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Denver, David Carle Further Commitment to Future Excellence of Pioneers Hockey

Story Links DENVER – University of Denver Athletics announced today that men’s hockey coach David Carle has signed a multi-year contract extension, furthering his commitment to the program’s success in the near and long-term future.   At the helm of the program for the past seven seasons, Carle has led […]

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DENVER – University of Denver Athletics announced today that men’s hockey coach David Carle has signed a multi-year contract extension, furthering his commitment to the program’s success in the near and long-term future.
 
At the helm of the program for the past seven seasons, Carle has led the Pioneers to 179-74-17 overall record and his career .694 winning percentage is presently the highest all-time among DU hockey coaches. He guided Denver to the 2022 and 2024 National Championships and four NCAA Frozen Four appearances (2019, 2022, 2024, 2025), joining Murray Armstrong as the only Denver coaches to reach the national semifinal four times in a six-year stretch (no tournament in 2020). 
 
“I am honored to have the University’s support for our hockey program over the last seven years and into the future,” said Richard and Kitzia Goodman Denver Hockey Head Coach David Carle. “Without their support and the support of our fans, alumni and donors, nothing that we have accomplished would have been possible. The resources we have established have had a direct impact on the daily lives of current and future Pioneer hockey student-athletes, and we continue to raise the bar for success with these commitments. 
 
“I am grateful for Chancellor Jeremy Haefner, Chairman John Miller as well as the entire Board of Trustees and Vice Chancellor of Athletics Josh Berlo for their continued support of and investment in Denver hockey to ensure we maintain our position as the best college program in the country. I’m looking forward to continuing to work with our student-athletes, coaches, administration, alumni, supporters and fans over the coming seasons. Denver is home for me and my family.” 
 
The Denver hockey program continues to be resourced at a high level with support from Athletic and University administration and in large part due to record philanthropy and increased revenues. Over the last several years, elevated support for the program include enhanced team travel, full Alston Award benefits for student-athletes, expansion of and investment in the coaching staff, as well as new lighting, seats, boards and glass at Magness Arena to improve the fan experience. 
 
“We are thrilled to have David continue to lead the exceptional legacy that is Denver hockey,” said Josh Berlo, Denver Vice Chancellor for Athletics and Ritchie Center Operations. “His dedication and passion are second to none, and we look forward to furthering our partnership and building upon our NCAA-record 10 national championships as the most accomplished college hockey program all-time. The Carle family commitment, along with the support of our university leadership, students, alumni, donors, season-ticket holders and fans, empowers the program to continue to chase competitive and academic excellence year in and year out.” 
 
Along with the extension, Carle is also committing to a multi-year major gift pledge to support current and new initiatives within the hockey program. Carle will be the first Denver Athletics head coach to join the department’s Gold Standard Society. His gift will directly support the Murray Armstrong Hockey Student-Athlete Enhancement Fund and the Athletics Excellence Fund.
 
“Our program is tremendously grateful for the support we have received from our fans, alumni and donors. In today’s changing college athletic landscape, we are grateful for philanthropy and season-ticket holder support more than ever to help our program stay at the highest level,” says Carle. “The legacy of Denver hockey wouldn’t be where it is without the foundation laid by coach Murray Armstrong. My family and I are honored to support the Murray Armstrong Fund and become members of the Gold Standard Society with the signing of this agreement. I would invite others to honor Murray’s legacy and support current and future initiatives of Pioneer Hockey at a time when it is as crucial as ever.” 
 
To make a gift in honor of Coach Carle’s continued commitment to DU Hockey, click here. To learn more about the Murray Armstrong Hockey Student-Athlete Enhancement Fund or Gold Standard Society, contact Kacie Dohrmann, Denver Deputy Athletic Director for Development. 
 
The support by the university, fans, alumni, and donors has led to an unrivalled level of success since the turn of the century. With their 10 national championships being the most all-time, the Pioneers have won five titles, reached eight Frozen Fours, have 19 NCAA Tournament appearances and 623 total victories since 1999-00.
 
Denver hockey has won at least 20 games in each of the last 23 full seasons, the longest active streak in the NCAA and extending their school-record “Tenzer Streak.” Over the last four years, Denver has won 30 or more games—the longest such stretch in program history and the longest since Michigan in the 1990s (1990-1998)—to go along with their three Frozen Four berths and two national championships in that time.
 
Carle’s 179 wins rank fourth in Denver hockey history, and he is three away from tying Ralph Backstrom for third place on the program’s all-time list. The Pioneers have reached the NCAA Tournament in each of the five full seasons with Carle leading the bench, with DU posting a 12-3 record in national tournament outings and making it to four Frozen Fours. Carle owns an 83-49-11 mark in National Collegiate Hockey Conference play and helped DU capture the 2022 and 2023 Penrose Cup as regular-season champions and the 2024 Frozen Faceoff Trophy as conference tournament champions.
 
Since 2018-19, Carle and the Pioneers own a perfect 7-0-0 record against Big Ten Conference programs and have an 18-7-1 mark against opponents from the Hockey East Association. Against NCAA “Power Four” schools, Denver has a 21-6-1 record in those matchups.
 
The Anchorage, Alaska, native became the fourth-youngest coach in history to win a D-I national title in 2022 (32 years, 5 months, 0 days) and is the youngest ever to win two national championships following the Pioneers’ NCAA-record 10th victory in 2024 (34 years, 5 months, 4 days). He is the 20th coach in NCAA history to win multiple national championships and was the first to do so since Scott Sandelin of Minnesota Duluth (2011, 2018, 2019).
 
This past season in 2024-25, Carle and the Pioneers went 31-12-1 and reached the NCAA Frozen Four for the second-straight year after opening the campaign with wins in each of its first 12 games—the best start in program history. The season-opening stretch was part of an overall 21-game winning streak that dated back to March 9, 2024 and went through Nov. 16, 2024—the longest across multiple seasons in school history and one shy of tying the longest overall winning streak at Denver (22, Jan. 5-March 16, 1968).
 
In addition to his responsibilities at DU, Carle has guided the United States National Junior Team in each of the past two years and helped the Americans win consecutive gold medals at the 2024 and 2025 IIHF World Junior Championships. It was the first time that Team USA had won consecutive World Junior Championships and marked the sixth and seventh titles in the country’s history. Carle is the only U.S. coach to win multiple World Juniors, and he and Marshall Johnston in 1977 are the only Denver bench bosses to lead Team USA at the World Junior Championship.
 
Named the ninth Denver hockey head coach in program history on May 25, 2018, Carle was 28 years old at the time of his hire and was youngest head coach in NCAA Division I men’s ice hockey. He first joined DU as a student assistant coach from 2008-2012 and later served four and a half seasons as a full-time assistant coach under Jim Montgomery (2014-2018), reaching two Frozen Fours and winning the 2017 national championship.
 
The University of Denver men’s ice hockey head coach is an endowed position by Richard and Kitzia Goodman. It was the first of five head coaching positions at Denver to be endowed (others include men’s lacrosse, men’s soccer, women’s gymnastics and alpine skiing).

 



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UMaine Sports Hall of Fame inductees include former NHL star Ben Bishop

Ben Bishop, the 6-foot-7-inch goaltender who backstopped the University of Maine’s hockey team to its last Frozen Four appearance in 2006-07, is one of five athletes who will be inducted into UMaine’s Sports Hall of Fame in September. The other inductees are former Black Bear women’s ice hockey standout Meagan Aarts, football’s Brandon McGowan, baseball’s […]

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Ben Bishop, the 6-foot-7-inch goaltender who backstopped the University of Maine’s hockey team to its last Frozen Four appearance in 2006-07, is one of five athletes who will be inducted into UMaine’s Sports Hall of Fame in September.

The other inductees are former Black Bear women’s ice hockey standout Meagan Aarts, football’s Brandon McGowan, baseball’s Brian Seguin and pole vaulter Bill Schroeder.

Three teams will also be inducted: the 1977-78 champion women’s swim team and the 1963-64 men’s cross country and indoor and outdoor track and field teams that swept the Yankee Conference meets.

The induction ceremony will be held on Sept. 26 at Jeff’s Catering in Brewer.

During his three years at UMaine, Bishop compiled a 55-35-7 record, a 2.29 goals-against average and a .917 save percentage. He also had five shutouts. He was named to the Hockey East All-Rookie team in 2006 and to the league’s second team in 2008.

He is currently third in career saves at UMaine with 2,399, fourth in games played (99) and lowest goals-against average and fifth in save percentage and wins. His 2.14 GAA and .923 save percentage during that 2006-07 campaign ties him with Frank Doyle for fifth in those single-season categories.

He is also fifth in saves in a single season with 915 in 07-08.

The former third round draft choice (85th overall) in 2005 of his hometown St. Louis Blues went on to have a stellar National Hockey League career for five teams. He was a three-time finalist for the Vezina Trophy, which goes to the league’s best goaltender.

He finished second twice and third once.

In addition to the St. Louis Blues, he also played for the Ottawa Senators, Tampa Bay Lightning, Los Angeles Kings and Dallas Stars, but a knee injury ended his career in 2021.

Bishop now works for the Dallas organization.

In 413 career regular season NHL games, he posted a 222-128-36 record with a 2.32 GAA and a .921 save percentage. In 52 playoff games, he went 29-21-0 with a 2.27 GAA and a .924 save percentage.

Bishop called his upcoming induction a “great honor.

“It’s really special. There are a lot of great memories and it jumpstarted my hockey career,” Bishop said Tuesday afternoon. ”The university meant a lot to me, and I’m proud to be an alumni.”

He gave a lot of credit to UMaine assistant and goalie coach Grant Standbrook and noted the long list of UMaine goalies coached by Standbrook who wound up in the NHL. That includes Jimmy Howard, Mike Dunham, Garth Snow and Scott Darling.

Aarts had an outstanding career for UMaine’s women’s hockey team, racking up 61 goals and 64 assists for 115 points in 127 career games. She is fourth in career goals and assists. The 2004 graduate had a terrific 2001-02 season in which she notched 25 goals and 22 assists in 35 games.

The former first team All-Hockey East pick went on to have a 10-year pro career in the National Women’s Hockey League and the Canadian Women’s Hockey League, including a 20-goal season for the Vaughan Flames in 2008-09.

She played 242 games in the two leagues and had 71 goals and 59 assists.

McGowan was an exceptional defensive back for the UMaine football team.

He was an AP Division I-AA All-American choice and a two-time all-conference selection, as a second teamer in 2003 and a first teamer in 2004.

He led the Black Bears in tackles both seasons, registering 85 in 2003 and 101 in 2004.

He was twice tied for the team lead in fumble recoveries and was second on the team in interceptions once.

McGowan signed as an unrestricted free agent with the Chicago Bears and spent part of four seasons with the Bears and one with the New England Patriots. He concluded his NFL career with 184 tackles, 10 pass deflections, four forced fumbles and two interceptions.

Seguin, who is also going to be inducted into the Maine Baseball Hall of Fame this year, was a three-time all-conference shortstop who still owns the school records for hits (91) and singles (74) in a season, longest hitting streak (27 games) and most games played in a season (66).

He was the team’s leading hitter in 1992 at .317 and was a career .311 hitter at UMaine, with 126 runs batted in, 156 runs scored, 37 doubles, five triples and 11 homers. He is ranked in the top 10 in career hits with 261 career hits.

He helped lead UMaine to two NCAA Tournament appearances.

Schroeder, a 1958 UMaine graduate, capped an outstanding track career at UMaine by sweeping the Maine, Yankee Conference and New England pole vault championships his senior year. He set the UMaine indoor and school, state and Yankee Conference outdoor records in the pole vault.

A team captain, Schroeder also ran hurdles and set a UMaine record for the 65-yard low hurdles his senior year.

Coach Jeff Wren’s 1977-78 women’s swim team won the New England championship and was the most successful one in school history. The title was the first of six New England championships during a 10-year span.

At the New Englands that season, future UMaine Sports Hall of Famer Julie Woodock claimed five individual titles and swam legs for two triumphant relay teams and Jill Puzas won the 200 breast-stroke.

Beth Carone, another UMaine Sports Hall of Famer, was also an important contributor to the team.

The team went undefeated in dual meets.

The 1963-64 season was a memorable one for the men’s cross country and track teams.

The cross country team got things started in the fall by capturing the Yankee Conference title and then the indoor track and field teams won the conference title spanning the fall and the spring semesters. The outdoor track and field team won the conference title in the spring.

The captain of all three teams was Jerry Ellis, who was inducted into the UMaine Sports Hall of Fame.

UMaine captured five state outdoor Yankee Conference meets from 1961-65.



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Trump’s new travel ban begins

MIAMI — President Donald Trump’s new ban on travel to the U.S. by citizens from a dozen countries took effect Monday with relative calm, as some travelers with valid visas reported extra scrutiny at American airports before being allowed entry. The ban targeting mainly African and Middle Eastern countries kicked in amid rising tension […]

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MIAMI — President Donald Trump’s new ban on travel to the U.S. by citizens from a dozen countries took effect Monday with relative calm, as some travelers with valid visas reported extra scrutiny at American airports before being allowed entry.

The ban targeting mainly African and Middle Eastern countries kicked in amid rising tension over the president’s escalating campaign of immigration enforcement. But it arrived with no immediate signs of the chaos that unfolded at airports across the U.S. during Trump’s first travel ban in 2017.

Vincenta Aguilar said she was anxious Monday as she and her husband, both Guatemalan citizens, were subjected to three different interviews by U.S. officials after arriving at Miami International Airport and showing tourist visas the couple received last week.

“They asked us where we work, how many children we have, if we have had any problems with the law, how we are going to afford the cost of this travel, how many days we will stay here,” said Aguilar, who along with her husband was visiting their son for the first time since he left Guatemala 22 years ago.

She said they were released about an hour after their flight landed, greeting their waiting family members in Florida with tears of relief. Guatemala is not among the countries included in the new ban or flagged for extra travel restrictions.

New ban shouldn’t revoke previously issued visas

The new proclamation that Trump signed last week applies to citizens of Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. It also imposes heightened restrictions on people from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela who are outside the U.S. and don’t hold a valid visa.

The new ban does not revoke visas previously issued to people from countries on the list, according to guidance issued Friday to all U.S. diplomatic missions. However, unless an applicant meets narrow criteria for an exemption to the ban, his or her application will be rejected starting Monday. Travelers with previously issued visas should still be able to enter the U.S. even after the ban takes effect.

Narayana Lamy, a Haitian citizen who works for his home country’s government, said he was told to wait after showing his passport and tourist visa Monday at the Miami airport while a U.S. official confirmed by phone that he was allowed into the country to visit family members.

Luis Hernandez, a Cuban citizen and green card holder who has lived in the U.S. for three years, said he had no problems returning Monday to Miami after a weekend visiting family in Cuba.

“They did not ask me anything,” Hernandez said. “I only showed my residency card.”

Ban appears to avoid chaos

During Trump’s first term, a hastily written executive order ordering the denial of entry to citizens of mainly Muslim countries created chaos at numerous airports and other ports of entry, prompting successful legal challenges and major revisions to the policy.

Many immigration experts say the new ban is more carefully crafted and appears designed to beat court challenges that hampered the first by focusing on the visa application process.

Trump said this time that some countries had “deficient” screening for passports and other public documents or have historically refused to take back their own citizens. He relied extensively on an annual Homeland Security report of people who remain in the U.S. after their visas expired.

Trump also tied the new ban to a terrorist attack in Boulder, Colorado, saying it underscored the dangers posed by some visitors who overstay visas. U.S. officials say the man charged in the attack overstayed a tourist visa. He is from Egypt, which isn’t on Trump’s restricted list.

Critics say travel ban sows division

The ban was quickly denounced by groups that provide aid and resettlement help to refugees.

“This policy is not about national security — it is about sowing division and vilifying communities that are seeking safety and opportunity in the United States,” said Abby Maxman, president of Oxfam America, a nonprofit international relief organization.

Haiti’s transitional presidential council said in a statement that the ban “is likely to indiscriminately affect all Haitians” and that it hopes to persuade the U.S. to drop Haiti from the list of banned countries.

In Venezuela, some visa holders changed U.S. travel plans last week to get ahead of Trump’s restrictions. For those without visas, the new restrictions may not matter much. Since Venezuela and the U.S. severed diplomatic relations in 2019, Venezuelans have had to travel to neighboring South American countries to obtain U.S. visas.

José Luis Vegas, a tech worker in the Venezuelan capital of Caracas, said his uncle gave up on renewing an expired U.S. visa because it was already difficult before the restrictions.

“Paying for hotels and tickets was very expensive, and appointments took up to a year,” Vegas said.



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Men’s Gymnastics Leads ECAC With 20 Selected to All-Academic Team

Story Links Springfield, Mass. – June 10, 2025 – The Springfield College men’s gymnastics team led the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) with 20 selections to the All-Academic Team in 2025.  The team includes all student-athletes from Army, Navy, William & Mary, Springfield, Greenville, and Simpson who have a cumulative 3.0 grade […]

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Springfield, Mass. – June 10, 2025 – The Springfield College men’s gymnastics team led the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) with 20 selections to the All-Academic Team in 2025. 

The team includes all student-athletes from Army, Navy, William & Mary, Springfield, Greenville, and Simpson who have a cumulative 3.0 grade point average, along with first-year student- athletes who have achieved a 3.0 grade point average in the fall semester.

Springfield led all schools with 20 selections and was followed by Greenville (19), Simpson (18), Navy (17), William & Mary (17) and Army (9). 

Headlining the selections for Springfield were seniors Matt Browne (Decatur, Ga.)Carter Cochardo (Cicero, N.Y.)Noah Dhaliwal (South Orange, N.J.)Felix Kriedemann (Strasslach, Germany) and Jaden Laubstein (Oakland, Calif.). Juniors Tyler Beekman (Bedford, N.H.)Owen Carney (Sterling, Mass.)Gustavin Suess (Portland, Ore.), sophomores Peyton Cramer (Grapevine, Texas)Gio Mantia (Aurora, Ill.), Kojiro Motoki (Paramus, N.J.)Kaleb Palacio (Barcliff, Texas)Evan Reichert (Oswego, Ill.)Joshua Szitanko (Lincroft, N.J.) and Tristan Tacconi (Waldwick, N.J.) as well as first-years Devon Felsenstein (Blue Bell, Pa.)Jesse Listopad (Des Plaines, Ill.)Cameron Rhymes (Joliet, Ill.)Donovan Salva (Feeding Hills, Mass.) and Carl Jacob Soederqvist (Stockholm, Sweden) were all selected to the ECAC All-Academic Team for the 2024-25 academic year.

For the latest on Springfield College Athletics, follow the Pride on social media on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.  Be sure to tune into all Springfield College Athletic events by subscribing to FloSports.





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NCAA select team to participate in 2025 Spengler Cup

A new type of team will be participating in the 2025 Spengler Cup. For the first time in the tournament’s 102-year history, a team comprised of the best NCAA college hockey players in the country will compete in the tournament this winter. College Hockey to Send First-Ever Team to 2025 Spengler Cup Squad of Select […]

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A new type of team will be participating in the 2025 Spengler Cup.

For the first time in the tournament’s 102-year history, a team comprised of the best NCAA college hockey players in the country will compete in the tournament this winter.

“The 2025 tournament will be the first time a select team representing college hockey has ever competed in the event,” according to a joint announcement made Tuesday by Spengler Cup Davos, the Hockey Commissioners Association (HCA) and College Hockey Inc. “Officially named the U.S. Collegiate Selects, the team will be comprised of active NCAA Division I players of any nationality representing all six conferences and the Division I independent programs.”

The players, as well as the coaches and support staff, will be named at a later date, according to the statement.

“We couldn’t be more excited to be sending a college hockey team to participate in the Spengler Cup,” said HCA President and Hockey East Commissioner Steve Metcalf. “The players that get selected will have an unforgettable experience at the oldest club tournament in the world.”

While the University of Minnesota (1981) and University of North Dakota (1982) both competed at the Spengler Cup, this is the first time a hand-picked squad of college hockey’s best players will compete in Davos.

“We are honored by the invitation to participate in the Spengler Cup, one of the most prestigious hockey events in the world,” said Sean Hogan, College Hockey Inc. executive director. “The opportunity to field a team of NCAA student-athletes is a testament to the elite level of play within college hockey and represents an incredible experience for everyone involved—players and staff alike.”

The Swiss league’s HC Fribourg-Gotteron won the 2024 Spengler Cup, defeating Germany’s Straubing Tigers in the championship.





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US Soccer Federation establishes committee to recommend changes to college sport

FAYETTEVILLE, Ga. — The U.S. Soccer Federation on Tuesday established a committee tasked with recommending how the college game can be better integrated with the sport. Top college teams play about 18-25 games per season and the importance of college soccer to men’s professional teams has lessened as more top talent goes through team academy […]

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US Soccer Federation establishes committee to recommend changes to college sport

FAYETTEVILLE, Ga. — The U.S. Soccer Federation on Tuesday established a committee tasked with recommending how the college game can be better integrated with the sport.

Top college teams play about 18-25 games per season and the importance of college soccer to men’s professional teams has lessened as more top talent goes through team academy systems and not college. The college game allows unlimited substitutions and for clock stoppages.

The USSF said the committee will produce a report with recommendations by the start of the 2025-26 academic year and is to suggest initiatives for possible implementation as early as 2026-27.

“College soccer is integral to the fabric and future of our sport in this country,” USSF CEO JT Batson said in a statement. “The individuals joining this group bring unique perspectives and expertise that will help us build a model where college soccer can thrive in a modern, connected system — all working collaboratively in service to soccer.”

Former Deloitte Consulting CEO Dan Helfrich will chair the committee, which includes former Major League Soccer president Mark Abbott, United Soccer League Championship president Jeremy Alumbaugh, Warner Bros. Discovery Sport executive Craig Barry, USSF technical development committee chair Mike Cullina, Davidson athletic director Chris Clunie, MLS executive Ali Curtis, Seattle Sounders owner Adrian Hanauer, former LA Galaxy president Chris Klein, Penn State athletic director Patrick Kraft, Kansas City Current co-owner Angie Long, agent Richard Motzkin, high-performance specialist Ryan Nelson, University of Maryland president Darryll Pines, NWSL executive Sarah Jones Simmer, Coca-Cola executive Amber Steele, Bank of America executive David Tyrie and Syracuse athletic director John Wildhack.

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Boston College Men’s Hockey, Northeastern to Play on Halloween at Matthews Arena

Boston College men’s hockey has had another matchup released for the 2025-26 season. Northeastern shared the home slate for its first half of the schedule and it features a game against the Eagles. Boston College and Northeastern will play at Matthews Arena on Friday, Oct. 31. The game will be the last one the Eagles […]

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Boston College men’s hockey has had another matchup released for the 2025-26 season.

Northeastern shared the home slate for its first half of the schedule and it features a game against the Eagles.

Boston College and Northeastern will play at Matthews Arena on Friday, Oct. 31.

The game will be the last one the Eagles play at Matthews Arena. The final game in the venue will be against Boston University on Dec. 13.

No games are scheduled for Tuesday, June 10.

No games were scheduled for Monday, June 9.

81 days.

“It took a lot of work at every level, but I think now people finally understand what I’ve always known. I’m not a grinder. I’m not a gimmick. And, in general, I’m just not a big guy.But I don’t need to be. I’m a hockey player.”

– Johnny Gaudreau

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