T.J. Oshie evolving from Olympic hero to broadcast booth

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When international hockey games go to a shootout, the same player is allowed to shoot again and again if that is what the coach prefers. That is a rule that forward Warroad High School star T.J. Oshie illustrated to the world a dozen years ago at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Russia.

With the Americans and Russians tied after overtime, the game went to a shootout, and Oshie served his country in one of the more memorable moments in Olympic hockey history. American coach Dan Bylsma sent Oshie out to face Russian goalie Sergei Bobrovsky six times, including the last five Team USA attempts in a row.

Bristol, CT – October 7, 2025 – Studio W: T.J. Oshie on the set of The Point prior to the opening night tripleheader Face-Off.

(Photo by Allen Kee / ESPN Images)

Oshie scored on four of them, ultimately winning the game.

Known for a dizzying array of shootout moves, Oshie’s go-to on that day was to aim for the gap between Bobrovsky’s knees, known in hockey parlance as the 5-hole.

Looking back, as he is asked to do every four years when the Winter Olympics come around, Oshie says his best memories from 2014 come from finally getting to play with all of the other American stars that he was usually tasked with stopping when he played against them early in his NHL career for the St. Louis Blues.

“It was almost a sense of relief, finally getting to bond with the American guys,” said Oshie, now 39 and living in the Minneapolis suburbs with his wife Lauren and their four children. “I played with them briefly in World Juniors but even then, I was a fourth line guy and a lot of the guys on our team were older.”

The American team returned home from Sochi without a medal, falling to Canada in the semifinals and losing bronze to the Finns, but Oshie’s status as a Team USA legend was cemented. He went on to win the Stanley Cup with the Washington Capitals in 2018, and officially retired from the NHL last summer after recurring back problems kept hime on long term injured reserve for all of the 2024-25 season.

After three seasons of college hockey at North Dakota, Oshie played more than 1,000 games for the Blues and Capitals in addition to his work with USA Hockey. Of the players with 100 or more career shootout attempts, Oshie’s 47.1% scoring rate is best in NHL history.

Washington Capitals’ Alex Ovechkin (8), of Russia, and T.J. Oshie (77) celebrate a power play goal by Ovechkin against the Minnesota Wild during the first period of an NHL hockey game Sunday, March 1, 2020, in St. Paul, Minn. (AP Photo/Hannah Foslien)

Hockey homecoming

With family in Minnesota, the Oshies made the tough decision to sell their home in northern Virginia and permanently relocate to the Twin Cities last summer. Thus far, they are loving the move — winter weather and all.

“In D.C., you don’t have time to drop someone off and go home and then get back, so a lot of our afternoons were spent sitting at practices with other parents,” he said. “Here, it’s so easy to get around. I know people complain about Minnesota traffic, but it’s actually unbelievable. And here nobody watches practice, so I don’t know what to do with my time now.”

Oshie’s free time has been snapped up quickly. He has transitioned mostly seamlessly from the players’ bench to a spot between the benches, wearing a tie and a headset. Originally he was just going to work for ESPN on occasion, but his plate has been filled by Monumental Sports, the regional network that televises Capitals games, and NBC, which has made Oshie a part of its Olympic hockey broadcast team (he works remotely from a studio in on the East Coast).

Before that, Oshie was seen, briefly, in a Super Bowl commercial for Michelob ULTRA, appearing as a ski race spectator alongside Olympic snowboarder Chloe Kim and renowned actor Kurt Russell, well-known for his portrayal of Herb Brooks in the 2004 movie, “Miracle.”

Oshie is the founder of Warroad Hockey Company, which has quickly become one of the NHL’s top suppliers of undergarments and outerwear. The company is named after the town where Oshie’s ancestors were hockey stars in the 1940s, and where he moved following his freshman year of high school and won state high school titles in 2003 and 2005.

New kind of pregame prep

For Oshie, the preparation and production work that goes into a hockey broadcast has been an eye opener. He credited well-known broadcasters such as Steve Levy and John Buccigross for their help and guidance in this new world.

“I’ve had a lot of great people around me, just like in hockey, both at ESPN and at Monumental,” Oshie said. “Along with talent coaches and producers and coordinating producers, I’m super fortunate and super lucky that all these people helped me along the way to try to be competitive at being on TV. I want to be the best I can be and give the fans the best insight I can.”

He admits to accentuating the positive, more apt to point out a good play made by an offensive player to steal the point than to highlight a defensive player’s error in coughing it up. For new co-workers like Levy, who has been with ESPN more than three decades, the new guy has been a welcomed addition to the broadcast team.

“He’s got an infectious personality and a smile that sort of lights up on TV,” Levy said. “The first night we had him in studio we had a triple-header. We were in a break and he looks over and was all bewildered, and a mess. He said, ‘I’ve never watched this much hockey in my life.’ And that was the first night. Welcome to the grind.”

Bobrovsky has backstopped the last two Stanley Cup titles won by the Florida Panthers, and all these years later, Oshie admits that the two have never actually spoken. But they did have one memorable on-ice reunion in March 2017 when Oshie’s Capitals hosted Bobrovsky’s Columbus Blue Jackets. With the game tied after overtime, Oshie took the ice to face Bobrovsky with a chance to win the game.

“I honestly feel a little bad about it … but I scored 5-hole on him again,” Oshie said. “It was a little rude. I could’ve done something else, but I said, ‘I’m just going to try it again. If he saves it, good for him.’ It had worked before, and I did score 5-hole on him after the Olympics.”

In the Olympics, in the NHL, with his family and now in the broadcast booth, Oshie continues to get the job done.

USA forward T.J. Oshie prepares to take a shot against Russia goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky during a shootout in a men’s ice hockey game at the 2014 Winter Olympics, Saturday, Feb. 15, 2014, in Sochi, Russia. Oshie scored the winning goal and the USA won 3-2. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

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Today in History: February 20, Thousands attend pro-Nazi rally at Madison Square Garden

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Today is Friday, Feb. 20, the 51st day of 2026. There are 314 days left in the year.

Today in history:

On Feb. 20, 1939, more than 20,000 people attended a rally held by the German American Bund, a pro-Nazi organization, at New York’s Madison Square Garden.

Also on this date:

In 1792, President George Washington signed an act creating the United States Post Office Department, the predecessor of the U.S. Postal Service.

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Memorial services for Rev. Jesse Jackson expanded to include South Carolina and Washington, DC

In 1862, William Wallace Lincoln, the 11-year-old son of President Abraham Lincoln and first lady Mary Todd Lincoln, died at the White House from what was believed to be typhoid fever.

In 1905, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Jacobson v. Massachusetts, upheld, 7-2, compulsory vaccination laws intended to protect the public’s health.

In 1907, President Theodore Roosevelt signed an immigration act which excluded “idiots, imbeciles, feeble-minded persons, epileptics, insane persons,” among others, from being admitted to the United States.

In 1962, astronaut John Glenn became the first American to orbit the Earth, circling the globe three times aboard Project Mercury’s Friendship 7 spacecraft in a flight lasting 4 hours and 55 minutes before splashing down safely in the Atlantic Ocean.

In 1965, America’s Ranger 8 spacecraft crashed into the moon’s surface, as planned, after sending back thousands of pictures of the lunar surface.

In 1998, American Tara Lipinski, age 15, became the youngest-ever Olympic figure skating gold medalist when she won the ladies’ title at the Nagano (NAH’-guh-noh) Olympic Winter Games; American teammate Michelle Kwan took silver.

In 2003, a fire sparked by pyrotechnics broke out during a concert by the rock group Great White at The Station nightclub in West Warwick, Rhode Island, killing 100 people and injuring over 200 others.

In 2016, a Michigan man shot and killed six strangers and wounded two others over several hours in the Kalamazoo area in between picking up passengers for a ride service. (Jason Dalton pleaded guilty in 2019 and was sentenced to life in prison without parole.)

Today’s birthdays:

Racing Hall of Famer Roger Penske is 89.
Hockey Hall of Famer Phil Esposito is 84.
Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky is 84.
Film director Mike Leigh is 83.
Actor Brenda Blethyn is 80.
Actor Sandy Duncan is 80.
Basketball Hall of Famer Charles Barkley is 63.
Model Cindy Crawford is 60.
Actor Andrew Shue is 59.
Actor Lili Taylor is 59.
Singer Brian Littrell (Backstreet Boys) is 51.
Actor Lauren Ambrose is 48.
Actor Jay Hernandez is 48.
MLB pitcher Justin Verlander is 43.
Comedian-TV host Trevor Noah is 42.
Actor Miles Teller is 39.
Singer Rihanna is 38.
Singer-actor Olivia Rodrigo is 23.

Girls state hockey: Centennial/SLP, Holy Family win quarterfinal matchups

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Centennial/Spring Lake Park and Holy Family advanced from their respective quarterfinal matchups on Thursday evening, advancing to the semifinals at Grand Casino Arena Friday night.

Centennial/Spring Lake Park 7, Farmington 5

A third-period explosion saw Centennial/Spring Lake Park five of eight goals in the frame to claim a 7-5 win over Farmington in their opening-round matchup.

The game was tied 1-1 at the end of the first period and 2-2 through two stanzas of play before Alaina Gnetz and Madeline Wolter scored just over a minute apart early in the third to give the Cougars a lead they didn’t relinquish.

Not that the Tigers didn’t try, scoring three goals in the period off the sticks of Jenna Goblirsch, Taylor Risch, and Amelia Goblirsch. However, Centennial/Spring Lake Park bettered Farmington’s efforts with goals from Madeline Wolter and Jozie Kelzenberg before an empty-netter late in the contest from Lillian Renslow settled matters for good.

Wolter and Gnetz scored two goals apiece for the Cougars, with Risch and Goblirsch doing the same for the Tigers.

Farmington goaltender Makena Underwood made 22 saves, while her Centennial/Spring Lake Park counterpart Kaia Weland stopped 20 shots.

Holy Family 4, Andover 0

Audrey Nichols’ tip-in goal gave Holy Family a 1-0 lead late in the first period and the Fire never looked back in a 4-0 defeat of Andover in Thursday’s late quarterfinal.

The score remained 1-0 through the second period and midway into the third before Allie Dufaw doubled the advantage at 8:15 of the final frame. Tatum Elvin’s first goal of the season all-but decided matters with 2:56 to play before Katya Sander’s empty-netter in the closing moments put the finishing touch on the victory.

Fire goaltender Kayla Swartout made 20 saves to record the shutout win, while Huskies netminder Clairebella Hillis stopped 26 of the 20 shots she faced.

Friday’s semifinals

All seedings held in the quarterfinals, propelling the top four teams into the semifinals on Thursday.

No. 1 Hill-Murray will face No. 4 Edina at 6 p.m., with No. 2 Centennial/Spring Lake Park squaring off with No. 3 Holy Family no earlier than 8 p.m. to determine which teams will play for the Class AA state title at 7 p.m. Saturday.

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Want to save your relationship? Try sleeping with separate blankets

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The Scandinavian Sleep Method is here to save your relationship

Sleeping with a partner can be tricky. Different people can have different sleep styles (like when one person sleeps like a log, perfectly still all night, while the other tosses and turns). And different people generally have different temperature and blanket preferences.

Enter the Scandinavian Sleep Method, which went viral a few years ago thanks to Swedish influencer Cecilia Blomdahl. With this method, couples sleep in the same bed, but instead of sharing one large blanket, they each get their own smaller one. It gives them more freedom to move around and regulate their own temperature while they sleep — and you have to admit, it’s pretty genius, whether the blanket is designed with this sleep method in mind or just captures the spirit of sleeping Scandinavian style.

Want to try the Scandinavian Sleep Method? These blankets will get you started

Big Blanket Co Original Stretch Blanket

When you can’t bring yourself to sleep with separate blankets, the Stretch Blanket from Big Blanket Co is a good compromise. At eight or 10 feet square, it’s so big that there is ample room for two, no matter how you and your partner sleep.

Amazon Basics Reversible Lightweight Microfiber Comforter Blanket

If you’re buying two blankets or duvets, Amazon Basics has affordable options, including this microfiber comforter for just under $25.

PHF Ultra Soft Waffle Weave Blanket

This soft waffle-weave blanket is another good layering option. It comes in multiple sizes and has an affordable price, which makes it easier for couples on a budget to get two.

Prices listed reflect time and date of publication and are subject to change.

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