Howson reflects on challenging first half, looks ahead
In lieu of an annual media conference at the AHL All-Star Classic, Scott Howson dished on where the AHL has been in the past year and what is next for the NHL’s top development league.
In lieu of an annual media conference at the AHL All-Star Classic, Scott Howson dished on where the AHL has been in the past year and what is next for the NHL’s top development league.
The 2022 AHL All-Star Classic had been scheduled to be held tonight and Monday at Place Bell, but the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic forced the postponement of the event for a second consecutive winter. Nevertheless, we can still play the what-if game.
Improvisation, sacrifice, and flexibility have long been among the traits that hockey demands for success, be it on or off the ice. The past year ― and beyond, really ― has especially tested those qualities around the AHL.
As a kid growing up in Colorado, Sam Hiller found a way to spend as much time as she could on the ice. Now she’s breaking barriers as one of the first female referees in the American Hockey League.
The AHL is proud to be joining the NHL and the NHLPA for their 23rd annual Hockey Fights Cancer initiative.
American Hockey League President and Chief Executive Officer Scott Howson has announced the following additions to the league front office:
After her college hockey career at Brown University, Katie Guay became a referee as a fun part-time job to help cover gas money for her long drives to a rink where she was playing in a rec league. Some 15 years later, she’s about to make significant hockey history with her whistle.
The American Hockey League is set to return to action today for its 86th season of play, with six games kicking things off.
The pandemic presented numerous obstacles last season. But the AHL and its teams pulled off the 2020-21 season, made it through, and set themselves up for that hoped-for pay-off of normalcy. Now they have that reward.
The jump to the AHL is a test for any official. But it’s a chance these women know they’ve earned, and they hope that not only can they continue to progress in their own careers, but that other women will see this as a legitimate path forward in hockey.