, according to a USA Today story in Nittany Lions Wire, Arizona State ranked ninth in the CFP last season for NIL funds at $10.6 million. The irony of Sanders saying this and still finishing behind a team with far fewer funds is what makes it sound like an excuse.
NIL doesn’t win games, but it does put a team in a competitive spot
I guess the conversation around NIL is destined to change with revenue sharing now part of college athletics. Programs will be allowed to keep their NIL collectives if they choose, though teams like Colorado have already jettisoned their collectives to focus solely on revenue sharing. Either way, the amount of money a team has to spend doesn’t directly correlate to that team actually winning at the highest level
While it gives teams access to the best players, it doesn’t actually play the games. Colorado found that out when they came up short of a College Football Playoff bid, losing games they shouldn’t have lost. They needed to beat Kansas, of all teams, to reach the Big 12 championship game and couldn’t do it. NIL (and family ties) helped the Buffs have the Heisman winner and one of the top quarterbacks in college football last year, but it didn’t get them over the hump.
You mean to tell me Sanders was able to poach Julian Lewis from USC simply because of the appeal of Boulder, CO? Yeah, I doubt that. Colorado was able to provide the money Lewis was interested in while also proving a better opportunity for him to play — though the latter usually gets left out of NIL discussions.
If you look at last year’s CFP field, SMU, Arizona State and Boise State all spent less than Colorado did, but that didn’t stop them from making the field. NIL has changed the recruiting game, but it doesn’t — and probably never will — directly correlate with winning national championships.
College Sports
Nashville Predators backed college hockey program, Tennessee State, delays start of inaugural season
The first ice hockey program at a Historically Black College and University will be put on ice for another year. The Tennessean reported on Tuesday that Tennessee State University’s men’s ice hockey program, which was expected to play its inaugural season this fall, will not play. It aims to compete in its first NCAA Division […]

The first ice hockey program at a Historically Black College and University will be put on ice for another year.
The Tennessean reported on Tuesday that Tennessee State University’s men’s ice hockey program, which was expected to play its inaugural season this fall, will not play. It aims to compete in its first NCAA Division I season during the 2026-27 athletic year.
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According to The Tennessean, a lack of facilities and fundraising have been contributing factors to another delayed season.
The Nashville Predators have partnered with Tennessee State to help establish the program, offering their facilities, and Predators CEO Sean Henry is helping to fundraise for the program.
“TSU had been a great partner of the Predators for some time, and we are excited to help them work toward the goal of becoming the first HBCU to field a NCAA Division I college hockey team,” Henry said following TSU’s announcement back in 2023 to establish an ice hockey program.
“President Glover and Dr. Allen are visionaries in their respective positions and should be lauded for continuing to build Nashville into the ultimate hockey town.”
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The team’s conception was announced at the 2023 NHL Draft in Nashville in an effort to promote diversity and inclusion within the sport.
TSU was initially expected to take the ice for the 2024-25 season as a club team and achieve NCAA Division I status by the 2026-27 season. However, the university changed its plans, intending to jump straight to Division I for the 2025-26 season.
Alongside the Predators, TSU has also been backed and supported by the NHL, NHL Players Association, and College Hockey Inc.
The NHL has also sponsored Arizona State and Augustana University (South Dakota) in successful efforts to create NCAA Division I ice hockey programs.
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“We appreciate our ongoing partnership with the Nashville Predators, which has played a pivotal role in our decision to pursue this historic undertaking, of starting an ice hockey program at TSU, and the first for an HBCU,” TSU President Glenda Glover said in a press release following the 2023 announcement.
TSU delays the start of its inaugural season despite having a head coach and an entire roster of players.
Duanté Abercrombie was hired as the team’s head coach in April 2024 and will be the first Black male head coach of an NCAA Division I ice hockey team. Abercrombie has been involved with multiple NHL teams, including the Washington Capitals, Toronto Maple Leafs, Boston Bruins and Arizona Coyotes.
He also served as a coach at Stevenson University, a NCAA Division III program in Maryland.
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TSU still has 13 players rostered for the 2025-26 season, two commitments for the 2026-27 season and one commitment for the 2027-28 season.
It has no goalies roster as its two prior goalie commitments, Johnny Hicks and Andrew Ballantyne, decommitted.
Hicks committed to Denver (NCAA) and Ballantyne to Ontario Tech (USports).
Since the news was broken on Tuesday, TSU has not made a formal announcement on the status of the team.
Xavier Abel, the first player to join TSU’s hockey team, poses for a portrait at the Gentry Center in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday, March 21, 2024. TSU is the first HBCU to offer ice hockey. © Andrew Nelles / The Tennessean / USA TODAY NETWORK
Forwards
Xavier Abel – 5’10 – 170 pounds – 24 years old – Drury University (ACHA-DII)
Cole Bishop – 6’2 – 214 pounds – 20 years old – Alberni Valley Bulldogs (BCHL)
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Ridge Dawson – 5’8 – 154 pounds – 21 years old – Trail Smoke Eaters (BCHL)
Marcus Fechko – 5’9 – 150 pounds – 19 years old – Odessa Jackalopes (NAHL)
Trey Fechko – 6’1 – 192 pounds – 21 years old – Janesville Jets (NAHL)
Stephen Kirkpatrick – 5’9 – 161 pounds – 21 years old – Spruce Goose Saints (BCHL)
Greye Rampton – 6’2 – 181 pounds – 20 years old – Langley Rivermen (BCHL)
Defensemen
Trent Ballentyne – 6’3 – 183 pounds – 21 years old – Prince George Spruce Kings (BCHL)
Kaycee Coyle – 6’0 – 187 pounds – 21 years old – Fairbanks Ice Dogs (NAHL)
Odie Ford – 6’3 – 209 pounds – 21 years old – New Jersey Jr. Titans (NAHL)
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Emerson Miller – 6’1 – 201 pounds – 21 years old – Northeast Generals (NAHL)
Sid McNeill – 5’7 – 146 pounds – 21 years old – Langley Rivermen (BCHL); Committed to Mayville (ACHA) for 2025-26 season
Ocean Fancy – 6’1 – 185 pounds – 21 years old – Maine Nordiques (NAHL)
Grady Hoffman – 6’0 – 185 pounds – 20 years old – 2026-27 commitment; Salmon Arm Silverbacks (BCHL)
Jadon Iygoun – 6’1 – 181 pounds – 19 years old – 2026-27 commitment; Spruce Grove Saints (BCHL)
Aidan Gray – 5’10 – 165 pounds – 16 years old – 2027-28 commitment; Little Cesars 16U AAA
College Sports
Flyers odds and ends: The Phantoms have a coach, the NHL has a CBA
The Phantoms have their next head coach. John Snowden is being promoted up from assistant coach over in Lehigh Valley to run the whole AHL bench, The Philadelphia Inquirer’s Jackie Spiegel confirmed. Snowden was on the ice during Flyers development camp in Voorhees last week, directing the organization’s prospects through various drills. He arrived to […]

The Phantoms have their next head coach.
John Snowden is being promoted up from assistant coach over in Lehigh Valley to run the whole AHL bench, The Philadelphia Inquirer’s Jackie Spiegel confirmed.
Snowden was on the ice during Flyers development camp in Voorhees last week, directing the organization’s prospects through various drills.
He arrived to the Phantoms in the summer of 2023, after a previous two-year AHL stint as an assistant coach for the Toronto Marlies, and he had a run in the ECHL that saw him guide the Newfoundland Growlers to a Kelly Cup championship in 2019 as their head coach before that.
Snowden also crossed paths with Riley Armstrong, the Flyers’ current director of player development, along the way as both were working through the ECHL coaching ranks.
“Having him here and his mind for development, which is a big part of what we’re going to do with the Phantoms, it helps me out a ton,” Armstrong said during development camp last Wednesday. “And then on the other side, I help him out a ton because we think the game the same way.”
And with several notable Flyers prospects already with the Phantoms – like Alex Bump, Hunter McDonald, and Carson Bjarnason – and more expected to be on the way – Oliver Bonk, Denver Barkey, and maybe Jett Luchanko toward the end of next season if he goes back to juniors – the emphasis on development appeared key.
Continuity, too, as Snowden will be taking over directly for Ian Laperrière, who moved into an advisory role for the Flyers back in May.
Terrence Wallin, who has served as head coach for the ECHL’s Maine Mariners since 2022, will also be joining the Phantoms as one of Snowden’s assistant coaches, again per Spiegel at The Inquirer.
Straight to the point
There won’t be any sweating over the possibility of a lockout again.
The NHL and the NHL Players’ Association have ratified a four-year collective bargaining agreement that will last through the 2029-30 season, both parties announced on Tuesday.
The league and the NHLPA said that the new CBA’s Memorandum of Understanding will be posted publicly at a later date, but Greg Wyshynski and Emily Kaplan over at ESPN were able to get a glimpse into the changes that will be on the way soon.
You can read their full report HERE, but as it pertains to Flyers fans, here were the standouts:
• Max contracts will be cut down from their current eight-year limit. A re-signing player can be offered seven years, while a free agent will only be able to get a total of six.
• The minimum for NHL salaries will increase.
• The regular season will bump up to 84 games and shorten the preseason.
• Draft rights will be standardized to expire when a player turns 22 years old.
• Olympic participation for NHL players is cleared to run through 2030.
There are other interesting bits, like the cleanup of a long-term injured reserve loophole where stashed salaries didn’t count in the playoffs (they will now), but unless the Flyers make it and Ryan Ellis can suddenly skate again, they more than likely won’t have to worry about that.
That one’s really for the Edmonton Oilers and Vegas Golden Knights, who each had key and expensive players who were out long-term conveniently ready to play again once it was playoff time.
Big picture, though, no lockout threat anywhere on the horizon for the NHL, which is a pretty major victory compared to 2012 and all of 2004-05.
A development gamechanger
Gavin McKenna, the consensus. No. 1 pick for next year’s NHL Draft, announced his commitment to play college hockey at Penn State for this coming season.
The 17-year-old left wing prospect has spent the past two seasons with the Medicine Hat Tigers in the junior Western Hockey League, where he put up a staggering 41 goals and 129 points through 56 games for the 2023-24 campaign.
But instead of staying on the Canadian Junior track approaching his 2026 draft eligibility, McKenna is instead leaving to face older, and tougher, competition in the NCAA, which also came with a pretty hefty NIL money offer from Penn State, per ESPN’s Emily Kaplan.
McKenna’s commitment to Penn State marks a huge victory for the NCAA and college hockey at large, which now has a clear-cut superstar, even if only for a year, and signals a massive shift in the amateur hockey landscape.
Before, draft prospects would usually stay in their already set lane up until their name gets called in the summer. Canadian Junior prospects would stay in their league, college players would run through their scholarships, and overseas skaters and goalies would follow their respective development pipelines back in their home country.
There have been unique cases, like how Auston Matthews played professionally in Switzerland before the Toronto Maple Leafs took him first overall in 2016, but those were exceptions, not the rule.
Now, though? Colleges, mainly the football ones, have some serious cash to throw around thanks to NIL, and that drastically changes the options available to the on-the-rise names in the sport.
McKenna is the latest, and biggest example, but keep an eye out for Porter Martone.
The Flyers’ sixth overall pick in the draft late last month said during development camp that his goal is to crack the team’s opening night roster, but he said that in response to a question about whether he considered returning to Brampton in juniors for this coming season or making the jump over to college.
Martone could make the team out of camp, but the likelihood is that he’ll need more development time, and to that end, here’s what Flyers assistant general manager Brent Flahr said at the end of dev camp on Sunday about that looming decision (as published on Tuesday):
“Martone obviously got all kinds of offers. He wants to play in the NHL, and that’s a discussion we’ll have to have with his agent. As much as we want him to play, we just gotta make sure we do what’s best for him.
“We’ll figure that out here in the coming weeks and see what he wants to do, his people, his family, and go from there.”
The game is changing, and fast.
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College Sports
Gurska Named Assistant Men’s Ice Hockey Coach at Babson
Story Links BABSON PARK, Mass.—Babson College Boxer-Rice Head Men’s Ice Hockey Coach Jamie Rice ’90 announced the hiring of Michael Gurska as the program’s new full-time assistant coach on Wednesday afternoon. Gurska comes to Babson after spending the last three seasons with the Chicago Steel of the United States Hockey League (USHL), the […]

BABSON PARK, Mass.—Babson College Boxer-Rice Head Men’s Ice Hockey Coach Jamie Rice ’90 announced the hiring of Michael Gurska as the program’s new full-time assistant coach on Wednesday afternoon.
Gurska comes to Babson after spending the last three seasons with the Chicago Steel of the United States Hockey League (USHL), the premier junior hockey league in the United States. Originally hired as the team’s director of operations prior the 2022-23 campaign, he was promoted to an assistant coach and the director of player development ahead of the 2023-24 season.
The Steel had three players selected in last month’s National Hockey League (NHL) Draft and have had 14 players picked during Gurska’s three-year tenure. Additionally, 24 players from Chicago’s 2024-25 squad earned Division I scholarships.
During Gurska’s three years with the Steel, the organization made a pair of USHL playoff appearances and advanced to the conference final in 2023.
We are excited to welcome Michael to Babson,” said Rice. “Michael has a tremendous background as a player in his experiences and success at Wilkes, in junior hockey and at the prep school level. His pathway is very similar to the route our current players and our recruits navigate.
“As a young coach, Michael has proven himself in player development and recruiting. Coming from the Chicago Steel he has been coaching and competing against the best amateur players in the country. His passion for coaching was immediately evident when we began the process of finding our new assistant.
“Michael will be a great asset to our entire Babson hockey program as we begin our newest chapter in the LEC this season.”
A native of Revere, Mass., Gurska joined the coaching ranks following a decorated career as a defenseman at Wilkes University from 2018-22. A member of the first team in program history, he earned All-United Collegiate Hockey Conference (UCHC) honors in both 2020 and 2022, and was a American Hockey Coaches Association (AHCA) All-America East second-team selection in 2020.
Gurska produced 12 goals and 63 assists for 75 points in 92 career games and ranks first in program history among defensemen in scoring. A three-time captain, he helped the Colonels reach the UCHC Tournament final for the first time in 2020 and again as a senior in 2022 while setting a single-season program record with 20 wins.
Following his senior season, Gurska played nine games for the Birmingham Bulls in the Southern Professional Hockey League (SPHL) producing a goal and four assists for five points.
In addition to his coaching experience, Gurska has worked Clear Sight Analytics breaking down NHL games since 2016.
“I’m incredibly honored to join coach Rice and the Babson hockey program,” commented Gurska. “Babson’s tradition of excellence on the ice, in the classroom, and through its strong hockey alumni network makes this a truly special opportunity. Having played Division III athletics, I’m excited to use my experiences to contribute to the program’s continued success and to support the development of our student-athletes as both players and people. I look forward to working with the coaching staff and being part of such a proud and passionate hockey community.”
College Sports
Lightning trade Hobey Baker winner Howard to Oilers
Isaac Howard, who won the 2025 Hobey Baker Memorial Award as the top men’s player in NCAA ice hockey, was traded to the Edmonton Oilers by the Tampa Bay Lightning on Tuesday for Sam O’Reilly. Howard then signed a three-year, entry-level contract with Edmonton. The 21-year-old forward had 52 points (26 goals, 26 assists) in […]

Isaac Howard, who won the 2025 Hobey Baker Memorial Award as the top men’s player in NCAA ice hockey, was traded to the Edmonton Oilers by the Tampa Bay Lightning on Tuesday for Sam O’Reilly.
Howard then signed a three-year, entry-level contract with Edmonton.
The 21-year-old forward had 52 points (26 goals, 26 assists) in 37 games last season, his second at Michigan State University after beginning his collegiate career at the University of Minnesota Duluth. He was selected by the Lightning in the first round (No. 31) of the 2022 NHL Draft.
Howard said after winning the Hobey Baker that his plans were to return to Michigan State for his senior season.
“I want to win a national championship. I didn’t play to win a Hobey,” he said. “At the end of the day, I want to win a national championship. I think we’re going to have the group to do it. It comes down to the tournament at the end of the year. We’ve just got to be ready and make sure we don’t leave anything on the table.”
O’Reilly had 71 points (28 goals, 43 assists) in 62 games for the London Knights of the Ontario Hockey League last season. The 19-year-old forward was selected by the Oilers in the first round (No. 32) of the 2024 NHL Draft.
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