
Calgary Flames prospect Cullen Potter brings mom's hockey heritage with him
Jenny Schmidgall-Potter was among the first women to combine motherhood and elite hockey when she twice gave birth to children and returned to the U.S. women's team.
The four-time Olympian and a competitor at 10 world championships had daughter Madison in 2001 and son Cullen in 2007.
Cullen Potter was a first-round pick, 32nd overall, in this year's NHL draft by the Calgary Flames.
'Cullen has unbelievable hands,' said his mom. 'People always say, 'Jenny, you had great hands' … it's just something you work on.'
Schmidgall-Potter and the U.S. claimed the first Olympic gold medal awarded in women's hockey in Nagano, Japan, in 1998. She also won four world titles with the Americans.
She ranks fifth all-time in points at the worlds for the U.S. with 61 in 50 games. Schmidgall-Potter retired from the national team in 2013 when Cullen was six and inducted into the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame in 2020.
There is a photo of a three-year-old Cullen on the ice with Jenny at the 2010 Olympic Games in Vancouver. He held his mom's silver medal in his small hands.
Cullen has hazy memories of his mom's playing days.
'Just a little bit … some of them are definitely a little fuzzy,' he said this week at the Flames' development camp in Calgary.
'I remember going out on the ice and kissing the medal. I've seen that picture a lot. So I remember some things, not everything. I was pretty young.
'Some people that have watched her play say I mimic her a little bit.'
Cullen was walking at five months and skating as a one-year-old, but Jenny and husband Rob didn't put him in organized hockey until he was 11. Cullen also played lacrosse and swam.
He learned hockey playing on outdoor rinks in Minnesota with his parents, who run a business training players.
'Cullen always had a knack for coming up with the puck,' Jenny said. 'Rob and I, our love for hockey is definitely an influence on him and he saw the passion we have for the sport.'
His sister Madison also played hockey and competed in swimming for Notre Dame.
'I did just about every sport you could think of,' Cullen said. 'From the second I touched the ice, I think that's just something I knew I loved and haven't looked back since.
'My mom playing in the Olympics and my dad playing college, they just know a lot about the game. They've helped me through the hard times and the good times.'
The five-foot-10, 172-pound centre produced 13 goals and nine assists in 35 games as an 18-year-old freshman at Arizona State this past season.
He added nine goals and 13 assists in 35 games for the U.S. development team in 2023-24 before joining the Sun Devils.
'I'm super proud of him,' Jenny said. 'He's matured a ton over the last year, going to college, playing with older guys and being around older players.
'I know what it takes to commit yourself on a daily basis and forgoing summer vacations or things that you miss out on because you're wanting to accomplish your goals.
'He's always been a worker and has some genetics, of course, but you know a lot of it's just through the hard work that he's done with my husband and with us as parents to get to where he is now.
'I can say I love hockey, I've had so many great moments in winning a gold medal and world championships, but I still think the best thing in my life are children.'
The 46-year-old still keeps an eye on a U.S.-Canada rivalry in women's hockey she helped fuel for many years.
'The rivalry is still strong and true. Go U.S.A.,' she said, before adding: 'Cullen's in Canada, so I guess maybe I'm going to have to support them just a little bit.'
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 3, 2025.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

NBC Sports
an hour ago
- NBC Sports
Athing Mu-Nikolayev eager for return to Hayward Field for 50th Prefontaine Classic
Athing Mu-Nikolayev hasn't raced an 800m in nearly a year, but is ready to run at the 50th Prefontaine Classic at Hayward Field and on a track where she has authored so much history already at age 23. 'The lead up to this has been really great for me,' she said Thursday. 'I've definitely been in a good spot mentally. It's obviously not the most convenient for it to be my first 800m (since last July 19) in this really fast race, but I think I've kind of gotten over that point and just recognized that, hey, we are 1,000 percent really great where we're at with training. This is a great field. This is an opportunity for me.' Mu-Nikolayev will line up Saturday along with reigning world champion Mary Moraa of Kenya and Olympic silver medalist Tsige Duguma of Ethiopia, among others, at Pre (NBC and Peacock, 4-6 p.m. ET). Already at the new Hayward Field, Mu-Nikolayev has broken the NCAA 400m record (49.57, 2021), made her first Olympic team in a personal-best time (2021, en route to Tokyo Olympic 800m gold), won a world title (2022) and broken the American record in the 800m (1:54.97, 2023). She was the youngest U.S. woman to win individual Olympic track and field gold (age 19) since Wyomia Tyus in the 100m at the 1964 Tokyo Games. She is the youngest woman in history to own Olympic and world titles in an individual track and field event. Her Hayward magic wasn't there in 2024, however. She tore a hamstring about six weeks before the Olympic Trials. Then in the trials final in Eugene, Mu-Nikolayev and Raevyn Rogers' legs appeared to make contact about 200 meters into the race. Mu-Nikolayev fell. She got up and finished ninth. Her Olympic title defense was over before she could board a plane to Paris. She still went to the French capital with her training group and was a few miles away from Stade de France when the Olympic women's 800m final took place, according to the Southern California News Group. 'It was very hard,' said her coach, Bobby Kersee, according to the report. 'My philosophy of coaching is to put her right back in it, right away. And she tolerated me as a coach. It was tough for me, and it was tough for her.' A month after the Games, Mu-Nikolayev announced that she and Yegor Nikolayev were engaged. They got married this past March. Then she returned to competition with low-key races in April (using a 5000m as a 3000m workout) and May (1500m wins in 4:21 and 4:10). So Saturday will be Mu-Nikolayev's first time in a top-level meet since the Olympic Trials. She called it 'a really anticipated race,' but one that she's stressing over with results-based goals. 'Getting back to kind of the basics of what has made me one of the best 800m runners,' she said. 'Just feeling that on Saturday, I think, is the most important thing rather than hitting a specific time.' Nick Zaccardi,


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
How free agency has impacted Edmonton Oilers' roster construction for 2025-26
The early days of free agency this summer were fascinating because of what the Edmonton Oilers did and didn't do on July 1. Edmonton general manager Stan Bowman did not secure the best goalie on the market (Jake Allen). Multiple skill forwards were signed by other teams in the first hours of free agency. Advertisement The Oilers were quiet. Bowman freed up cap space when he dealt Viktor Arvidsson, but the first addition didn't arrive until late Tuesday night when left winger Andrew Mangiapane was added. On July 2, right-handed centre Curtis Lazar was signed. For a fan base used to loud noises on July 1 and 2, the Bowman pace was met with all manner of reactions. Some are disappointed there's no new goalie, others are wondering where the goals are going to come from on the wing, and still others are upset that no obvious replacement for Evander Kane's physical play was added on Day 1 of the free-agent frenzy. What does all of this mean for the 2025-26 roster? Making room for some, adding competition for others and finding a better fit on left wing for the second line. The Oilers were overstocked on right wingers, so trading Arvidsson plus walking Connor Brown and Corey Perry in free agency means a new look at the position in 2025-26. Zach Hyman will be back to play on the No. 1 line with Connor McDavid, but the rest of the current depth chart suggests a younger, faster group. Matt Savoie is coming off a strong rookie pro season with the AHL Bakersfield Condors and looked good alongside Leon Draisaitl during a three-game audition during the 2024-25 season. In 32 minutes at five-on-five with the big centre, Savoie delivered a nice assist to set up Draisaitl, and the line had a 50 percent goal share. No guarantees for Savoie, but the opening has been created by management. David Tomasek is a wild card at right wing (and at centre) for next season. He signed as a free agent at 29 after an exceptional season in the SweHL, where he led the league in points. He scored well at even strength (11-23-34 in 57 games, 2.9 points per 60) and helped outscore opponents in the discipline (41-35). Tomasek also played extensively on the power play (8-10-18 averaging almost three minutes per game) and may give the Oilers a different look on the second power-play unit. The even-strength totals are most impressive, but training camp will show his foot speed and ability to play without the puck against NHL opponents. Advertisement If Savoie and Tomasek both fail in efforts to make second- or third-line right wing, expect coach Kris Knoblauch to look for veteran left wingers Mangiapane, Trent Frederic or Vasily Podkolzin to move over to their off-side. Lazar is a right-handed centre with plus speed and penalty-killing experience. He had a poor year in five-on-five scoring (0.67 points per 60, down from 1.61 in 2023-24), and that could be a sign that the 30-year-old has hit the wall in this area and won't bring enough offence to hold a roster spot. His contract is a minimal investment and gives Noah Philp (and others) competition for the No. 4 centre job. There are other areas of the roster that have strong competition (wings, No. 7 defence) but the Oilers' penalty kill could use a boost, and it's in this area that Lazar may have his best chance to win a job out of camp. Last summer, the Oilers made free-agent bets on Arvidsson and Jeff Skinner. The verbal at the time surrounded finally having the opportunity to secure quality linemates for Draisaitl on the second line. To say it didn't work is an understatement. Draisaitl rolled merrily along (as he always does) with other linemates (mostly Podkolzin and Perry) and delivered another exceptional season. The big man scored 1.62 goals per 60 at five-on-five when playing with Connor McDavid, and 0.93 goals away from the captain (1.17 overall), so the damage to Draisaitl from the failed Skinner-Arvidsson experiment should be considered minimal. Bowman adding Mangiapane gives the Oilers a goal scorer (0.71 goals per 60 at five-on-five last season) and a good style fit (Mangiapane is aggressive on the forecheck and will go to tough areas). Mangiapane's 2024-25 season with the Washington Capitals featured a wide range of five-on-five scoring results. He scored just 0.15 goals per 60 in heavy minutes (403) with Lars Eller as his centre, while hammering at a 1.4 goals per 60 clip with Nic Dowd in 214 minutes. Advertisement Taking out the Eller minutes, Mangiapane scored 1.16 goals per 60 at five-on-five for the Capitals in 2024-25. That total would have ranked second to Draisaitl on the Oilers last season. Mangiapane with Draisaitl should work well. It's a better bet than Skinner or Arvidsson based on age and playing style. Fans will be upset about goaltending in Edmonton until management finds a solution. Did Bowman cast about this offseason and come to the same conclusion as Ken Holland? It's unlikely. Bowman may well want to find an upgrade, but found free-agent and trade prices too dear. No team is going to give the Oilers a helping hand, and that means waiting for an opportunity. Edmonton may hire a 'goalie whisperer' to improve Stuart Skinner's performance to the point the organization is confident in running the big man for a fourth straight playoff run. Or a trade happens before training camp. Either way, if it's an issue, Edmonton must make a bold move at the deadline. Bowman made room for Savoie (and Tomasek) while also finding Draisaitl's possible ideal winger. NHL teams run forward lines in pairs and then add a third based on complementary players who fill a specific need. If Draisaitl and Mangiapane can find some magic together, the Oilers will have accomplished much in the early hours of free agency in 2025. Lazar is a solid small bet. If there's another loud noise this summer, it's a goalie. (Photo of Andrew Mangiapane: Bruce Bennett / Getty Images)


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
What we saw and heard from Sabres prospects at development camp
BUFFALO, N.Y. — Three years ago, the Sabres had Jack Quinn, JJ Peterka, Owen Power, Mattias Samuelsson and Peyton Krebs at development camp. A few months later, all five of those players were on the NHL roster playing meaningful roles. In 2025, development camp had a much different feel for the Sabres. The roster had eight forwards, 12 defensemen and five goalies. Nobody who played for the Rochester Americans last season, including 2024 first-round pick Konsta Helenius, was at camp. Typically, the Sabres have done a three-on-three tournament with three different teams. This time around, it was just two teams scrimmaging. This is the second straight year most of Buffalo's top prospects have been kept home for the development camp. For a team that is heavily invested in drafting and developing its own talent, this seems like a development opportunity worth taking advantage of. Advertisement 'I don't know if it's a philosophy change,' GM Kevyn Adams said. 'A lot of the guys who were in Rochester, it's a taxing year. The goal at this camp is less about being on the ice and more about getting familiar with the organization and who's who and what does everybody do and what does it mean to be a Sabre. So a lot of the guys that maybe in other years would have been here, (Konsta) Helenius is the perfect example. He's not new to the organization now because he's been here and he's been in Rochester. That's part of it. I think sometimes, especially with Rochester's length of the season, you want to make sure they get the rest and then get right into their training and don't be disruptive in terms of some of the thoughts if you're bringing guys over. It's a smaller group this year but the picks this year and then last year other than Konsta. So it's not so much philosophical. Just more so how it played out.' This year was the 10th anniversary of the Sabres drawing a near sellout crowd at KeyBank Center for Jack Eichel's development camp. The crowd at the Harborcenter on Thursday morning was sparse by comparison. This camp has always been more of an orientation for new prospects than it is an evaluation of players who have been in the system. But the excitement and competition that were present in years past weren't the same with the smaller roster. So many of the Sabres' top prospects are playing in Rochester, including first-rounders Isak Rosen, Noah Ostlund and Helenius. The Amerks' season didn't end until late May, so they played a lot of hockey this year. But new strength coach Brian Gallivan was in town this week, putting the prospects through intense off-ice training. Sabres first-round pick Radim Mrtka was laughing at the end of the week because he estimated 'half the guys were puking' on testing day. The Sabres have drafted a lot of players over the last few years who need to get stronger and could have benefited from some face time with Gallivan and his staff. This could have served as a mid-summer accountability check. Advertisement 'They can do Zoom calls,' Adams said. 'They're on programs, and (Gallivan) has already taken care of that. It's not as critical. But it is something we did talk about.' Ultimately, development comes down to a lot more than one week in July. The absence of the top prospects just left more room for others to stand out. Here's what we saw and heard from Buffalo's prospects this week. 1. 2022 sixth-round pick Jake Richard seems to be an annual standout at development camp. This summer was no different. During the three-on-three scrimmage, Richard scored a hat trick and then added a shootout goal to top it off. Goals in a summer scrimmage don't mean much, but it was notable that Richard, one of the older players at camp, decided to take charge of the scrimmage in front of the big club's decision makers. 'That's not really something I'm thinking about during the game, it was just the competitive spirit in me that wanted to win a hockey game,' Richard said. 'Everyone on the bench was like, 'We're not losing this game.'' Richard took a huge step at UConn this season. He scored 15 goals and had 28 assists in 34 games. His shot has always stood out, but he's added a strong netfront component to his game as well. Richard came up to Buffalo earlier this summer and has been getting in extra work with Sabres skating coach Mike Ansell. Richard has been staying with Sabres draft pick Gavin McCarthy, who was his junior teammate in the USHL. Skating has been Richard's biggest focus for the last few years. The Sabres had some talks with Richard about turning pro this spring, but he wanted to go back to school to try to win with the core group UConn is bringing back. He can become a free agent if not signed by next August. Amerks coach Michael Leone coached Richard a few times in international tournaments and said, 'The transformation he made this season was incredible.' Leone noted that the bigger the game, the better Richard seemed to play in a demanding Hockey East season. Advertisement 'His natural instincts, especially around the net, his ability to find space,' Leone said. 'He has a really good stick in tight areas. His ability to get pucks and tip pucks, too. You don't see that a lot with younger kids, the ability to play in traffic and tip pucks. All things you guys see at the next level are really important. How many goals are scored around the net area? He has a lot of good tools.' 2. Mrtka looked the part of a steady and smooth defenseman throughout the week. It's always tough to judge defensemen in a three-on-three setting, especially when most of the top forward prospects weren't in town. But what stood out is the way Mrtka carries himself on and off the ice. He's confident and mature, two qualities that Sabres assistant general manager Jerry Forton pointed out on draft weekend. 3. The Sabres had five goalies at camp, including Scott Ratzlaff and Topias Leinonen, who both signed their entry-level contracts this spring. The NHL signing of Alex Lyon means there's a chance Devon Levi spends part or most of the season in Rochester. That could result in one or both of Ratzlaff and Leinonen spending time in the ECHL this season as a development tool. Ratzlaff is probably the more refined of those two goalies at this stage in his career. The Sabres made a bet on the size and mobility of Leinonen. He just needs to become more consistent technically, and goalie development coach Seamus Kotyk said he saw him take steps in that direction this season. Sabres fourth-round pick Samuel Meloche has the same offseason goalie coach as Levi, and it's noticeable in the way both goalies move around the crease. Meloche's quickness is his best trait. Kotyk noted Meloche could end up playing college hockey at some point, but he's still 17, so it might be another year. 4. Third-round pick David Bedkowski was unable to take part in any of the team practices this week because of an illness. He came down with what he thinks was strep throat while flying back from the NHL Draft. Meanwhile, 2023 second-round pick Max Strbak was not at development camp because of a personal matter. 5. There are always sneaky standouts at these camps, and 2025 fifth-rounder Ashton Schultz was one this week. The Chicago Steel forward from Minnesota is only 5-foot-11, but his hockey sense and competitiveness make him a real pest around the net. On one shift early in the scrimmage, Schultz had four shot attempts from right around the crease. If he can build the strength to match his mentality, Schultz could have a future. He said he plans to play one more year in the USHL before going to North Dakota. Advertisement 6. The Sabres did not extend a qualifying offer to 2021 second-round pick Aleksandr Kisakov. That seems to signal the end of the road for Kisakov with the organization. He played 13 games for the Amerks last season after playing 32 and 48 games in the two years prior. The Sabres also no longer hold the rights to 2021 third-round pick Stiven Sardarian, who was a point-per-game player at Michigan Tech last season. According to PuckPedia, Sardarian is no longer a college student, so it's unclear what his playing future looks like. (Photo of Radim Mrtka: Matt Winkelmeyer / Getty Images)