NHL planning more outdoor games at US service academies

NHL planning more outdoor games at US service academies

Updated Mar. 4, 2020 10:07 p.m. ET

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) The NHL's first outdoor game at a U.S. service academy probably won't be its last.

After the Washington Capitals hosted the Toronto Maple Leafs at the Naval Academy, the league hopes to play games at Army's West Point and the Air Force Academy over the next few years.

It's a significant foray into honoring and partnering with branches of the military that follows the lead of the NFL and Major League Baseball for a league that's split between the United States and Canada.

''It's unique and as we continue to move forward with the outdoor games, you look for new concepts and new themes and new things that'll interest the fans,'' deputy commissioner Bill Daly told The Associated Press on Saturday. ''Certainly the hope is, with a successful game (at Navy), we'll continue the venture with the Army and the Air Force and we'll see where we go from there.''

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Daly said he'd be surprised if the sequel to Maple Leafs-Capitals at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium comes as soon as the 2018-19 season, though 2019-20 is a possibility. The Florida Panthers faced the New Jersey Devils inside in an exhibition game at West Point's Tate Rink in 2006, and ownership connections to the Army make the Panthers and Vegas Golden Knights strong candidates for a potential outdoor game there.

American-born players taking part in the game at Navy said they were honored to get the opportunity. Told of the NHL's future plans to attempt games at Army and Air Force, Maple Leafs defenseman Ron Hainsey called it ''a great road for us to go down.''

''It's a nice recognition and a little partnership almost that we're able to play here,'' American-born Capitals defenseman Matt Niskanen said. ''I think means different things to different people. As a country, it means a lot, especially the Americans that play in the league and our fans.''

The NHL has 24 American- and seven Canadian-based teams and is made up of about 49 percent Canadian-born players. Members of the Canadian Armed Forces took part in pregame ceremonies with the Maple Leafs, and Daly said involving a team from north of the 48th parallel was a conscious decision that didn't meet any resistance.

''I think North American forces are united,'' Daly said. ''I think there's a real appreciation for the military wherever you are, north or south of the border. While it was something we certainly thought about, it certainly hasn't been something that's been an obstacle at all.''

When Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, native Mike Babcock moved to Spokane, Washington, he recalled the deep connections to the military from those stationed at nearby Fairchild Air Force Base or just residents who served or knew someone who was in the Army, Navy, Air Force or Marine Corps. So he's very attuned to the comparisons and contrasts for the military in the United States and Canada.

''When you talk to families in the U.S., there seems to be someone in every family that's had someone in the family,'' the Maple Leafs' coach said. ''When you do it in Canada, we don't have as big a military, so we haven't had that same thing. That doesn't mean we don't have tons of people doing a really good job and doing everything they can.''

Babcock said he didn't know how the NHL would make an outdoor game work at a place like the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario, and Daly acknowledged the service academies are different in the United States. They also provide the kind of outdoor venues that fit hockey well.

''It's just a different atmosphere,'' Capitals defenseman John Carlson said before playing at 34,000-seat Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium. I think football stadiums and baseball stadiums, which I've played in, they're amazing. But to have a kind of unique atmosphere and history to this place and from a fan's point of view the sightlines and all that are way better at a place like this than a 60,000-seat football field.''

Being part of a historic atmosphere is one thing players, American and otherwise, cited as an added value to this Stadium Series game.

''As Americans, I'm sure if you're from a different country, it probably doesn't quite feel that way, but for us it does feel really special,'' Capitals right winger T.J. Oshie said. ''It's great for the NHL, it's great for hockey and it's great for the Americans that are able to play in the games.''

The NFL has partnered with the military for years, and the Atlanta Braves and Miami Marlins played at Fort Bragg in North Carolina in 2016. The NHL is now wading into those waters with more to come.

''The recognition that (servicemen and women) deserve, I guess, is probably a lot more than everyone's doing,'' Maple Leafs defenseman Jake Gardiner said. ''To play some sporting events at places like this is pretty cool.''

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Follow Hockey Writer Stephen Whyno on Twitter at https://twitter.com/SWhyno

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For more NHL coverage: https://apnews.com/tag/NHLhockey

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