TUE APR 1
11:00 PM
FLA
-190
MTL
T: 6
Preview
11:00 PM
WSH
-220
BOS
T: 5.5
Preview
11:00 PM
NSH
T: 6
CLB
-180
Preview
11:00 PM
BUF
T: 6.5
OTT
-210
Preview
11:30 PM
TB
-170
NYI
T: 6
Preview
WED APR 2
12:00 AM
DET
T: 5.5
STL
-175
Preview
1:00 AM
CGY
T: 5.5
UTA
-180
Preview
2:00 AM
EDM
T: 6
VGK
-160
Preview
2:00 AM
SJ
T: 6
ANA
-175
Preview
2:30 AM
WPG
T: 5.5
LA
-120
Preview
11:00 PM
MIN
NYR
Preview
11:00 PM
WSH
CAR
Preview
11:30 PM
FLA
TOR
Preview
  • Terry Ryan celebrates 47th birthday with fist-flying return to pro hockey

    ST. JOHN'S, Newfoundland (AP) — Former NHL player Terry Ryan celebrated his 47th birthday with a fist-flying return to professional hockey, dropping the gloves and fighting Sunday for the Newfoundland Growlers in the ECHL.

    Playing professionally for the first time in 20 years, Ryan traded punches with the Adirondack Thunder's Zach Walker, a 25-year-old former Boston College player who got the upper hand at the end after Ryan lost his balance.

    Ryan fought Walker midway through the third period in the Growlers' 6-2 loss, also drawing an instigator penalty.

    "I wasn't planning on fighting ... but I turn around and my teammate, my buddy's got his helmet off,'' Ryan said in a video posted by the Growlers. "What do I have to lose? I'm supposed to lose that fight like when I fought Tie Domi when I was 18.''

    Ryan appears in the Canadian television comedy series "Shoresy'' as Ted Hitchcock and has a popular hockey podcast. His book, "Tales of a First-Round Nothing: My Life as an NHL Footnote'' was published in 2014.

    He was at a bar — "I was probably five or six pints in,'' Ryan recounted — celebrating his birthday late Saturday night when he got the call from the Growlers to join the short-handed squad.

    "I still skate 4-5 times a week and I play a lot of ball hockey,'' Ryan said. "I just figured if I had the cardio, at least a fraction of it, that I wouldn't embarrass.''

    Drafted eighth overall by Montreal in 1995, Ryan got on the ice for only eight NHL games over three seasons with the Canadiens. He sustained a serious ankle injury in 2001 and last played professionally for the ECHL's Cincinnati Cyclones in 2002-03.

    "I was joking with the guys, `You get sent down for two weeks, but two decades is a little much,''' Ryan said.

    His 13-year-old daughter watched him play for the first time Sunday.

    "I didn't want to embarrass them,'' Ryan said. "Before the game she gave me an extra long hug.''

    NHL NEWS

    More Headlines

    COMMENTS

    When submitting content, please abide by our submission guidelines, and avoid posting profanity, personal attacks or harassment. Should you violate our submissions guidelines, we reserve the right to remove your comments and block your account. Sportsnet reserves the right to close a story’s comment section at any time.