Hockey

Panthers offer Sarah Nurse deal to lead girls hockey program

The Florida Panthers are trying to sign a high-scoring forward who has an Olympic gold medal and two world championships, with hopes of getting the deal done in the coming days.

Team's new program designed to get more girls playing hockey

A women's hockey player smiles as she's congratulated by two male hockey players on ice. Both men are wearing hats.
Canada's Sarah Nurse is congratulated by Canadiens' Nick Suzuki and Maple Leafs' Mitchell Marner after scoring a goal during the NHL all-star skills competition on Friday. (Marta Lavandier/The Associated Press)

The Florida Panthers are trying to sign a high-scoring forward who has an Olympic gold medal and two world championships, with hopes of getting the deal done in the coming days.

If it happens, she won't be playing for the Panthers.

Sarah Nurse, the Canadian forward who had a highlight-reel goal against the New York Rangers' Igor Shesterkin during the NHL's all-star skills competition on Friday night, has the chance to run the Panthers' new program designed to get more girls playing hockey.

Florida president Matthew Caldwell offered the job to Nurse publicly — very publicly, at a lectern, with a microphone, before a crowd of onlookers Saturday morning. And he was serious.

"I'm going to embarrass you, but we're going to offer you a job today," Caldwell told Nurse, who was seated in the crowd. "We want you to be the face of our girls program at the War Memorial. So, are you in? On the spot? We don't deal with agents, OK. I'm a tough negotiator."

WATCH | Sarah Nurse scores a 'Forsberg' on Rangers' Shesterkin:

Sarah Nurse scores a ‘Forsberg’ on Igor Shesterkin at NHL All-Star skills competition

2 years ago
Duration 0:35
Sarah Nurse scored a memorable goal against Ranger goalie Igor Shesterkin in the Tendy Tandem event.

The idea to hire the 28-year-old Nurse was first floated to Caldwell by Melissa Fitzgerald.

She's the general manager for the War Memorial, which is the two-rink facility being refurbished by the team and will become its practice headquarters.

"We've been talking about it for a few weeks," Caldwell told The Associated Press. "Our youth hockey team kind of brought it up as a joke to me, but I said, `Let's think big. We're building this huge facility. Let's put our money where our mouth is."'

The only part Caldwell was less than serious about with Nurse was how the Panthers don't deal with agents. He spoke with Nurse's representative, Thomas Houlton, after the event.

Houlton did not immediately respond to a request for comment. He and Caldwell spoke for about 15 minutes after Saturday's event, which was attended by NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman, Panthers stars Aleksander Barkov and Matthew Tkachuk, and dozens of kids who got to play ball hockey afterward.

Nurse of Hamilton, Ont., played for Canada's world-champion teams in 2021 and 2022, along with Canada's Olympic gold winners at the Beijing Games last year.

Her 18 points in seven games in Beijing was an Olympic women's tournament record.

She was one of five women's players from USA Hockey and Team Canada — the two most dominant women's national teams in the world — who were part of the skills events on Friday night. She wore custom skates highlighting Black History month and the Black Girl Hockey Club, a nonprofit focused on getting more Black girls and women into the sport.

She used a move made famous by Hall of Famer Peter Forsberg when he helped Sweden win gold at the 1994 Olympics against Shesterkin, a Vezina Trophy-winning goalie.

U.S. star Hilary Knight didn't think Nurse's goal should have surprised anyone, saying, "she's a top scorer."

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