logo
St. Cloud State's Brian Idalski hired as first coach of PWHL's expansion team in Vancouver

St. Cloud State's Brian Idalski hired as first coach of PWHL's expansion team in Vancouver

Brian Idalski is leaving St. Cloud State after being hired as coach of the PWHL's expansion team in Vancouver, the league announced Monday.
The 54-year-old has more than 20 years of women's hockey coaching experience, including overseeing China's national team at the 2022 Beijing Winter Games. Idalski also coached the KRS Vanke Rays to two Russian-women's league ZhHL championships over a three-year period.
Vancouver's inaugural roster includes former Vanke Rays players, Michela Cava and Hannah Miller, who also played for China in 2022. Idalski's hiring comes a day before the PWHL draft. Vancouver will select seventh followed by Seattle, with the expansion teams switching the final two spots in each successive round of the six-round draft.
'Brian is a proven winner who knows our sport, the players, and has coached at the highest levels,' general manager Cara Gardner Morey said. 'What stands out in Brian's experience is his ability to build and transform the programs he is a part of, from his work in professional leagues, at the Olympics, and turning collegiate teams into nationally ranked contenders.'
From Warren, Michigan, Idalski spent the past three seasons at St. Cloud State, where he earned college hockey coach of the year honors in 2023 after the team tied a school record with 18 wins. His teams have combined for five NCAA Tournament appearances, with previous stops at North Dakota and Wisconsin-Stevens Point.
'I've been associated with a lot of players across the PWHL, either coaching them personally or against them over the years, so this role brings me full circle with an eagerness to work with the league's world-class talent,' Idalski said.
Seattle filled its coaching position by hiring Steve O'Rourke last week.
___
AP women's hockey: https://apnews.com/hub/womens-hockey
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Vancouver Canucks re-sign winger Brock Boeser to new seven-year deal
Vancouver Canucks re-sign winger Brock Boeser to new seven-year deal

Hamilton Spectator

time36 minutes ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Vancouver Canucks re-sign winger Brock Boeser to new seven-year deal

VANCOUVER - The Vancouver Canucks have re-signed one of their top scorers, inking right-winger Brock Boeser to a seven-year, US$50.75-million deal. The team announced the new contract about half an hour after the NHL's free agency period opened on Tuesday and the 28-year-old from Burnsville, Minn., became an unrestricted free agent. Boeser had 25 goals and 25 assists for Vancouver last season, well below the career highs he posted in goals (40) and points (73) during the 2023-24 campaign. There was ample speculation in March that the 28-year-old right-winger would be moved ahead of the NHL's trade deadline, but Canucks general manager Patrik Allvin said the offers simply weren't enticing enough. Originally selected 23rd overall by the Canucks in the 2015 draft, Boeser has played all 554 of his career NHL games for Vancouver, amassing 204 goals and 230 assists in regular-season play. He added another 11 goals and 12 assists over 29 post-season appearances. The six-foot-one, 208-pound forward from Burnsville, Minn., became a fan favourite not only for his scoring prowess, but how he handled adversity off the ice, including the death of his father, Duke, in May 2022. The support from Vancouver hockey fans always meant a lot to Boeser. 'I can't say enough about the fan base and the city. Everyone's so kind to me, if I'm just out and about,' he said at the end of the 2024-25 campaign. 'Everyone's always had my back and supported me. And that's something that I really appreciate ' Earlier on Tuesday, the Canucks announced extensions for all-star goalie Thatcher Demko and winger Conor Garland. Demko inked a three-year, $25.5-million deal, while Garland signed a six-year, $36-million contract. Both players are heading into the final season of five-year contracts and were set to become unrestricted free agents next summer. Demko, 29, is coming off an injury-plagued 2024-25 campaign where he posted a 10-8-3 record with a .889 save percentage, a 2.90 goals-against average and one shutout. The six-foot-four, 192-pound goalie from San Diego, Calif., was named a finalist for last year's Vézina Trophy, awarded annually to the NHL's top goaltender, after going 35-14-2 with a .918 save percentage and a 2.45 GAA during the 2023-204 campaign. The performance helped Vancouver clinch first place in the Pacific Division and earn a spot in the playoffs. Demko suffered an injury to the popliteus muscle in his left knee during Game 1 of the team's first-round series against the Nashville Predators. He did not play again until Dec. 10. 'Thatcher is one of the top goalies in the National Hockey League and a key leader in our locker room,' Canucks general manager Patrik Allvin said in a statement. 'Demmer is one of the hardest-working players on our team and gives our group great confidence when he takes the net. A complete package of size, strength, rebound control, and athletic ability, our players know that they have an opportunity to win each and every game he plays.' Garland put up 50 points (19 goals, 31 assists) for the Canucks this past season and won gold with the U.S. at the men's world hockey championship in May. The 29-year-old winger from Scituate, Mass., has played the last four years in Vancouver after being acquired from the Arizona Coyotes alongside defenceman Oliver Ekman-Larsson in July 2021. 'Conor is a core member of our hockey team and a player who has taken on a bigger role with the club the past couple seasons,' Allvin said. 'He competes hard every day, drives play on the ice, is relentless on the forecheck and is really tough to play against. Gars is an emerging leader in the group and works extremely hard to keep himself and the players around him accountable.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 1, 2025.

Brock Boeser stays with Canucks, agrees to 7-year, $50.75 million contract
Brock Boeser stays with Canucks, agrees to 7-year, $50.75 million contract

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Brock Boeser stays with Canucks, agrees to 7-year, $50.75 million contract

The Athletic has live coverage of NHL free agency. Brock Boeser, one of the best goal-scoring wingers available on the free-agent market, has agreed to re-sign with the Vancouver Canucks on a seven-year, $50.75-million contract, the team announced Tuesday. The deal is worth $7.25 million in average annual value. Boeser, 28, has spent all nine seasons of his NHL career with the Canucks, who drafted him at No. 23 in 2015. Inconsistency and injuries have been issues for him at times, but he brings legitimately high-end finishing ability at even strength and on the power play. General Manager Patrik Allvin announced today that the #Canucks have agreed to terms with F Brock Boeser on a seven-year contract with a $7.25 million AAV. — Vancouver Canucks (@Canucks) July 1, 2025 He was at his best in 2023-24, scoring 40 goals and totaling 73 points in the second season of a contract that paid him $6.65 million annually against the cap. Like many of his teammates, Boeser's performance dipped last season, but he still finished with 25 goals — a level of production that he's basically hovered around throughout his career. In eight full NHL seasons, Boeser has scored at least 20 goals six times. Advertisement A Minnesota native, Boeser started free agency in a group of wingers who could be viewed as contingency plans for Mitch Marner, the unquestioned top player available in unrestricted free agency before Monday's sign-and-trade with the Golden Knights. Though his overall impact at five-on-five has been questionable, Boeser was the purest goal-scorer in the bunch. He reportedly turned down Vancouver's offer of a $40 million, five-year contract during the season.

Ranking college conference names by accuracy, plus CFB 26's top 25
Ranking college conference names by accuracy, plus CFB 26's top 25

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

Ranking college conference names by accuracy, plus CFB 26's top 25

Until Saturday Newsletter 🏈 | This is The Athletic's college football newsletter. Sign up here to receive Until Saturday directly in your inbox. Today in college football news: happy Canada Day to the Beaches. The Pac-12 has added Texas State, which is nowhere near the Pacific Coast, unless you zoom out a lot and get in 'pale blue dot' mindset. In the grand scheme, we're all near the Pacific Coast. Regardless, the Pac-12's name has become less accurate. Well, there's a lot of that going on in conference names. On that note, I will rank each FBS league by the accuracy of its name, considering all upcoming realignment moves. Advertisement Excuse me, I misspoke. I will not rank anything. The Name Accuracy Quotient (NAQ) will do the ranking. I'm just here to tell you what it told me, like I'm one of those oracles who used to tell the BCS what the computers were allegedly saying. Behold, I hear the results issuing forth from the NAQ even as we speak: 🐝 'NIL's been around for 50 years. It's just public NIL now.' Real talk from Brent Key in Seth Emerson's story on why Georgia Tech is good again. 🅾️ Adidas, American Eagle, Battle Sports, Chipotle, DSW, Electronic Arts, Lululemon and Red Bull: just some of the companies in the Jeremiah Smith business. 💰 Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti is trying to present his '9 billion automatic bids for us and the SEC' plan as a way to minimize the role of the CFP committee. 🧢 Michigan beat Ohio State in a head-to-head battle for top-100 recruit DE Carter Meadows. 📰 'The unnamed woman who brought a civil lawsuit accusing BYU quarterback Jake Retzlaff of sexual assault has withdrawn her case. … It's unclear if Retzlaff is still facing the suspension and or if he still plans to leave the program.' Details. 🏀 Truly a full-circle moment: EA Sports is bringing back its college basketball series. It was EA's usage of former UCLA star Ed O'Bannon's image in NCAA Basketball '09 that sidelined both the football and basketball games in 2013. O'Bannon had better be in the new game (tentatively coming in 2028, per Extra Points) for real. Speaking of! Alabama at No. 1 in an EA Sports college football game? Sure, that's normal. Technically, the Tide started at No. 1 in three of the last five editions, going back to NCAA 11. Business as usual. But Alabama being the top team in College Football 26's initial top-25 rankings (listed below) feels a little different than it used to. We'll see how it turns out, on fields both real and fake. Bold choice by EA either way! The game's full initial top 25: Also, I compared EA's list to a ranking I mashed together from five different 2025 power ratings (FPI, Massey, SP+ and TeamRankings, plus BetMGM national title odds). I'll share a version of that composite later in the offseason, but know this: EA's rankings fit in fine. If I'd seen a blind spreadsheet of all six metrics next to each other, I probably wouldn't have guessed which one is which. Still, a few small takeaways from that comparison: OK, that's all for today. Email me at untilsaturday@ to tell me which conference outside of FBS is the most (or least) accurately named. Last week's most-clicked: Technically, it was the New York Times' list of the century's 100 greatest movies, but among the links in this newsletter's actual jurisdiction, it was: 'How many college football teams could have won a national title with Nick Saban?'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store