
Landeskog at the 2012 NHL Awards
“C” it’s one small letter, one massive responsibility. Many players will see years of ice time but never have the title of Captain. That’s not the case for Colorado’s Gabriel Landeskog who became the youngest captain in NHL history today; the 4th in Avalanche history joining past captains, Joe Sakic, Adam Foote, and Milan Hejduk.
Drafted as the 2nd pick in 2011, Landeskog posted an amazing rookie season, which ultimately earned him the Calder win at this years NHL Awards.
Other notable young NHL captains, Penguins Sidney Crosby and Blackhawks Jonathan Toews; both Stanley Cup winners. Season pending, it’ll be interesting to see how Landeskog takes on his new role, and if it’s the push Colorado needs to skate into the Stanley Cup playoffs this coming season.
Follow Gabe on Twitter: @gabelandeskog92
This video might not be viral quite yet, but it’s certainly dropping the gloves against the impending NHL lockout. NHL, No Hockey Lockout!
[tubepress video=”EWQs3O_IDas”]
Despite the 2012-13 season still being up in the air, the Boston Bruins are full steam ahead when it comes to preparing for the upcoming season. One major part of game nights and community events are the Boston Bruins ice girls. Ice girls occasionally get a bad wrap around the league, but these women make a game night experience all the more worth while. Check out which girls made the cut for this years squad! Bruins Ice Girls

NHL 13
Worried about the rollercoaster ride that is the impending NHL lockout? Fear not, the Sept. 11 release date of NHL 13 is one you can bank on happening. Players of the EA Sports’ NHL 13 will now have the option of choosing either Canadian women’s hockey team star Hayley Wickenheiser or American defenceman Angela Ruggiero as part of the Legends roster. EA Sports started to include generic female players in NHL 12, but this is the first time the athletes are real-world and recognizable as part of the Canadian-made game.
With the summer slipping through our fingers and hockey season hopefully starting soon, here is a look that is not only season appropriate but also supports your favourite hockey team. The team chosen for this week is the New York Islanders. This look combines many summer aspects; this look also provides something key for this in between season and that is layering. This look is perfect for supporting your favourite team whilst looking chic and season appropriate.
Just like always if you don’t have something here don’t sweat just use what you have, this look is just a guideline. If you love this look and aren’t an Islanders fan just swap out the Islanders stuff to fit your team colours and logo. Hope you enjoyed it.
For many girls, wanting to marry an athlete is the ultimate dream. A fairy-tale lifestyle with all pros, no cons and a simple skate into the sunset. While the lifestyle can offer the world, it’s not as easy as one may have imagined. A hockey wife, who has spent 11 years by her husbands side through the OHL, AHL and NHL, was kind enough to answer questions about the lifestyle at home instead of at the rink. This wife has asked to remain anonymous, for now…
Winter: In what moment did the realization hit, that you were a hockey wife?
Anonymous Wife: I was a “hockey wife” long before I said “I do”, but the moment that it sunk in, was the 3rd day of our honeymoon. We got married over the AHL All Star break and had only a few days before heading back to our hockey home; I totally thought something like, “That was short, I’m finally married to my husband, but I’m married to the game too.”
W: It’s always about the man behind the jersey, tell me a bit about the woman behind the man?
AW: Well, sometimes I wear a jersey too, during pick up hockey games in the summer. I’m Canadian, so I grew up playing hockey. A lot of wives have to learn the game, luckily I already knew it, the good and the bad. I went to university and have my degree in nursing. I’m afraid of spiders and I hate the smell of wood smoke. Random things about me, eh.
W: How did you meet your husband?
AW: It’s not some romantic, mushy story, we lived near each other growing up near Edmonton. My husband and my older brother have been friends for an eternity now, they played hockey together growing up. My husband was always at our house and it was just a natural progression I guess. We started dating right before my 16th birthday, broke up a few times, but always ended up together again.
W: What is one skill that every hockey mother, girlfriend, or wife should master?
AW: Master the art of making pasta, it’s the one meal you’ll make more times than you’d probably like in this lifetime!
W: What is the best and subsequently the worst thing about being a hockey wife?
AW: The best, I could name a million positives about being a hockey wife. We get to experience so many great things, and for that I’m truly thankful. I’d say the best thing about being a hockey wife, girlfriend, etc is the extended “family” that you’re welcomed into. The people you get to meet and the friendships that ensue. It seems that with hockey, someone knows someone on every team and even if you’re the new kid, you’ll find a friend mighty fast. The worst, the negatives are a pretty large list. I don’t want to sound like I’m complaining, but I’m complaining. At every level, it’s the girls, the girls constantly throwing themselves at your boyfriend, husband etc. That’s a big frustration with a lot of us, but you soldier on. Girls aside, I’d have to say the schedule, it’s grueling on not just a player but the entire family. The schedule was easier to take when I was younger, I was in school the first few seasons, then we had a dog and I worked the next few seasons. It wasn’t until our daughter was born 3 years ago that the schedule really took a toll. I’m not sure how to say this correctly, because my husband is a great father and does more than his fair share, especially in the summer; but during the season a lot of the time it’s like I’m a single mom. It was a bit easier when our daughter was a newborn, but now she asks where daddy is and misses him a lot when he’s on the road.
W: You mentioned that you have a nursing degree, a question that comes up often is if wives work?
AW: I’d like to clear up a huge misconception about us wives, mainly because I hear the same thing all too often and to put it bluntly, it pisses me off. The majority of us aren’t dumb girls who get married and give up our dreams for money and fame. Just because I’m married to a hockey player, chances are no one outside the state where he plays knows our last name and trust me, I’d like to keep it that way! I worked my way through school and our first 4 seasons together. I worked even after we got married and I didn’t necessarily have too. I chose nursing because of the flexibility within the schedule and because every city that we might ever play in, has a hospital. Currently, I’m not working outside of the home, but trust me I’m still working in it. I’m a mom and taking care of my husband so he can play to the best of his abilities. Being a hockey wife is a full time job during the season, but a lot of people don’t get that.
W: What is an average daily schedule for you?
AW: Are we talking off-season or during the season? The off-season is that fairytale ending for sure, vacation, sleeping in, my husband home all the time. Okay, maybe not a fantasy when he’s driving me insane, but still its preferable. During the season, my schedule is pretty similar to any other stay at home mom, take care of the house, our daughter, our two dogs, run errands, the whole shebang. But during the season, I have the added benefit of making sure everything is put together and my husband has a clear mind, that our daughter is napping when he is on game days, that the pre-game meal is just perfect and the suit and tie are ironed to perfection. That’s just the tip of the iceberg, I won’t even touch what life is like around our home during playoffs.
W: Can you elaborate on “being married to the game?”
AW: I can try, but it means a bunch of different things. I don’t think people realize that both in season and off, hockey dictates our lives. We can be traded, called up, and sent down at a moments notice, that’s the right a team has when you sign a contract. A 10 year deal doesn’t mean that you won’t be traded after 10 months. When a trade happens, the player leaves immediately and the wives and girlfriends are left behind to pick up the pieces. Through the good and the bad, you have to have a thick skin and roll with the punches. Teams try to be accommodating, but there’s only so much they can do.
Have questions for “The Hockey Wife” about hockey life? Send an email to pinkpuck@thepinkpuck.com with “Hockey Wife” in the subject line!
Here is a DIY tutorial for one of the hottest trends this year a Peter Pan collar. With the addition of the Peter Pan collar to your basic girly tees you can dress them up in an instant. This tutorial takes an NHL spin on this trend. Hope you enjoy it.

Materials
- Felt or your chosen fabric
- Needle & thread
- Ribbon or chain
- Hot glue gun + Glue
- Shrinky Dinks (Available at any craft store)
- Printer
- Pencil Crayons
- Scissors
- Pattern (found here and here)
- Straight Pins
Although the list of materials may seem overwhelming this tutorial is actually quite simple.

Hall and Seguin
Taylor Hall signed a 7-year $42 million contract extension with Edmonton on Wednesday. The signing places the 2010 #1 overall pick in an Oilers uniform through the 2019-20 season. It’s been a battle of Hall vs. Seguin since the beginning and it should be interesting to see if Bruins GM Peter Chiarelli will lock up the Bruins forward sooner rather than later. Seguin posted an incredible season last year, following his Stanley Cup win during his rookie year. Although the upcoming season is still pending, Seguin should be on track to accomplish much more on the ice. With Hall pulling a 7-year extension, it’ll be interesting to see if Seguin posts the same kind of deal in the near future.