Hockey rarely gets much attention in Norway, a skiing-obsessed nation that turns to soccer when the snow melts. Mats Zuccarello is changing that.
Zuccarello is only the seventh player from Norway to make it to the NHL, and he is the first to make it to the Stanley Cup Final. Now “Zucca” has Norwegians staying up late to watch New York Rangers games and checking the stats to see if he scored.
“A lot of Norwegians have fallen in love with Zuccarello,” says Roy Kvatningen, sports editor for Norwegian online paper Nettavisen. “First and foremost because he’s successful at what he does. He won the scoring title in Norway, he won the scoring title in Sweden, and now he’s playing on the biggest stage in the world. He’s also got a cool name and a good personality: confident, but down to earth.”
Former teammates of Zuccarello and his mother are being interviewed by Norwegian media. Downhill skier Kjetil Jansrud and players on the national soccer team have sent him congratulatory messages.
In his fourth NHL season, all with the Rangers, Zuccarello notched 19 goals and 40 assists in 77 games. He added four goals and seven assists in 20 post-season games to help New York get to the finals for the first time in 20 years.
“Some people, like my close family and friends that have been following me since I was young, are really excited,” he said. “I told everyone it’s a huge opportunity for me to play, but at the same time nothing is won yet.”
The affable 26-year-old winger hopes his success will build up hockey at home, but he knows it will take a lot more than that.
“I would love to be a role model for younger players back home and create some more buzz around hockey,” he said. “Hopefully this can help. If I was Norwegian or not, I would be equally happy to play in the Stanley Cup Finals.”
Norway finished last in the Sochi Olympic hockey tournament. Zuccarello believes a greater commitment is needed within the country before success outside of it can be reached.
“We have 25 rinks. There is no ice in the rinks during the whole summer,” he said. “How are you supposed to be a good hockey player when you go four months with no ice?”
Zuccarello says Norway has not made a commitment to hockey since Oslo hosted the 1952 Olympics.
“Nothing,” he said in a frustrated tone. “We have one new rink in Norway that is not from ‘52. They have renewed it a little bit, but our main rink in Oslo was built in ‘52, and that’s not good enough. It’s got to start from the top. It’s going to cost money, but the government has money. You’ve got to use it to get new rinks, get people excited to go to a hockey game with new seats.
Norway is considered the “little brother” in hockey circles to Sweden and Finland. Sweden has 10 times as many rinks than Norway, Kvatningen said.
Zuccarello was fortunate to attend a hockey-centric high school and then played three seasons in Norway’s elite league. From there he went to Modo in Sweden’s premier league before signing a free agent deal with the Rangers in 2010.
He watched the Stanley Cup Final as a youngster in the early morning hours. The first one he recalls was the Colorado Avalanche’s victory over Florida in 1996, when he was eight.
The Avalanche, with Swedish star Peter Forsberg, was Zuccarello’s favorite team. They won that series in a four-game sweep — ending it with Uwe Krupp’s goal in triple overtime.
“I remember waking up. I was going to school, I turned on the TV and Uwe Krupp scored the overtime winner,” Zuccarello said. “I didn’t think it was live. I thought it was taped.”
He might be about to create a lot of sleepless nights for grownups and children alike back home once the series against the Los Angeles Kings begins. Family members and friends are planning to make the trip to New York to see him play live in Games 3 and 4.
They will have to make room for other Norwegian tourists who are looking to make the trek, too.
“I know already that more Norwegians have been traveling to New York to catch a game at Madison Square Garden,” Kvatningen said. “Even if they’re not hockey fans, it’s a great experience for Norwegians to go over there and see a small Norwegian guy getting celebrated.”
Hong Kong-based cricket team Hung See this weekend found success in their matches in Taiwan, even if none of the results went their way. Hung See played the Chairman’s XI on Saturday morning, the Daredevils that afternoon and PCCT yesterday, with all three home teams winning. The team for Chinese players at the Happy Valley-based Craigengower Cricket Club sends teams on tour to “spread the game of cricket.” This weekend was Hung See’s second trip to Taiwan after visiting Tainan in 2016. “The club has been traveling to all parts of the world since 1982 and the annual tradition continues [with the Taiwan
‘TOUGH TO BREATHE’: Tunisian three-time Grand Slam finalist Ons Jabeur suffered an asthma attack in her 7-5, 6-3 victory over Colombia’s Camila Osorio Taiwan’s Hsieh Su-wei yesterday cruised into the second round of the women’s doubles at the Australian Open, while Iga Swiatek romped into a third-round women’s singles showdown with Emma Raducanu and Taylor Fritz was just as emphatic in his pursuit of a maiden Grand Slam title. Hsieh and Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia, the third seeds, defeated Slovakia’s Tereza Mihalikova and Olivia Nicholls of Britain 7-5, 6-2 in 90 minutes in Melbourne. Ostapenko and Hsieh — who won the women’s doubles and mixed doubles at the Australian Open last year — hit 25 winners and converted five of nine break points to set
HARD TO SAY GOODBYE: After Coco Gauff dispatched Belinda Bencic in the fourth round, she wrote ‘RIP TikTok USA’ and drew a broken heart on a television camera lens Defending champion Hsieh Su-wei of Taiwan yesterday advanced to the quarter-finals of the women’s doubles at the Australian Open, while compatriot Chan Hao-ching on Saturday dominated her opponents in the second round, as world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka swept into the quarter-finals. Third seeds Hsieh and Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia toppled Hungary’s Timea Babos and Nicole Melichar-Martinez of the US 6-4, 6-3, hitting 24 winners and converting three of seven break points in 1 hour, 18 minutes at 1573 Arena. Although rivals at last year’s Australian Open — where Hsieh and Belgium’s Elise Mertens beat Ostapenko and Ukraine’s Lyudmyla Kichenok 6-1, 7-5
Dubbed a “motorway for cyclists” where avid amateurs can chase Tadej Pogacar up mountains teeming with the highest concentration of professional cyclists per square kilometer in the world, Spain’s Costa Blanca has forged a new reputation for itself in the past few years. Long known as the ideal summer destination for those in search of sun, sea and sand, the stretch of coast between Valencia and Alicante now has a winter vocation too. During the season break in December and January, the region experiences an invasion of cyclists. Star names such as three-time Tour de France winner Pogacar, Remco Evenepoel and Julian Alaphilippe