Trading Secrets - 282. Hayley Scamurra: Olympic Gold & the Business of Women’s Hockey
Episode Date: March 16, 2026This week, Jason is joined by Olympian, gold medalist, and PWHL star Hayley Scamurra!A key member of Team USA’s women’s hockey team, Hayley opens up about what it took to reach the top of her spo...rt — from years of elite training and representing her country on the biggest stage in the world, to finally bringing home Olympic gold. Growing up in Buffalo with NHL roots, Hayley shares how her dream of becoming an Olympian started early, and how that vision carried her through the grind of college hockey, professional uncertainty, and years of fighting for a real future in women’s hockey.Hayley breaks down the emotional difference between winning silver and winning gold, what it was really like inside the Olympic Village, and the mindset she used to stay calm in the biggest game of her life against Canada. She also shares the business side of women’s hockey — from playing professionally for almost no money, to helping pave the way for the PWHL, navigating trades, free agency, and the continued fight for fair pay and better opportunities for women in sports.She also talks about the support system behind her success, the role mental training played in changing her career, and why she believes athletes should never settle for the bare minimum when they know they deserve more. From gold medal moments to the future of women’s hockey, Hayley gives an honest look at both the dream and the grind behind it.Hayley reveals all this and so much more in another episode you can’t afford to miss!Momentous Head to livemomentous.com, and use promo code TRADINGSECRETS for up to 35% off your first order.Livemomentous.com promo code TRADINGSECRETSNorthwest Registered Agent Don’t pay hundreds or thousands of dollars for what you can get from Northwest for free. Visit northwestregisteredagent.com/TradingSecretsFree and start using free resources to build something amazing.Boll & Branch Upgrade your sleep during Boll & Branch’s Annual Spring Event. Take off 20% sitewide plus free shipping at BollAndBranch.com/tradingsecrets with code tradingsecrets MonarchUse code TRADING at monarch.com for half off your first year. That’s 50% off at monarch dot com code TRADING.
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Welcome back to another episode of Trading Secrets.
Today's guest is an Olympian gold medalist and PWHL star, Haley Skamura, a key member of Team USA's
women's hockey team that brought home the gold medal in this past winter Olympics.
From the grind of elite training to competing at the biggest stages in sports, Haley has experienced
what it takes to chase a dream. Represent your country and win at the highest level. Today, we're talking
about her journey in the metal life, representing her country, representing Buffalo, New York.
Of course, we've got to talk a little bit about the Olympic Village and what it takes to become
one of the best hockey players in the world in all things.
You have seen this sport within women's hockey grow at a level that is unprecedented,
selling out arenas all across the world.
Haley, welcome to Trading Secrets.
Wow, great intro.
Thank you so much for having me.
It is an honor.
The big question I know everyone's going to ask is, do you got the metal?
Do you got the metal around?
Yes.
Let's go.
And I heard this is one of the most expensive metals of all time.
How heavy is that thing if you had to guess?
I've actually weighted.
It's over a pound.
That's like pure gold?
It's silver but gold plated.
Okay, silver but gold plated.
But there were a lot of rumors in the Winter Olympics this year about metals breaking.
Is there validity to that?
There is actually.
So this one's good.
Apparently they fixed them, but at the beginning, when people were celebrating and jumping, the medal was just falling off the ribbon.
They must not have had a strong enough ribbon for the weight of the medal.
Did any of your teammates have that issue or not?
Apparently, Megan Keller, when she was on SNL, they had to sew her ribbon back together because apparently it was breaking.
That is absolutely insane.
And so many questions to ask you, but while we're on the topic, I'm just going into that gold medal game.
The rivalry between Canada and U.S. is unbelievable.
The history is long and deep.
And especially even I can say growing up playing AAA hockey, when we would go play and
where we'd go play, we'd go play across the board, Bud Bakewell, we'd play in Ontario, we'd play
Ottawa, go up to Toronto.
It was almost like a war it felt like at times.
And those guys hit before us, so they hit hard.
What were the nerves going into that gold medal game?
You know what?
It was one of the more calm times I've probably been before a gold medal.
game, which I know is insane to say. I just had so much confidence in our whole team. I was like,
we've got this. We keep playing the way we've been playing. We've been dominating this whole tournament.
We've got this. So I weirdly felt confident. I think as soon as I stepped on the ice, the moment
head, I'm like, okay, this is the gold medal game at the Olympics. It's really happening.
The fans are filled. So then it hit me a little bit then. But then as soon as I started playing,
it just felt like a hockey game. I felt really confident in myself and my teammates.
Okay. This is a career in finance podcast. And it's tough to tie on a stage like that to people.
that are at home. But I will tell you, there are people at home that give presentations,
or it might be a teacher that's doing literally their first day on the job. It could be any type
of profession, a nurse that's working with a patient. And people often sometimes crack under the
pressure. It gets intense. Your palms get sweaty. You lose focus. What are things at that stage that
you do at that level, they'll stay dialed and ignore the kind of the stage that's set and just
focus on what's in front of you? What are some of the tactics or training secrets you got?
I focus on my breathing. So if I do ever get nervous, I do four deep breaths, four seconds in,
four seconds out. I focus on things that I'm really good at. So I remind myself of my skill set.
So I'm a really physical player. So it's okay, as soon as I get out there, I'm going to win my battles.
Win my board battles. Name concrete things that you do out there. That's second nature to you.
And that always helps me a lot. And then honestly, even just talking to teammates, just giving them a tap,
telling them something that they did really well out there, taking the focus off yourself and focus on your teammates,
that's a huge benefit to me as well. And I feel I can go in any workplace as you focus on others and how you can help them and it'll help you.
I love it. Superstitions are big amongst hockey players. Do you have any superstitions before the game? You do anything on a routine basis?
You know what? I was listening to the same music in the same order on the weight of the rink. They were just songs that were really viving with me. I feel. And I was like, okay, I got to start at the same song and have it just go in order the whole way. We had a 20 to 30 minute bus ride depending on which rink we were at.
But then other than that, I'm pretty chill.
We play like a sewer ball, which is like a soccer game before our warmups off the ice.
And as long as I get a good game in like that, I'm good to go.
People are going to ask, so I've got to ask you, what's the number one song on that playlist?
Oh, oh my gosh, what was it called?
Honestly, some bad bunny was on there after his Super Bowl performance.
The Pregunta one, I think, is what it was called.
I like that one a lot.
Yeah, that was on there.
Some Drake.
can't go wrong with that money in the grave, I think it was.
Yeah, there was more.
That's good playlist.
I do have more Olympic questions.
I'll save them to the end because I want to hear a little bit more about your story leading up to the Olympics.
Before I go there, though, the last thing I got to ask you, how do we celebrate?
I mean, what were we drinking?
Do you drink?
Did you guys party?
Did you party for five days straight?
What was the celebration?
We definitely drank.
There was champagne and beers in the locker room after we had the ski golf.
and everything to celebrate.
I actually got drug tested, though, after the game.
So that was sad.
Everyone gets randomly drug tested throughout the tournament,
and mine was after the gold medal game.
So sad.
However, still party with everyone after.
Lots of champagne and drinks, for sure.
And then honestly, we got to celebrate the whole time
because we were done with our competition,
but we were still there for four more days.
So every day we did something.
And so the coolest part was we went to this club,
and this was like two days after winning.
And we had heard Snoop Dog might show up.
I'm like, okay, we'll see.
So we get to this club.
They cover your cameras, all this stuff.
So we're down there.
And all of a sudden, he comes in with his posse, people in front of him, behind him, to the side.
And he goes up and performs, like, four songs.
I was like, this is the best night of my life.
We literally are at a concert right now.
We're getting all this champagne at our tables.
We're with all these other Olympians, the figure skaters, the speed skaters.
He's performing.
Then French Montana went up and performed.
That's incredible.
Absolutely incredible.
So Olympic level partying.
Yeah.
Olympic level party.
It sounds like that's the dream come true.
What is who's one athlete?
And then I promise, I'll go to the next question.
But who is one athlete?
You just, you won't forget meeting that you met that wasn't on your team.
Oh, man.
There's just so many.
I think Alyssa Liu was awesome.
So cool.
So was Amber Glenn.
We got to meet them and chat with them.
And their mindset was just so incredible and how they go about their individual performances.
And even their team performances, I was mind.
because it's their individual performance can affect the whole team.
For us, we're out there with the whole team.
We have everyone with us.
It's so much more supportive and helpful.
For them, they're on their own.
It's almost scarier for the team performance because if they mess up,
they could mess up the medals for the whole team.
So I just thought, learned a lot from them.
And it was really cool to see their mindset going into their competitions.
Okay.
Now, Haley, I was reading a little bit.
And you first made the Team USA, was it in 2019?
Yeah.
So 2019.
And then you go to the 22.
Olympics, you go to 26 Olympics. That's a long time to be a qualified Olympian. What from 2019 to
2026 have you done either physically or mentally to keep you on top of your game?
There's so much. My journey is definitely unique. I think I made the team later than most people do.
And for me, I really focused on the mental side of things because I think that's the hardest
part of the game in my opinion. And I think that was the thing that had to develop the most in order
for me to make it to that Olympic level.
There's just so much that goes into it to be such a consistent player year in, year out for
every single evaluation.
You're always being evaluated in terms of making the team for world championship rosters,
for camps, for Olympic teams.
So you really have to stay on top of it mentally.
So I think developing different tools to help me stay calm, help me stay consistent, and remind
myself why I was there.
I think you can get in your head and start comparing yourself to other people, but you're there
for your game and just remembering why I'm there and continuing to play my game and not trying to
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I love it. One of our common friends,
is Nate Ruckdashel. Nate, help make this introduction. And one friend we share in common all through
Buffalo, New York is, of course, Rob Grinkowski. He's been on the podcast, and he talked a lot about
the mental aspects of things he did outside of the field to stay in the game. One of the bigger
things that he did was what he connects with is just discipline. He's more disciplined than anybody.
When you talk about the mental and the physical side of it, was there, I don't know,
is there anything that you think you would hang your hat on? Do you have, do you have, like,
leadership coaches or therapists or crazy trainers, anything like that? Yeah, I think. So for me,
2019, my dad's always been my coach for as long as I can remember. So he's the one who taught me
the discipline and hard work side of things. So I would say my whole life, I've been really
disciplined. That's just something I've always been consistent in and in the hard work side of things.
After the 2022 Olympics, I actually started working with my now boyfriend and trainer, Nick Stoop.
and he was so helpful in terms of the mental side of things.
It's helped me stay so grounded and calm,
all the different kind of mental tricks you can do for yourself
and remaining confident in different mental affirmations.
Actually, before this last Olympics, we had,
I'm a gold medalist written on a whiteboard,
and I would write over it every day
and kind of say it to myself whenever I would see it
or whenever I would think about it.
And I think a lot of that was why I stayed so calm
throughout the whole Olympics.
I just felt so confident in my preparation and I just knew it was going to happen.
There was just a part of me that knew we were going to win the gold medal.
I love it.
Staying mentally focused manifesting.
Probably helps to have a good trainer and boyfriend on your side too, living with that 24-7.
That's awesome.
You mentioned your dad, right?
Former NHL player star had an unbelievable career.
Growing up in Buffalo, when you have a father who played in the league and you aspire to play.
and you think about little Haley, like running around the rink and doing all the things.
At that time, there really, there wasn't much of a professional scene for women to play hockey
at a level that you could possibly monetize and make a career out of.
I remember growing up, I would write down, I want to be an NHL star.
What did it look like for you growing up?
What were your aspirations, given some of the hurdles that even live, especially back then
and not any longer, thank God, but in the space of women to play professional
hockey. Funny enough, I actually have a little book that I was on a boys team that my dad coached
and it said, I want to be an Olympian. Every other boy wrote NHL player and I had Olympian. It's crazy.
I don't have the memory of it, but it's really cool to see it written out. I clearly was confident
in that. But I never thought too far ahead I just played because I loved the game. And I think
that's something a lot of women athletes can attest to. For me, my idols were soccer stars.
So Abby Wambach was someone I looked up to a lot. There was not really hockey.
There wasn't women's players I was seeing on my TV or even like in my vicinity.
The closest thing was maybe the Niagara College Hockey team.
But even then, I wasn't thinking, oh, I'll go play college hockey.
I didn't know where that would lead.
But once I turned 14, that's when people could start recruiting you.
And I was like, okay, I guess maybe I'll get a free college education out of it.
Why not?
And again, no pro leagues.
I'm just doing it to continue playing the game I love, but also get a free education out of it.
When you're at Northeastern, what did you think?
things change a little bit, right? That's no longer a little Haley and playing with the boys,
right? And that she'll be an Olympian. Things are changing. Things are manifesting. When you're in
college, what did you think it would look after college from a career perspective?
It's crazy. I thought I'd be done with hockey after college and especially because I wasn't in the
U.S. program at all. So I wasn't making any camps or any evaluations or things like that. And I
remember I was really sad about it in college and I actually worked with a sports psych. That was when
I first got into the psychology part of things.
And his big piece was be where you are and be the best person you can be and best player
you can be for the team that you're on now.
And then that will lead you to where you're meant to be.
And something so simple just helped me stop focusing so much on, I have to make this U.S.
team in order to be successful.
It's like, I'm playing Division I hockey on a free scholarship.
This is incredible.
Be the player you need to be for this team and good things will come out of it.
And so I'm really glad I changed that mindset because it just has.
helped me so much take the pressure off of myself and not focus too far ahead. And that was a huge
mental mind shift for me going into college. And then we found out there was a pro league my senior year,
I want to say. So my major at the time was speech and language pathology. And I was like,
there's a team in Buffalo, New York. So I'll just tell them to draft me. This is how funny it is,
right? They'll know to just pick me. And that's actually how I ended up winning the visible cup.
So after my senior year, I had been drafted to Buffalo and literally played in two or three games with them and we won the championship.
I said that I went right back to my college classes.
And then I went to grad school at the University of Buffalo and played for the Buffalo Butes making $7,000 a year.
Actually, probably less at that point.
I bet you it was $3,000 that year.
$3,000 a year?
A year.
So you're playing the game of hockey a year?
playing pro women's hockey.
At that time, you're in a deficit.
You're losing money.
Correct.
And obviously, I lived at home.
I was doing grad school.
And I was just like, all right, I'll just keep doing this until I'm done with grad school.
And then I'll just go be a speech language pathologist.
And little did I know after the first semester, I got recruited by a USA Hockey Scout.
And they wanted me to come to, it was called winter camp at the time.
And it was funny because I was at grad school literally about to take finals.
I had taken like a two-week break from hockey because I had finals.
And I get a call and they want you at camp like next week.
I go, okay, I guess I'll be ready.
And then that's when we had our first rivalry series.
So I made a rivalry series roster, which is where we play Canada in a friendly match, if you will.
And yeah, it was absolutely insane.
So I made that and I go, I got nothing to lose.
Just leave it all out there.
And then that's how I made my first world roster in 2019.
And I quit grad school.
What do you think about?
Because you see so many pros right now.
It doesn't matter what sport they are.
You're right.
They get picked up when they're 2014, 10 years, when they're 10 years old, when they're 12.
I remember growing up in Buffalo played with Patty K.
And he was in 88.
And from squirts to pee-wees, he was getting picked.
What do you think?
Obviously, you can attest to the fact he became a better teammate, sports psychologist,
but something had to change, right, to get picked?
Or do you think it was just being seen?
How do you back into that?
That's such a great point.
And I think for me, I think the physical piece was always there.
I was always in shape.
I was always strong.
But I think the mental piece didn't allow me to reach my full potential.
I think I was always in my head in a way, afraid to make mistakes, afraid to not be perfect.
And once I was able to let that go, I think that's what allowed me to play more free and more like myself.
And to ultimately play better.
And I think scouts could see that that I was doing more on the ice because I wasn't playing it.
anymore. Understood. So when you're with the Buffalo Butes, you said you're making $3,000,000,
you're there. You're with them for a couple of years. And when you get signed to Team USA,
from the financial perspective, how does that look? Do you get a signing bonus? You get paid.
What does it look like? So with USA hockey, I remember, so I don't know how much you know about
this, but in 2017, the women's team had to fight for pay because they weren't getting paid like
anything. And they almost boycotted the World Championship that year.
And then they reached an agreement and were able to get the funding that we deserved in order to play at the highest level.
And so what it looked like was we would get a stipend from USA hockey every month.
And then we would also get a stipend from the Olympic Hockey Committee as well.
And so that was enough in terms of relatively living wage, I would say.
And especially in comparison, obviously to the professional league, we were making more than that for sure.
So you're making, at this point, you're making enough to live when you say.
Yeah, but it's nothing crazy.
Yeah.
Okay.
Okay.
And then so when you're with the Buffalo Buttes, is it, is the goal always, of course, to be an Olympian, but is the goal always to then move into Canadian pro league, PWHL?
What was the career navigation from there that you had your eyes set on?
So the NWHL was also, there was also a CWHL at the time.
There was two separate leagues happening.
So then the CWHL had folded and then it forced the players to make a decision and we decided that we deserved a true professional league because the NWHL wasn't truly professional. We're not making enough money. And so we ended up forming a union, which is how the PWHL eventually came to be three years later, I think. So it took three years of us just going rogue basically and having different showcases where we would play against each other and stuff while we waited for this professional league.
League to unfold. And now we're in our third season of the true professional league. So before that,
the only money I was really making was from USA Hockey and the Olympic Committee.
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When you say waiting, I don't think we should overlook this time period.
We're talking about 2017, right, on the Buffalo Butes,
and you didn't start playing in the PWHL until 2023.
You waited six years to make an actual decent living as a pro athlete,
which is insane, but that's the reality of it.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, it was a lot of hard work behind the scenes.
Unbelievable.
So then you get you land.
So the first, I think your first stop was Ottawa.
Talk to me about, I mean, we just don't get to see this stuff.
And I think it's so important that we do.
What does it look like?
Finally you're here.
Six years in a lifetime.
And you're making an actual living, playing hockey.
Give us perspective.
We see these $100 million contracts.
We see these $50 million contracts.
What does it look like in 2023?
So our average salary is probably in the,
the 45 to 50 range, 50,000 a year. The lowest is like 38,000. And then high end probably,
they're not like public yet. Like we're working on that to make it public. But I think it's 120 is
maybe the highest. So a bit of a range, but nothing crazy, obviously you hear. But what was really
cool. So the first year the league came to be, we had an actual draft. So remember how I told you
with the Butes? It was like, I got to tell them where I wanted to go. Not the case. It was a true
draft. So we went to, it was in Toronto, got to go with my family and just sit and wait for my name
to be called and I had no idea which city I'd be called to. And so it was super, honestly, I think
that was the most nervous I've ever been. I was just in my seat, just freaking out, not sure when
the name's getting called. And then finally hearing it was Ottawa. I'm like, this is real. I'm actually
going to have to move to Ottawa. Like, how crazy is this life? But yeah, so I'm like, I'm making a little bit
above the average with Ottawa, 60,000, I would say, and signed a two-year contract with them.
First of all, congratulations.
Thank you.
Thank you.
You guys are paving the way for hopefully what will be very different as we look forward.
You sign the contract with them, 60K a year.
But then, and this is something I'm just unfamiliar with in the PWHL, you get, you got traded a lot, right?
You go Ottawa, you go Toronto, then Toronto to Montreal.
This isn't a three-year period.
Some questions I have about the business is, do you have an active?
agent that's working for trades on you when you get traded are your contracts changing give us some
insight into the pwhhl when it comes to that so we all have to have agents and i actually got my agent
i was one of the first to sign with her with the c aa this was back in 2022 i probably signed with her
but yeah everyone's required in the league to have an agent to represent you which is huge especially with
the contract negotiations she deals with all of that which is massive i would not want to have to deal
at that. But with the trade, we didn't know. I didn't ask for a trade. That was completely like
out of the blue for me. I was really happy in Ottawa, so I was definitely sad to leave. And the crazy
part of the trade, I don't know how much you read, but we were in Toronto about to play Toronto.
And I got traded to Toronto the night before the game. So me and my teammate who got traded with
me, we had to meet the team the next day at pregame skate and play against our former team that
night. I can't even imagine. You said that you're agent. You have to have an agent and the agents
doing the deals. Do you get say, or does the agent call you and say, go literally, go in the other
locker room. You're on the other team. Do you get to accept that deal? Or is she just, it's done,
it's synced. Go trade. Go put on a different jersey tonight. For us, we don't have no trade clauses.
We don't have any sort of say at all. So it's just the trade is the trade.
That's insane. There was no choice. That is absolutely crazy. Okay. So then you go to
Toronto and the same night you're playing against your former teammates. It's got to be hard,
no? Or you just, fuck it. Let's go. Let's have fun. I was a wreck. I was crying the night before.
Oh, my God. It was awful. And then I'm like, how am I going to play? All these other girls are
playing in this game. Like, how is this possible? I couldn't even look at my former teammates.
They kept trying to make eye contact with me on the ice and I go, don't look at me. I don't want to
break down right now. I got to focus. I somehow finished the game. But that by far is one of the
craziest games I've had to play in.
Yeah, I literally can't even imagine.
But I assume that the players, they have empathy for you.
They know you're not making the deal.
It's not like you're the Buffalo Bills head coach intentionally going to the Patriots
in conference.
You got traded.
It's part of the business.
Exactly.
So I finished the season with Toronto.
And then I hit free agency.
Is that good?
Usually in professional sports, that usually means payday.
Yes.
So that was nice.
That I actually had control and got to decide where I wanted to go and got to hear the different
offers.
So again, that was all through my agent.
and like phone was blowing up the day it started, which was super cool.
And so getting emails about how much each team would pay me and then she would counter
and all of a sudden getting a new email.
And it was wild.
It was such a cool experience.
And the first time that I was in the driver's seat, I could decide where to go.
And so I took it very seriously.
And when Montreal made their offer and I was excited to go to Montreal, I knew some of the coaches
there.
I knew some of the players there.
And I thought it would be a good fresh start for me.
So we finally get this big opportunity.
Now, I want to continue to keep this in perspective because I think it's so important to put in perspective for those that are listening.
But you play college, you start playing pro at 2017.
It's 2025 that you go to Montreal, almost 10 years later.
Yeah.
And at 10 years later, is the deal for the first time over six figures?
No.
What the fuck?
It's just...
Like, I make over six figures with the USA.
hockey money combined with this salary. And that's hugely helpful, obviously. But yeah, no. I would say
obviously majority of the girls do not make six figures. I think only a handful of girls make six
figures. And what's your take on that? Before I start going off, what's your take on that?
That's hard, right? You just made the point, the perspective, how far we have come. And we are starting
off at a better footing than the WMBA started and the NWSL started. So we're starting high. And
because of where they've gone, right?
So their starting point was way lower than what our starting point is.
So in that sense, we're doing well.
However, we obviously want to see higher salaries and things that.
And it will come.
And that's the way it goes, starting at the bottom and starting this process,
this historical process to be a part of the ground floor with the PWHL.
So in that sense, it's an honor.
But, yeah, we'd love to obviously see the players making more money
and being able to live comfortably based off of the salary.
Keep fighting. Keep pushing for it.
It'll eventually get there.
Do they get the NFL players are a union and they get some kind of pension?
Do they have they worked some kind of arrangement for retirement for you guys yet?
They do have retirement plans.
However, I have a bit of a thing because I'm American in a Canadian market.
And so they only offer a Canadian retirement fund for me, which wouldn't really make sense for me to do.
and I can't have it in an American account.
There's little kinks that we would like to have worked out, I would say.
They always worked the kinks in.
All right.
So in the 2022 Olympics, you get a silver medal, correct?
And when you win a silver medal like that, does anything else help as far as like outside
brand endorsements or do you do for silver medal?
I know Team USA gives you a check.
It's pretty interior.
But does that help the financial trajectory of your career?
I would say after a silver, you don't hear much.
That's so interesting because never when things with pink, you're all over the place,
you're left, right and center.
So the difference between silver and gold four years later is monumental.
Massive.
The amount of like support we've had, the amount of people I've talked to, the amount of interviews I've done,
tenfold increase, I would say, based off getting gold versus the silver.
That's unbelievable.
I'm glad that's so sweet that you guys got it done.
When you're going against, going back to a gold medal game a little bit, you've played in, you live in Buffaloes pretty much living in Canada.
And you've played in Ottawa.
You've played in Churama.
You've played in Montreal.
You're friendly with a lot of these Canadian you're going toe to toe with.
Does any of that friendship connect in that game?
Or is it full, those are checked at the door and it's a whole different element of competition?
For sure.
As soon as those U.S. Canada jerseys go on, it's I don't even know them.
I completely check out of that.
it's full go. We are getting this gold medal. I remember the feeling of silver, not happening again.
I don't care who I know on that team. I am winning gold. Yeah, it's honestly easier than you would think
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Do you guys, I'm sure you're on text messages and group chats with some of the Canadian players.
Like do you guys just stop communication?
You ghost each other until the end of the Olympics.
Do you guys talk shit before the games?
What happens behind the scenes?
We weren't really talking much shit, no.
But if we saw each other in the village, we would say hi in passing.
But we're not texting.
We're not doing any of that at all.
And then after the fact, we're in the locker room together.
And it's, hey, congrats, you too.
And then we let it go.
Don't really talk about it anymore after that.
I was going to say, have you seen any type of negative sentiment since going back to Montreal
after winning the gold medal?
No, no negative.
Everyone's been so supportive.
They've been so great.
Everyone's been congratulatory.
Which is funny.
I obviously have been meeting a lot of the Canadian fans since winning.
They're like, we're happy for you.
We're sad.
I'm like, get it.
You don't have to say it.
It's fine.
In general, like the macro level.
All Canadians are nice, right?
So sorry.
Sorry it happened.
So I'm glad to hear that stays consistent throughout.
So I can't even imagine what it's like to go back to that world and live in it.
But when you look at your career now, what do you think the crystal ball looks like?
Where do you want to go with your career?
Where do you take it from here?
Do you get more focus on brand stuff?
Do you keep playing puck?
Do you train for just my gosh, the 2030 Olympics?
What does it look like?
Give me the crystal ball.
Oh, my gosh.
I've definitely thought about it.
I have a lot of people ask me what I want to do.
My mom and my family tell me I'm really good at talking on TV and doing the interviews
and things like that.
so they really want me in that space.
It could be cool.
I have no idea.
I'm open to exploring.
I also do.
I co-host with a podcast about like for our kids play hockey, which is fun.
I also love coaching and mentoring.
So I dig into that a lot on my off season.
So I'll do a few camps this summer.
Other than that for hockey, I'll keep going as long as my body's feeling good.
I don't know what that'll look like yet.
Before the pro league, I always thought this would be my last Olympics for sure.
But now that we have a pro league, who knows?
And I would love to keep playing as long as USA hockey will let me.
Because I absolutely love representing the country.
And those teammates are just bought it for life, obviously, now.
And I would love to keep playing as long as I could.
But definitely professional hockey for a few more years.
And I'm excited to see what life looks like after that, though.
I don't know yet.
In your journal, do you have being Olympian in 2030 written as a manifestation?
Not yet.
Maybe I will.
Okay.
You're going to write it down tonight, maybe?
Maybe I want it.
At it tonight. Let's go right here on Trading Secrets. You're going to add it. You're going to add it.
All right. What about like some things behind the scenes in Olympic Village?
Obviously, you see all the media, you see the social media, you see the food that's hot.
There's a lot of networking and stuff. Like what's actually happening behind the scenes?
What was your most memorable takeaway when it comes to the food, the actual, the dining, the setup and where you're staying?
Come on, give us something we don't know that we would only know from you.
Oh, man. My raw reaction when we walked into the room,
I go, this is small. It was crazy. Me and my roommate could literally hold hands in our beds.
And there are these twin XL beds. I'm like, this is right back to college days. This is insane.
So that was shocking because in Beijing, we had straight up apartments. We had three separate bedrooms.
You had your own room, a big living area. So there were a ton of space. So this was the complete opposite.
But it's like a college campus. There's like the different residential buildings. There's
there was a little Corona hut where they did meditations and mindfulness.
And I actually had my a little Corona gold bottle made after we won the gold.
It's over there.
They had a little Coca-Cola lounge.
Did you Corona sponsorship for that?
I should.
Yeah.
You should.
Get me all the sponsors.
I would love that.
Yeah, it's sitting over there.
I got to get the picture up on Instagram or something.
Yeah, put that out there.
Let's go Corona.
Pick it up over here.
That's actually a question I was wondering about.
Has it have sponsorships come to fruition?
or brand deals since after the Olympics?
Nothing major yet.
There's been a lot of kind of gifts sent over.
I honestly just opened the Abercrombie package from them.
My agency sent over a bunch of stuff from some different companies.
A lot of gifts in that sense.
No sponsorship deals yet, though.
No, but I am looking into, I wore a Nike headband in all my photos.
So maybe Nike will send something over.
We'll see.
I like it.
Nike Corona.
Keep that manifesting alive.
Don't stop.
Keep it ripping.
There's something there.
When you win, because there's all these different outlets that speak to it, I'm not sure that you can.
But there's reports that are certain they have the number down.
But when you win the gold, don't you get an actual check for winning the goal?
It's not material.
It's something small, isn't it?
Yeah.
So we get two separate checks.
I think it's all public.
So the USC, the Olympic Committee, sends 20,000.
And then I think USA hockey sends 37,500.
So it is.
That's a big payday.
It's huge.
It's huge.
What's the difference between silver versus gold?
Throwing back.
I think from instead of the 37, it's 22, 21 or 22.
And then the other one is like 15, I think.
Okay.
Got it.
So pride, right, outsets any type of financial incentive,
but there is financial incentive when you're playing the game.
Yeah.
Pretty sweet.
All right.
The buzzer goes off.
I just can't even once in a lifetime, that feeling.
Like, if you could summarize when that buzzer goes off,
What's that feeling?
Pure relation is the only thing I can think of.
I had no control of my body.
I just went on to the ice, threw everything off.
I've never been so excited in my life.
And then also emotional.
All of a sudden started crying, seeing teammates hugging.
What really got me was family.
When I saw them in the stands, I just, I see my mom sobbing.
And then I look over.
I see my dad.
He's smiling really big and waving like this.
And I was like, oh, my God.
My dream has come true with my family in the stands.
There's just nothing better. It was just amazing.
What a beautiful moment that I'm sure in your brain, you'll just never, ever forget.
And I'm so glad that you think about the little girl, Haley, running around and throwing in her little diary being Olympian.
And to have that come to fruition is the ultimate, ultimate dream.
Congratulations. How just exciting is that. What an honor it is to have that moment that you'll forever, ever have.
And hopefully be able to impact so many other players that look up to you.
you'll be able to show them that road. So that is so cool. One thing I want to ask you was we talk
business on the podcast. So I'm curious, I'm going to put you, I'm going to put you in the boss
seat, okay? So you're starting a business and you've got to look at your teammates. Of all your
teammates, who's the one person you're hiring and why are you hiring them? I got two. Can I say two?
Let's hear. What's your two? Yeah. Hillary Knight and Kendall Cohen, Schofield, without a doubt.
Good answers. Why? They just don't stop. They keep going.
until they get what we deserve.
And that's why we have this leak.
Because of them, there's obviously other people behind the scenes.
We always joke with Kendall, especially.
She just never stops working.
She is always going.
She's always trying to get what's best for us.
A famous thing we've talked about with Billy Jean King was like,
we're done with the breadcrumbs.
We want the whole cake.
We don't want the crumbs anymore.
We're not satisfied with this.
And just because we're asking for more does not mean we're not grateful for what we have.
That's a huge kind of storyline we're trying to get out of.
It's, yes, we're so happy. We have a professional league now, but we have to keep elevating. We have to keep expecting more because we're not done yet. We deserve more. And so those two people are people who work tirelessly for those around them and not for their own glory.
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code trading. When you say that stuff and we hear the theme of this interview, it's a hard question
to ask, but it's a question I got to at least, is that you guys have fought for pay, you have
fought for the league, you have fought for everything. Your 10 years into the league is a top performer
in the entire world and you're still working to get that six figure dollar amount. When you guys
go through what you went through and then win the gold and then we all know what was said by
President Trump in the locker room and some of the noise that came with that, what is that
mean to you and how do you carry forward given everything that you fought for or not for the 10 years
prior and where you are today? Like how do you interpret it all and what does it mean as you continue to
look forward? We were definitely obviously frustrated by that. But I think the coolest part that came out
of it was just how much love and support we got after the fact. We had so many people reaching out
to us wanting to send us any sort of support they could. Flavor of Flav is inviting us to Vegas
now to celebrate. We are just getting love and support from everyone you can imagine, honestly.
And I think that's huge because I didn't love the precedent it's sent to young girls.
I have mentees that I work with as a mentor.
And they were hurt by that.
They didn't appreciate that.
And neither did we.
And we're going to stand up for what we deserve.
And we didn't deserve that.
But the outpouring of love and support we did get after that we deserved 100%.
It's such a good perspective because you think about, again, what I always love to do
this podcast is take people that are listening and they look up to people like you.
And how do they apply situations that happen in your life at the literally,
global level and apply them to their life. And I think a takeaway there is sometimes the noise or
the setbacks or the things that kind of hurt you the most can actually be a massive propeller
to continuing to build momentum behind everything you've already built. The things that might
hurt the most actually create the best outcome for you. So I think that's one that anyone,
no matter how small, your world might feel like some of those biggest setbacks actually might
be the biggest thing that change things for you in the future. So I think
that's just such a great perspective to carry on and to continue to rip and roar with.
And it feels like there's just complete upside in your future.
One quick question, my brain's running when you're talking about that moment with your parents
there that you'll never forget.
During the Olympics and you're talking about the dorm room situation, how much of contact do you have?
Are you allowed to be with your parents a lot?
Are you allowed to be with your boyfriend a lot?
Are there certain rules and restrictions?
What does that look like?
The only restriction is that they just can't come in the village.
So you had to have, we had credentials that we went in with and went through security and no one else can come through the village.
However, I could leave whenever I wanted, obviously.
I could go see people whenever I wanted.
The biggest thing was more conserving my energy at times.
So I think sometimes I just didn't see them as often as we got closer to the medal game because it was like, okay, I'm just going to be with the girls and stay in the village and do my thing.
I don't need to go explore Milan with everyone.
And I also wanted my family to enjoy their time and not wait around.
for me to be free for one hour.
So I let them kind of do their thing.
But yeah, I was free to see everyone as much as I could.
I probably saw them like 10 times throughout the Olympic time.
Cool, reasonable.
What do you think personally, whether it was in a game or outside,
the game, what was the hardest challenge to overcome during Olympics?
Maybe just how big the moments felt at times.
I think this Olympics, we had fans in the stands.
So in 2022, there was no fans.
So that part, I think I maybe had maybe underestimated a little bit.
I was like, wow, this is very different having fans here.
Like this builds up the pressure and the energy a little bit more.
So just keeping that in check was maybe a challenge at the beginning.
But by the end, I was fine.
Good stuff.
Haley, it's so cool to learn about where you've been, where you've come, where you are today,
and what the future might look like.
Your story is incredible.
What would you say the best part of your game?
You had to put one thing, like you're on any, you're on the PWHL video game
and you got your little skills.
What's your number one skill?
Physicality for sure.
I'm like the strongest one out there. I'm winning all my battles, hard on the forecheck. Good shot.
You got any like stick tricks? You do like a little hacks or anything? Anything he could give us for the hockey players back there or no?
A little push on the back of the skates, little bop-bop. Okay. Hit the back of the knees a little bit and ankles and get them off balance.
I love it. I love it. Good stuff. Hey, thank you so much for coming on trading secrets and telling us everything about your career and where it's going. You're an inspiration to so money, so many. Continue to pay.
the way. But we got to wrap with the trading
secret. So something that's very specific
to you. It could be financial. It could be career.
It could be personal. But something that only
someone can listen and hear from you
given your experience. What trading secret
can you leave us with? I think always
fight for what you deserve. Don't
just accept the bare minimum.
Always be willing to fight for what
you have earned and
deserve. I love it. It's a hell
of a trading secret. It's a hell of an episode.
Haley, where can everyone find your podcast
and just anything and everything you got
going on. Give us the plug. Where can we find it all? So my username is just Haley-L-E-Y-L-E-Y-S-C-A-M-U-R-A. I'm on Instagram. I'm on TikTok,
but not very diligently, I would say. And then the podcast that I do is Our Kids Play Hockey. And then
on my Instagram, I also have a mentorship program that I do with my boyfriend, Nick, that I
mentioned, and then Cameo. I just started. Amazing. All right. There's a lot of places to find you. I think
The mentorship and the podcast sounds so cool.
So if you guys are listening, go check those out.
Haley, we're going to continue to watch Thrive.
And now you got to write it down.
It's a live and exclusive here on Trading Secrets.
2030.
Let's go.
Olympics, you've got this.
And if you're not playing, we want you coaching, okay?
We want you on that bench.
Rip it and Roaring, showing the girls to be tough as you are.
But Haley, thank you for being on this episode, Trading Secrets.
We appreciate having our first ever, Gold Olympian.
Thank you for being on.
Thank you for having me.
Ding, ding, we're closing in the bell to the Haley episode.
I'll tell you what, David, this is right up here, Alley.
We're talking Olympics.
We're talking hockey.
We're talking the breakdown of professional sports, the money behind it.
Women paving a lane in a lane that didn't exist.
Tell me everything.
I'm sure you have so much to say.
Yeah, it was great.
Talk about right up my alley, a hockey player focused podcast.
And there's a lot of correlation.
I've got to say, I'm wearing my Bishop Carney hockey hat.
my Bishop Carney Hockey hoodie.
That is the school that I coach at
that I'm the director of the boys program at.
And we have a girls program
and we had eight alumni in the Olympics
from our girls program,
five of them on Team USA.
So five gold medalists
from the Bishop Carney selects girls hockey program.
We're teammates with Haley
and to hear a little bit of the insights
and know that some of those girls
were walking the hallways at the school that I represent
was a really cool touching piece for me.
But one thing I do love about the pot is
I'm sure all of Team USA has done some sort of press.
And I think that to be able to talk about the level of detail of her entire career,
all of her accomplishments,
all of the accomplishments from all the women's as it relates to the women's game,
is why the podcast is a really special place.
So I thought you navigated the interview great.
And it was,
I learned a lot too,
being a hockey guy,
obviously mostly on the men's side,
but I learned a ton too.
So it was a really great episode.
What was most surprising to you?
I think most surprising was obviously like,
you know that there's
discrepancy and pay
and I think just really hearing from someone
who went through it like how many times
did she think her hockey career was over
and it wasn't necessarily because she didn't love the game
or because she wasn't talented enough
it just there wasn't any options.
So I think when it comes to like surprising,
I just like getting paid $3,000 to play
quote unquote professional hockey
and listen at the end of the day
I have a lot of friends.
I've coached a lot of players who've gone on
and played quote unquote professional men's hockey too
from the SPHL to the East Coast Hockey League to the Hague
to the AHL.
And the pay for those is not what you would think either.
Like the average East Coast Hockey League player who's playing in a big market and playing
in front of 10,000 fans is only making $15,000, $25,000 a year.
They're making $5,000 to $600 a week.
AHL salaries as well.
Like they're the same as the PWHL.
Like the average AHL salary for a lot of these guys is that $65,000 mark.
Obviously, you have more.
It depends on the contract that you sign with your NHL club if you have one.
But the pay in some of these professional sports for the commission,
and the dedication in the grind, it just doesn't always equal out.
So to be in a $3,000 a year professional sport,
I didn't know that they really lived off of stipends
from USA hockey and from the Olympic Committee.
I thought that was really interesting.
But to hear where they've gotten and where they're trying to get to,
it's inspiring.
And I give a credit to everybody on the woman's side
that's really driving this forward.
On the Olympic side and the money side,
there are so many things that are surprising to me.
Was there anything that really stuck out to you
or was it what you just alluded to?
No, I think the biggest thing
when you really break it down
and get hyper-focused on what she was saying
from a career point of view
and a finance point of view
and a money point of view
is the difference of winning
a 60-minute hockey game.
Between silver and gold, do you say?
The difference between silver and gold
where she won a silver in 2022
and now winning a gold in 2026.
And it's not just the monetary.
It's like she talked about the four-day partying.
She talked about going to a nightclub
with all the other athletes
and Snoop Dog showing up and parents.
If you don't win that game, you don't get that experience.
If you don't win that game, I'm sorry, you probably don't come on the podcast.
And not because you're not deserving of that.
It's just you're in the limelight.
It's all those things.
And I coach hockey all the time.
And the parents in my program, players of my program, even me as coaches in our program,
you get so strung up on the wins and losses that I always say,
if I started making life decisions off my reactions of wins and losses,
I'd probably be divorced 10 times.
You just can't control hockey game sometimes.
bounces one way or another. USA dominated the tournament. Here they are in overtime, and it's just
one play, one small play changes the trajectory of these women's lives for the next, at least the
four years. And certainly in the short terms, it's just, it's the beauty of the game, but it's also
like fucked up in a way, where it's just, if that goal crosses, if that puck crosses the
line on the other end, this girl's life drastically changes short and long term.
You're a Canadian when you watch this game and you watch the other games, did you think that USA was
going to win in the women's and men's game? Let's start with the women's game. Yeah, and the women's
game, no, USA was going to win that game the whole way. I thought that the men's and the women's game
was actually opposite. I thought USA dominated the whole game and should have won and they end up winning
in overtime. I thought the men's game Canada dominated most of the game and should have won, but then
US end up winning in overtime. But USA hockey women have been on the uprising on the charge for a long
time. If you go back to world championships and a lot of these rivalry series like she talked about,
like they're really dominating Canada lately on the women's side. I know there's a lot of
pride in the USA hockey woman's world right now, as there should be.
What's one?
We only had Haley for about 45 minutes.
What's one topic if you were in this interview, you would have asked her more about
or you want to know more about?
Yeah, it's a good question.
I think more just like from the finance perspective, like being in it, like hockey is a 12
month of your sport.
So maybe finding out a little bit of the cost associated with all our training.
Hear about all our earnings, but you don't really hear a lot about the expenses.
The equipment is ridiculously expensive.
Is she getting all that stuff sponsored?
All those aspects would be really interesting.
one of the most relatable things that she talked about was getting traded,
which I thought that was a fascinating story of how she was in Toronto playing for Ottawa.
She gets traded right where she's playing Toronto.
She literally has to,
she's already there.
Her and her teammate have to go into a new locker room and play her old team.
She was like saying how she was like emotional on the ice,
like crying on the ice.
That for me is relatable.
I got traded twice in my junior hockey career.
Before I was even a,
I never was a professional hockey player.
To this day,
I never got paid to play hockey,
but I played four years of junior hockey.
hockey, which for those who aren't aware, men's hockey is really messed up, where after high school,
you have to go play junior hockey and these random towns across North America and playing these
leagues to get scouted and exposure to go to play college hockey.
And for all those of you who have been in college and met college hockey players, yes,
we are a 21-year-old freshman and 22-year-old freshman who graduate college at 25 years old.
That's just the nature of our sport.
But I got traded twice in junior hockey.
So here I am not making any money, working towards my life goals.
and you get a call from the GM,
you get called in the coach's office.
Like you're traded,
you're on a bus to who knows where.
You move out of one bill at family home
to another bill at family home,
people you've never met before,
teammates you've never met before,
and the expectation is performing.
And those trades are a lot.
Like one time I got traded for three players
and $25,000 and a player to be named later.
So it's decent transactions that are happening
in the junior hockey level
and it's only getting crazier today.
Hearing that story and putting yourself in her shoes
in that situation is it's really nuts.
Like getting traded,
It is like your whole life, you pack it up and you've got to go now.
And then play against your team.
And then play against your team and play against.
It's just crazy.
So finance is involved in that.
Like, where were you living?
Where did you move to?
Were you subleasing an apartment?
Like those are the details where it's just nuts what we do for sports sometimes.
Didn't you have one of your teammates, Diko, and you got traded?
You guys get her so sad.
You both finished like three cheeseburgers and cried in each other's arms.
This story is hilarious.
And I'm going to tell it because we got a couple minutes.
years. I was playing in Trail British Columbia with my best friend and normal game day. We play at
seven o'clock. I go get called in the coach's office at three o'clock. They tell me that I'm traded.
I'm the leading score of the team. I'm the captain of the team. I couldn't believe it. It's my last
year of junior hockey. My best friend comes. He's injured at the time. He shows up with 20 cheeseburgers
and a handle of Crown Royal Whiskey and he was just so sad. So we get like a drink in a couple
cheeseburgers and my new GM coach calls me and he's like, hey, we're so excited to pick you up like
we're playing in Prince George tomorrow,
three o'clock,
need you in the lineup.
Prince George is a 27-hour car ride
from where I was.
And this was at 4 p.m.
and we played at 3 p.m.
So obviously I couldn't even drive there if I wanted.
So he goes, here's what we're doing.
We have a bus from Castle Guard,
of Cologne. It's a four-hour bus trip.
Our owner will pick you up in Cologne,
take you to the hotel and take you to the airport.
You'll fly to Vancouver.
And then from Vancouver, you'll fly to Prince George.
You'll get here just in time for the game.
Oh, my God.
Long, short, short,
Dico has to drive me to the bus. I literally have my hockey gear, a suit, and a backpack. And I had to
leave my car and trail. We'll figure out, we'll fly you back and get your car. I take a bus and I'm on
this bus. And I'm like, what the fuck am I doing my life? Like I'm 20 years old. I'm taking a bus,
this small town. Owner picks me up. I get to the hotel, two in the morning. He picks me up
at four in the morning. We go to Kelona, fly from Colona, Vancouver, get on the plane, Vancouver to
Prince George. I'm so tired. I fell asleep on the tarmac. I woke up two hours later. We're still
on the tarmac. And I ended up getting into Prince George. The game is at three. I end up getting
Prince George landing at two, getting a taxi because the team bus was already at the rink, a taxi to the
rink, literally opening up the door players to the rank and all my new teammates are like standing
at the gate ready to go on the ice for warmops. And I was like, hi guys. So then I like go. I'm getting
dressed in this locker room by myself. My teammates are on the ice. The equipment manager's
fitting me for new gear. Long story short, we go and I score two goals. I get first
no way. We win three, two. We win three two. And then I'm on the team bus. We go back.
And that was it. And then they flew me back to trail. I got my car. I drove it up a couple
days later. And yeah, that was it. So it's a crazy man. Those stories, those memories that I've had
that obviously Haley had in her journeys and playing for three teams and three years and seeing her
sport grow and growing into professional leagues. It's unbelievable. It's unbelievable. The
experiences that this game, the sport gets to bring you in your life.
Can't make it up.
Truly, those stories like that, you can't make it up.
You can't make up what she was explaining to us during this episode and everything
she's undergone just in the last 10 years of professional hockey.
And then think about all the youth hockey before that, in college hockey, and growing up
in a family where her dad played pro and seeing that when she was skating with the
boys in her youth hockey, her dream was to be an Olympian.
And she made that dream come true.
And from silver medal to gold medal, it's almost like you can write a book on her story.
And it feels like her story has so much more to be untold.
So I was inspired by this.
I think the timing of it was really cool.
So fucking amazing to just see the gold medal.
I wanted to bite the thing.
That looked so badass.
And that experience of her being there with mom and dad and the family to watch it,
you can't make it up.
And they think about in life, what's your gold medal moment as it happened?
And if it hasn't happened, what will it be?
and those are things I think about when I get out of this interview.
Anything else you're thinking before we wrap?
Last thing I got it, I just love how she kept going back to how she just played for the love of the game.
Since there was no PWHL at the time, there was no like she just played because she loved it.
And I think that not just in hockey, but a lot of youth sports, parents have lost sight,
that that really should be the goal for your kids.
They're looking at it as an investment and they want to return on their investment.
And sometimes the investment is like you're just providing an experience for your kid.
And it's not always about my kid plays on this team.
who's ranked this or if he doesn't make the NHL it's a failure if he doesn't get college
paid for why'd I spend all this money you spent it I hope you're spending it because you're
trying to do you every other parent does and provide for your kid because he just fucking loves
the game and that's why he's doing it so if you lose sight of that the sports in general will
always come back to disappoint you there has to be a purity behind it perfectly said I think that
also really obviously so certain youth sports anything with these parents who get like overly
obsessive in their kids performance and looking at it as like an ROI
Don't do it.
Be there for the passion of the game.
Be there for the fun.
Be there for the competitive energy.
Be there for the foundation.
It creates for a lifetime.
I think that a lot of that honestly connects to work.
If you're only chasing the dollar, you will burn out.
It won't work.
It won't be there.
So I think it's a cool way to wrap it.
You'll lose the healthy relationship of why you're doing these things in the first place.
Yeah, it was a great interview.
I got nothing but credit and respect for all the women in the women's game right now,
how they're growing it.
I loved her a couple of lines.
We're not settling for the crumbs anymore.
we want the whole cake.
And just because we're asking for more,
it doesn't mean we're grateful for what we've gotten.
Fuck, yeah.
They're selling out NHL arenas.
Yeah, that's such a good line.
They're selling out NHL arenas all across the country.
So it's getting real.
Proud of the women's game and proud of Haley.
And thanks for coming on.
David, it is.
I want you to go play.
I want you to go coach for the Olympics.
I want you to go coach the NHL or the PWHL.
Come on.
Let's talk.
I appreciate what P.
I'm ready for you go to the next level.
I know.
But you know what?
my calling in life in hockey is to be there for kids and be there for families who need me because it's
really confusing, it's really stressful and is someone needs there to be able to guide these families and
give them knowledge and answers. And I would trust me, I would love to go and coach the Olympics,
but helping these teenage kids navigate their lives and they need someone, I love being that person
for them. Yeah. And I think, I think it's perfectly said. And I think what's cool about it is like,
you've been there. You've done that. You've been at that age where you've,
been looked at by NHL teams and D1 teams and the best junior teams in Canada and the state.
So it's like you've been in their shoes.
You know what it takes.
So I think that's pretty special.
And Haley clearly knows what it takes.
A gold Olympian silver medalist, almost decade in the pros.
And of course, born and raised in Buffalo, New York.
Let's go.
There you go.
Speaking of Buffalo, New York, this recap felt a little bit like I was in the host seat a little bit.
It felt like JTA, which we recorded in Buffalo.
That will be coming to you shortly.
We are putting the finishing touches on it.
Next week, next month, JTA is going to be released to the people.
We hope that you loved this episode.
We hope that you'll love that episode.
Jay, you want to ring us out here?
Give us five stars.
Hopefully this was another episode of Trading Secrets,
one you couldn't afford to miss.
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