Connect with us

College Sports

Curl-Salemme scores twice as Frost evens series

Ottawa, Canada – May 22nd: Game #2 of the Walter Cup Final between the Minnesota Frost and the Ottawa Charge at the TD Place Arena on May 22nd, 2025 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada – (Photo by: Josh Kim / Ottawa Charge) OTTAWA, ON (May 22, 2025) – Britta Curl-Salemme scored late in the third period […]

Published

on


Ottawa, Canada – May 22nd: Game #2 of the Walter Cup Final between the Minnesota Frost and the Ottawa Charge at the TD Place Arena on May 22nd, 2025 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada – (Photo by: Josh Kim / Ottawa Charge)

OTTAWA, ON (May 22, 2025) – Britta Curl-Salemme scored late in the third period and again in overtime to lift the Minnesota Frost to a 2-1 series-tying win over the Ottawa Charge, silencing a sellout crowd of 8,206 fans on Thursday night at TD Place. The score remained scoreless for most of regulation until Jocelyne Larocque broke the deadlock at 17:25 of the third period, giving Ottawa the lead. With 15 seconds left in regulation, and the Frost pressing on a power play with their net empty, Curl-Salemme scored the equalizer to send the game to overtime. While both teams traded chances in extra time, it was Curl-Salemme who struck again––scoring with less than four minutes left in the first overtime frame–– to lift Minnesota to the win. Maddie Rooney made 37 saves on 38 shots in her third win of the postseason, while Gwyneth Philips turned aside 22 of 24 shots in her sixth start of the postseason. The loss was Ottawa’s first in four games on home ice this postseason.

Game Three of the best-of-five PWHL Finals, presented by Scotiabank, is set to take place on Saturday at 5 p.m. ET at Xcel Energy Center.



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

College Sports

Cassandra Ringer Named New Redbird Gymnastics Head Coach

Story Links NORMAL, Ill. – The Illinois State gymnastics program has found its new head coach, as Illinois State Director of Athletics Dr. Jeri Beggs has announced the hiring of former Ball State assistant coach Cassandra Ringer as the team’s mentor. Ringer replaces Bob Conkling, who retired after the 2025 season following […]

Published

on


NORMAL, Ill. – The Illinois State gymnastics program has found its new head coach, as Illinois State Director of Athletics Dr. Jeri Beggs has announced the hiring of former Ball State assistant coach Cassandra Ringer as the team’s mentor. Ringer replaces Bob Conkling, who retired after the 2025 season following 20 years at the helm of the program.

“We are excited to welcome Cass back to Illinois State and look forward to her leadership of the Redbird Gymnastics program,” Beggs said. “Cass brings a wealth of experience, passion and enthusiasm with her from Ball State and we look forward to seeing how she puts her mark on this program. Having worked here previously, Cass knows the history and tradition of Redbird Gymnastics and she wants to ensure it remains a nationally recognized program that competes for championships and postseason opportunities. We are thrilled to have Cass back and know she will be a great asset to our department.”

Ringer comes to Illinois State after serving as an assistant coach at Ball State since 2018. Prior to that, she served as the Illinois State graduate assistant coach and choreographer during the 2017-18 season.

“I am beyond thrilled and extremely grateful to join the Redbird family,” Ringer stated. “I would like to thank Dr. Jeri Beggs, Cindy Harris, and the entire athletics staff for this amazing opportunity to lead the Illinois State Gymnastics program. I truly believe the opportunities at Illinois State are limitless and I look forward to building on the strong foundation established by past and present Redbirds.”

The 2023 Women’s Collegiate Gymnastics Association (WCGA) Regional Co-Assistant Coach of the Year, Ringer concluded her seventh season as an assistant coach for the Ball State gymnastics program in 2025. Her expertise helped guide the Cardinals to a pair of Mid-American Conference regular season titles (2023 and 2024), as well as a pair of team berths into the NCAA Regionals (2023 and 2024). Since Ringer joined the staff at Ball State, the program posted an 83-48-1 (.633) dual record, including double-digit wins in six of her seven seasons in Muncie. In MAC competition, the Cardinals were 27-14 (.659) over that same span and finished second at the MAC Championships in both 2023 and 2024.

During her time on staff, the Cardinals also produced the 32 highest team scores in program history, highlighted by a program-record mark of 198.025 at the 2024 Tennessee Collegiate Classic. The effort at the Farm Bureau Expo Center, which included 22 scores of 9.800-or-higher, is also the MAC team score record in the current seven-team era. Ball State’s primary coach and choreographer for floor exercise, Ringer also helped the Cardinals register seven of the 11 highest team floor scores in program history.

 

Among those scores was a 9.950 from Suki Pfister which marked the second straight season Ringer helped the first all-American in program history tied the program’s individual floor record. Overall, Ringer helped BSU’s gymnasts record two of the program’s eight all-time floor scores of 9.950, along with 18 of 27 all-time floor scores of 9.925 and 36 of 55 all-time floor scores of 9.900. Ringer’s student-athletes have carried over their success into other apparatus as well, helping establish the top 11 all-around scores in program history. Zoe Middleton leads the way with her program record all-around effort of 39.750, which included one of her six career scores of 9.925 on floor. In addition, both Middleton and Pfister were crowned MAC Co-Floor Champions during the 2024 season with scores of 9.900 at the league championships.

 

Ringer arrived at Ball State from Illinois State where she served as the graduate assistant coach and choreographer. During her time as a Redbird, she instructed training sessions and developed training plans, served as the primary coach of floor exercise, choreographed floor and balance beam routines, facilitated team building activities, and increased fan and alumni engagement. Prior to her time at Illinois State, Ringer was a volunteer assistant coach at West Chester University of Pennsylvania for two years and spent time at Gymnastics Etc., Arcadia Gymnastics, Woodward Camp and the AJS Pancott Gymnastics National Training Center.

She graduated cum laude in May 2015 with her bachelor’s degree in nutrition and dietetics from West Chester. While competing for the Golden Rams, she was a United States of America Gymnastics (USAG) Scholar Athlete, Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference (PSAC) Academic Honor Roll member and an academic all-conference honoree. Ringer also has a master’s degree in public administration with graduate certificates in sport management, administration and human resources management from West Chester.

GoRedbirds.com and the Illinois State Redbirds App:  Your sources for Illinois State tickets, Weisbecker Athletic Fund gifts, multimedia, Redbird merchandise, photos and more.



Link

Continue Reading

College Sports

FBI and law enforcement respond to ‘terror attack’ in Boulder, Colorado

BOULDER, Colo. — Several people were injured and some may have been set on fire at an outdoor mall in Boulder, Colorado, police said. Police said a man was taken into custody in the attack that the FBI immediately described as a “targeted terror attack.” Boulder Police Chief Steve Redfearn told reporters Sunday evening […]

Published

on


BOULDER, Colo. — Several people were injured and some may have been set on fire at an outdoor mall in Boulder, Colorado, police said. Police said a man was taken into custody in the attack that the FBI immediately described as a “targeted terror attack.”

Boulder Police Chief Steve Redfearn told reporters Sunday evening that it was too early to discuss a motive but that witnesses were being interviewed.

“It would be irresponsible for me to speculate on motive this early on,” he said.

The Boulder attack took place at a popular pedestrian mall known for attracting tourists and college students. On Sunday, demonstrators with a volunteer group called Run For Their Lives had gathered to call for the release of hostages who remain in Gaza. The group has multiple chapters across the world that regularly meet to walk to advocate for hostage releases.

Sunday’s attack also occurred as law enforcement authorities in the U.S. grapple with a spike in antisemitic violence. And last week, a man was arrested on charges in the fatal shooting of two Israeli embassy staffers and shouted “Free Palestine” as he was being led away by police.

Boulder police said there were “several victims” in the attack. The injuries authorities found were consistent with reports of individuals being set on fire, Redfearn said, adding that injuries ranged from serious to minor.

Multiple blocks of the pedestrian mall area were evacuated by police. The scene shortly after the attack was tense, as law enforcement agents with a police dog walked through the streets looking for threats and instructed the public to stay clear of the pedestrian mall.

“Our agents and local law enforcement are on the scene already, and we will share updates as more information becomes available,” FBI Director Kash Patel posted on social media.

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis said in a statement that he was “closely monitoring” the situation, adding that “hate-filled acts of any kind are unacceptable.”



Link

Continue Reading

College Sports

Panthers-Oilers Rematch; Honoring the Gaudreaus; SALE, SALE, SALE

Good morning, my name is Andrew Fantucchio. It’s Monday, June 2, and here are the top stories, news items, and highlights surrounding the Boston Bruins and from across the NHL today. NHL News & Rumors: Panthers: The Florida Panthers have played plenty of hockey in recent years. So much so, in fact, they’ll set a […]

Published

on


Good morning, my name is Andrew Fantucchio. It’s Monday, June 2, and here are the top stories, news items, and highlights surrounding the Boston Bruins and from across the NHL today.

NHL News & Rumors:

Panthers: The Florida Panthers have played plenty of hockey in recent years. So much so, in fact, they’ll set a new record for the most games played by a single team in a three-year span when the Stanley Cup Final begins this week.

McDavid Injury Concern: Connor McDavid left Oilers practice early on Sunday, raising concerns over his availability for the start of the Stanley Cup Final.

Maple Leafs Must Get Creative: Regardless of whether or not they re-sign Mitch Marner, the Toronto Maple Leafs must get creative this offseason if they ever hope to win another championship.

First Annual 5K Honoring Gaudreau Brothers a Massive Success: The first annual Gaudreau Family 5K honored the late Johnny and Matthew Gaudreau and took place in their hometwon of Sewell, NJ, with more than a thousand people in attendance, including several current NHL players.

BHN + Sale:

Boston Hockey Now is running a massive subscription sale this week.

For a limited time only, a year-long subscription costs just $12, getting you access to exclusive content and an ad-free experience to not only BHN, but the entire National Hockey Now network.

Don’t miss out. Subscribe today!

boston-hockey-now-sale

More From National Hockey Now:

Pittsburgh: The Pittsburgh Penguins were one of the busiest teams on the NHL trade market last summer. This year, they expect to be just as active and to make an even bigger splash.

Philadelphia: The Philadelphia Flyers already took care of one of their RFAs by signing Tyson Foerster and now must shift their focus to Cam York.

NY Islanders: As he takes over as the new general manager of the New York Islanders, Mathieu Darche fully intends to take the team in a new direction.

Vegas: With plenty of holes to fill in their lineup and a finite amount of cap space, the Vegas Golden Knights are preparing to offload some sizeable contracts before the start of free agency.

FOLLOW ANDREW FANTUCCHIO ON 𝕏: @A_FANTUCCHIO

FOLLOW BOSTON HOCKEY NOW ON 𝕏 AND FACEBOOK





Link

Continue Reading

College Sports

Ferguson signs to Concord University for soccer after strong senior season

After a career-best year as a senior, Social Circle’s Alana Ferguson penned her letter of intent to continue her soccer career at Concord University. Ferguson signed alongside family as her friends, teammates and coaches watched on. After she made it official, Ferguson shared her thoughts on playing at the next level. “I was very excited […]

Published

on

Ferguson signs to Concord University for soccer after strong senior season

After a career-best year as a senior, Social Circle’s Alana Ferguson penned her letter of intent to continue her soccer career at Concord University.

Ferguson signed alongside family as her friends, teammates and coaches watched on.

After she made it official, Ferguson shared her thoughts on playing at the next level.


“I was very excited during the signing, I couldn’t stop smiling,” Ferguson said.

Outside of making sure the college has her major, Ferguson’s decision to choose Concord came down to the feel of both the soccer program and the school’s campus.

“Researching the university, I became very interested in their soccer program, but when I saw their campus I was just in awe and knew it was the right place for me as soon as I saw it,” Ferguson said.


As a Lady Redskins, Ferguson was a part of multiple playoff teams.

At minimum, Ferguson reached the Final Four in every single season on the team. 

Ferguson has more than one favorite moment at Social Circle, but her most memorable one on the soccer pitch came when the team won it all during her freshman year.


“ I have two favorite moments at Social Circle,” Ferguson said. “One for soccer was winning the state championship my freshman year, it made me feel as though I was capable of anything. My second was prom night, it was so much fun and the environment had so much positive energy because everyone was having a good time.”

During her senior season, Ferguson erupted for a team-high and career-high 57 goals. 

After a long and storied career at Social Circle, Ferguson shared how one of the state’s top programs has prepared her for the college level.

“ It has helped shaped me to become a better person and develop different character traits that I will need in the future,” Ferguson said.

Continue Reading

College Sports

An Email Interview with Online Hockey Personality for Snapback Sports – Tim Kalinowski

There are a lot of great hockey content creators out there. I want to introduce you all to one in this piece. His name is Tim Kalinowski. Kalinowski is an on-air talent and personality for Snapback Sports. Kalinowski attended several memorable hockey games this season and, in typical creator fashion, shared them with hockey and […]

Published

on


There are a lot of great hockey content creators out there.

I want to introduce you all to one in this piece. His name is Tim Kalinowski.

Kalinowski is an on-air talent and personality for Snapback Sports. Kalinowski attended several memorable hockey games this season and, in typical creator fashion, shared them with hockey and sports fans through his various social feeds.

Tim was kind enough to take time out of his busy schedule to tell us how he got into hockey growing up, when he knew he wanted to be in sports media, what it was like to attend incredible hockey games this season, and more. I hope you folks enjoy this!

PH: Growing up, how did you get into hockey?
TK: I was born in Vail, CO, where we lived for three years before moving to Massachusetts, which was
during that great Avalanche run in the early 2000s. My dad, despite never playing hockey, just
really loved the sport.

He had season tickets to the Aves, and my parents were the kind of people who brought their infant to hockey games. (Classic hockey parents). Surprisingly, I was very well behaved for that environment, so they figured I enjoyed it.

They famously brought me to the opening night of the Pepsi Center in 1999 when I was just a year old. Other than that, I believe the first thing my dad bought after I was born was a mini hockey net and stick, so I had a stick in my hands from the day I was born.

I am pretty sure he had me in skates before I learned to walk. He would hold me and drag my feet along the ice as he went skating on the pond or at frozen rinks in parks, and whatnot.

Because of all that, I do not remember getting “into” hockey because I was engulfed in it since the moment I was born, hahaha!

PH: Growing up, who was your favorite team (s) and player (s)? How about now?
TK: Because of the Colorado thing, I was first an Avalanche fan. My first word was “Joe Sakic.
(and that is not a lie)”.

When we moved to Massachusetts, I was about three years old, so it was all Boston Bruins. With that said, there was a time around high school when I became obsessed with wanting to be a sports media guy.

I still had the dream of taking my hockey career as far as I could. I also knew at one point I would need another skillset career-wise.

My uncle, Mike Lynch, was a famous sportscaster in Boston, so starting at a young age, he would take me to work with him a few times a year. This entailed things like being on the field/court or holding the microphone in scrums in the Bruins’ dressing room after games.

I have held the microphone for Tom Brady, Zdeno Chara, and David Ortiz, among others. As such, because I was around the media and journalism industry, I almost organically started to become more of a neutral fan.

The media has changed now to where more media people express their fandom, but when I was younger, I thought it would be a major red flag if one day people dug up tweets and saw that I was a Bruins fan or Red Sox fan, etc.

I beat it out of myself to be a more neutral fan. I also think having seen all of my Boston teams win championships in my lifetime has helped that, but I pretty quickly got to a point where I am not torn up in any way if Boston teams win or lose. I used to get teased in high school for saying “I am a fan of the game” as I was stirring the pot at times with my Masshole friends.

Overall, my life is far more enjoyable when the Boston teams are good because that means the people close to me are more interested, but otherwise as you see in my content one night I am in a Leafs jersey, the next I am in a Panthers jersey and people say “Aren’t you a Bruins fan?”

To be honest, I am not a Bruins fan anymore.

PH: As a hockey player, you played some junior hockey and even played club hockey at
Syracuse University. What were those experiences like?
TK: By the time I graduated high school and was doing a post-grad year at Phillips Exeter, I had
some DIII schools who were interested in me, and that was the route I was planning to go. Once I was playing juniors, however, and the decision on where to go to school was getting closer, I started to have some doubts about whether I wanted to go to a smaller college, which is obviously what a lot of DIII hockey schools are.

If I was not going to play in the NHL, why would I go to a school I did not want to go to outside of hockey? The Syracuse Club hockey team reached out to me and was pretty much recruiting me, and my head is telling me that I am not going to play club hockey, as I am better than that.

I ended up putting on one of their games and quickly realized this was not what I thought it was. You see, a lot of people do not understand that the top 25 or so teams in club hockey are damn good.

Everyone is fast, big, and played junior hockey. It is a whole batch of players who were making similar decisions that I was.

And to top it off, by going to Syracuse, I would have the opportunity to follow my sports media dream by going to the Newhouse School there. It was a perfect match, and funny enough, hockey-wise, I scored two goals in my first game as a freshman and then was a scratch three weeks later for two months.

It was quite the reality check of how good club hockey can be. It is something I believe in in terms of promoting the sport.

In the summer, I used to skate with a lot of my friends who played DI, and I found it so flattering how many of them were just as interested in how my season was going as they were about how someone who was playing at BU was doing. The fact that they did not see me as an inferior player made me feel proud.

People look down on club hockey mostly because they do not understand it. The higher-level teams like Syracuse are not glorified beer league squads.

We have a paid coaching staff. We traveled the country, we missed out on every fun college weekend and party for five months of the year, and we practiced and trained every day.

It is honestly a fight I am sick of having because people just don’t get it.

PH: At what point did you realize that you wanted to work in the media side of sports?
TK: I probably answered a lot of this in the second question, but the experiences I had with my uncle. I am one of those people who, since I was in high school, have read the paper every day.

I love sports coverage probably more than I like sports. From the second I wake up to when I go to bed,
Boston sports radio is playing in my headphones, which is something that I thought was normal, but upon meeting other human beings, I realized that I might have a sports sickness, haha!

An example would be my love with the Toronto Maple Leafs. I talk a lot about the Toronto Maple Leafs to the point where people think I am a fan when I am not.

I am a fan of the story, always having the hype and never getting it done in what is usually in horrific fashion. I listen to Toronto radio every day, and I read every article.

When they lose a big game, it is like I am refreshing Twitter all night because I am waiting to hear the postgame quotes, and I am salivating reading the Monday morning quarterbacking and endless postmortem.

But just to get back to my career, I almost get embarrassed when people ask what I do
because the reality is I make TikToks and am technically a content creator (a title I hate). That is because I think there is a natural undertone of trying to be an influencer or thinking you are so important that you videotape yourself.

The reality is this is not what I wanted to do. If I could have it my way, I would be a columnist for the Boston Globe and I would travel to morning skates, be on a beat, and I would just write my thoughts and opinions on the team/game.

That is just not how it works anymore. At the advice of one of my college friends, he said to me, “Why don’t you just make a TikTok and just say into the camera what you would want to write about”, which is what I did.

It is what helps me sleep at night knowing sure, I may be on TikTok, but I am doing it through the lens of an old newspaper columnist.

PH: How did you become an NHL betting analyst over at the Action Network? What was it like to make hockey content for them?
TK: Action Network was my first real job. I started as an intern the summer going into my senior year of college and I ended up being there for three years.

I was working about 30 hours a week for them while I was in college. I loved it because I was a fan of Action before I started working there.

I have been betting pretty much every day since I was 16, so I have a pretty big betting background, which before the massive legalisation surge was a big feather in my cap to have as an intern.

I was not even working on anything really hockey related until after being there for two years. I was sent to work an event with Michael Leboff, Action’s lead NHL guy at the time.

We had never crossed paths at work (we were fully remote by then) and we got into a conversation about the Maple Leafs and he could not believe how much I knew about hockey and that I bet on it on a regular basis.

It was one of those “did we just become best friends?” moments. A day later, he said, “Hey, do you want to join me and Nick Martin on our NHL betting pod?”

I joined the pod, which we did three times a week for over a year. It was probably the most enjoyable thing I have done in my career because I loved working with Mike and Nick so much.

It also helped me improve as a hockey bettor because I was not very good until I began doing the show. I
had the right understanding, but I needed help with my process.

I owe them a lot for how much they taught me. The three of us are still very tight even though we are all in different places now.

PH: Tell us about how you got a gig with Snapback Sports.
TK: Snapback was started by Jack Settleman, who is pretty big in the sports influencer world. He used to work at Action, but we missed each other.

Three years ago, I was in Phoenix doing some work with NASCAR at their championship race, and Jack ended up being in my little group. I had no idea who he was at the time, but we talked for a little bit, and we went to dinner one of the nights we were there, but that was it.

I had not spoken to him for a while, and then all of a sudden last spring (about three years after that dinner), he texted me and said he wanted me to come work for him at Snapback. I was very nervous to make the move because I do not like change.

It was probably one of the best decisions of my entire life. In just one year at Snapback, I have been to Ireland, Canada, the CFB National Championship, Super Bowl Radio Row, the Stanley Cup Final, and a million other things in between.

I could not be happier.

PH: In terms of hockey, what are you trying to do at Snapback Sports?
TK: Interestingly enough, when I first joined Snapback, I kinda assumed I was going to have to put
my hockey content on the back burner for a little. Snapback is still a small company, and as we see in the sports world, football takes up most of the airtime and resources, but I am a huge football fan, so I was willing to accept that compromise in the beginning.

When the 4 Nations Face-Off happened, everything changed. On the Snapback sports YouTube channel we travel the world going to sporting events to try to find “the greatest sports experience in the world.”

A majority of our experiences have been dominated by football, especially college football. However, during the football offseason, Snapback tries its best to do other experiences like NASCAR, baseball, basketball, etc.

They are all fun, but it is difficult to pull off compared to the cadence and consistency of the football season. So, as football was winding down this season, it was around December, and we were building our winter/spring schedule for events outside of football, which is when I suggested the 4 Nations Face-Off.

As a hockey guy, I was pretty pumped for it, but like a lot of us, I did not know what to expect. This was also my first pitch to Snapback that was not football related, so it was a bit of a gamble on my end to convince my bosses at Snapback, who are hockey casuals, that this was gonna be at the very least a noteworthy event.

Long story short, I wanted to go to that Saturday night USA-Canada game in Montreal, but we were working on a deal with the NHL, and they said they had already filled their allotments of tickets/passes. They offered us championship access instead, which I was very disappointed by because it was not guaranteed to be USA-Canada.

Those famous first 15 seconds happened in Montreal and watching from home, I knew the anticipation for the potential championship was going to be just as insane. And with that, the 4 Nations Face-Off had the full attention of Snapback and everyone else in the sports world.

I went from what felt like going out on a limb, asking my bosses to send me to this thing and all of a sudden, it was like not only are we sending you, but your content better deliver because this is the hottest ticket in town now.

PH: What was it like to experience the 4 Nations Face-Off? Did you think it would be as good as it
turned out to be?
TK: I probably answered this in the question above, but the experience itself was insane. Again, I was so disappointed to not be in Montreal for that Saturday night game, but it still felt like a small victory that so many people were talking about hockey, which was the biggest thing for me.

Someone my age (27) has very few international hockey memories, and I have always been jealous of people like my dad who can go on and on about the Canada Cup and things like that. It felt cool to have a memory of my own.

I was in the camp that it would be competitive and that the players would try and all that because they are hockey players and they have a lot of national pride. What I was wrong about is that I thought it would be a big deal just for the hockey world and for the few of us hockey sickos on Twitter and that is it.

When it was leading shows like “Get Up” on ESPN, I was floored. It was also cool to have my dad with me there as well.

As I said, people were not sure how it was going to go. We, as a company, were like “Yeah, Tim. Just go have fun with it”.

I invited my dad weeks before the tournament started, and then all of a sudden it blew up. I would normally have had a producer traveling with me, but then I could not just uninvite my dad, so he had to be my producer and had to rise to the occasion in a big spot, which he did.

PH: Speaking of memorable hockey events, you were at UBS Arena when Ovechkin set the new
NHL record for goals scored in breaking Gretzky’s record of 894 goals. What was that experience like for you as a longtime hockey fan?
TK: That was beyond my wildest dreams. That is probably the coolest thing I have ever seen in person.

Again, similar to the stories I have been telling, hockey did not seem like a big priority at Snapback. I am not saying this in a bad way, but hockey is a niche sport.

After the momentum of the 4 Nations Face-Off, leading right into Ovie was just the perfect storm for me, but I still had reservations. Sure enough, Jack was like, “Well, we have got to get you there to see the record broken, right?” I was like “Yeah, of course… Are you serious?”

For me to have that opportunity to see history in person was hard to put into words. I grew up in a sports family, so I have always kinda been hit over the head with “You missed the good ole days,” like Mike Tyson, Pete Rose’s hits record, the Summer of 98, Miracle on Ice, and all of that.

To now have my kind of “I can tell my kids I was there for that moment” was surreal. And that is just as a sports fan, not even as a Capitals fan or a die-hard Ovie follower. It was just sports.

On top of that, the fact that I got Ovoe and the 4 Nations Face-Off in a year when I was not expecting to do much hockey content. It made it all so much sweeter.

PH: Is there anything else that you would like to share with hockey fans?
TK: I would just say that recently I went through this epiphany that hockey is so obsessed with
“growing the game”, and a lot of leagues are, and that is fine. I want more people to learn and find
out how great this game is.

If Colorado did not have a team, who is to say I ever would have fallen in love with hockey? But in the same breath, if you are already a fan, do not let that get in the way of just enjoying the sport yourself and sharing that with others you know who love it.

You do not have to sell someone who is not a hockey person 24/7. There are times for that, but not at the risk of exhausting yourself and missing the essence of why you love it in the first place.

I got into that cycle early in my career, and it has been far more liberating to just enjoy the sports you love. For a while, I felt like I always had to convince someone they had to like hockey before I talked about it, but that is not the case.

If you like hockey, then just talk about hockey, and more often than not, the growth will take care of itself. I have had countless people tell me they have become a hockey fan just from seeing my passion for the sport and for me that is pretty damn good.


Discover more from Inside The Rink

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.



Link

Continue Reading

College Sports

Red Hot Hockey Returns for 10th Edition at Madison Square Garden

Story Links NEW YORK – The Kelley-Harkness Cup will be up for grabs for the 10th time this fall as Red Hot Hockey returns to Madison Square Garden on Saturday, Nov. 29, as announced today by Boston University Director of Athletics Drew Marrochello and Cornell University’s Meakem & Smith Director of Athletics […]

Published

on


NEW YORK – The Kelley-Harkness Cup will be up for grabs for the 10th time this fall as Red Hot Hockey returns to Madison Square Garden on Saturday, Nov. 29, as announced today by Boston University Director of Athletics Drew Marrochello and Cornell University’s Meakem & Smith Director of Athletics and Physical Education Nicki Moore.
 
The passionate fan bases of longtime rivals Boston University and Cornell will once again gather in New York City over Thanksgiving weekend, as Red Hot Hockey has become one of the premier events in college hockey since its debut in 2007.
 
Puck drop for this year’s contest is set for 8 p.m. Tickets for Red Hot Hockey will be available starting Wednesday, June 4, at noon and can be purchased at the Madison Square Garden box office, all Ticketmaster outlets, through Ticketmaster charge by phone (866-858-0008), and online at www.ticketmaster.com and www.msg.com.
 
Fans can also purchase tickets for the Boston University or Cornell fan sections. Student tickets will be available at a discounted price at the Agganis Arena box office (Boston University) and the Cornell Athletic Ticket Office in Bartels Hall.
 
“It’s amazing to think that we’re getting ready to return to Madison Square Garden for the 10th edition of Red Hot Hockey,” Marrochello said. “The success of this event is a testament to not only our wonderful partners in Cornell and Madison Square Garden, but to the fans of both schools who have made this event one to circle on the calendar and to the two hockey programs who continue to be among the best in the country. We’re looking forward to spending another Thanksgiving weekend in New York City with Terrier Nation.” 
 
“The Red Hot Hockey series has been circled on every Cornellian’s calendar every other year since 2007, and the 10th contest at Madison Square Garden will be extra special,” added Moore. “We’re excited for Casey Jones to lead the team to New York City for the first time in a rematch of the 2025 NCAA Regional Final. Featuring two premier programs, two passionate fan bases, and an iconic venue, the game will be an incredible experience for alumni, fans, and student-athletes alike. We look forward to the Cornell community coming together in the Big Apple for another unforgettable chapter in this historic rivalry.”
 
More than half of the previous Red Hot Hockey games have taken place before sold-out crowds at Madison Square Garden. The inaugural event, attended by 18,200 passionate students, alumni, parents, and fans, was a resounding success. Held on Nov. 24, 2007, it featured members of the 1980 gold medal-winning U.S. Olympic hockey team, including Mike Eruzione, Jack O’Callahan, and David Silk from BU, along with Joe Nieuwendyk, a member of the Cornell Athletics and Hockey Halls of Fame.
 
After Boston University went undefeated in the first five Red Hot Hockey meetings (3-0-2), Cornell has won the last four meetings, including a 2-1 victory in 2023, where the Big Red scored two goals in the third period. The Terriers won in 2007, 2011, and 2013, while the rivals skated to ties in 2009 and 2015. The Kelley-Harkness Cup, which honors legendary coaches Jack Kelley (BU) and Ned Harkness (Cornell), was introduced 10 years ago.
 
The rivalry between BU and Cornell began on Jan. 10, 1925, when the Terriers secured a 7-2 victory on Beebe Lake in Ithaca, and includes matchups in the NCAA title games in 1967 and 1972. Since the Terriers departed from ECAC Hockey to join Hockey East in the 1984-85 season, the two schools have met sporadically before the first Red Hot Hockey event. Madison Square Garden, home to the NHL’s New York Rangers and NBA’s New York Knicks, has served as the venue for this showcase since its inception.
 
BU and Cornell are the only two schools in Division I men’s hockey to win at least one NCAA Tournament game in each of the last three years, with the Terriers making it to the Frozen Four each time. The Terriers defeated the Big Red in an NCAA regional final twice over the past three seasons, including a 3-2 overtime victory in Toledo, Ohio, this past March on their way to the national title game. Each of the last 12 meetings between the Big Red and the Terriers has been decided by two goals or fewer, including four consecutive one-goal games.
 
“Celebrating the 10th edition of the biennial Red Hot Hockey underscores the strong appetite for college hockey in New York City,” said Joel Fisher, executive vice president, Marquee Events and Operations, MSG Entertainment. “As the home of the very best in sports and entertainment, Madison Square Garden is proud to once again host the storied rivalry between Boston University and Cornell for this milestone game, and we look forward to another electric atmosphere with New York’s passionate college hockey fans.” 

Both schools are perennial powerhouses in college hockey, combining for 355 victories and a .650 winning percentage over the past decade. Boston University has won the national championship five times (1971, 1972, 1978, 1995, and 2009), while Cornell has claimed the title twice (1967 and 1970). Together, these two schools have produced over 100 NHL players, including prominent names such as New York Rangers president Chris Drury, new Rangers head coach Mike Sullivan, Jack Eichel, and Macklin Celebrini (BU), along with Ken Dryden, Joe Nieuwendyk, and current NHL players Morgan Barron and Sam Malinski (Cornell).

 

“Experiencing playing at MSG for the first time since 2009 was better than I remembered,” said Casey Jones ’90, who will be entering his first season as the Jay R. Bloom ’77 Head Coach of Cornell Men’s Ice Hockey. “What this game has come to mean to our program and our alumni is incredible. The Lynah Faithful are the best fans in college hockey and you can see how athletics can connect our alumni to our university. This year with BU, it should be another great battle in ‘The World’s Most Famous Arena.'”

 

“We’re excited to return to Madison Square Garden in November,” said fourth-year BU head coach Jay Pandolfo ’96. “It’s an incredible opportunity to not only play for a trophy on such a big stage but to face off against one of the top programs in the country. This rivalry brings out the best in both teams, as evidenced by all the one-goal games we’ve played over the past three seasons. The atmosphere is always electric and we expect another fantastic crowd at MSG.”



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending