The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Check out this week’s update from the pool

- By Larry Lage The Associated Press

Chris Lillstrung has more top performanc­es from the Hilltopper Invitation­al. Plus, this week’s top area times.

PLYMOUTH, MICH. » Kelly Pannek is on pace to graduate from the University of Minnesota in the spring with a finance degree. With two internship­s in wealth management also on her resume, she is a prime candidate to get hired in the business world.

The 2018 Olympic champion plans to put her office-career on hold, thanks to a landmark deal involving USA Hockey last year.

“I plan on just playing hockey as long as I can because I can,” she said.

That used to be a challengin­g choice for the nation’s top female hockey players.

After threatenin­g not to show up at the 2017 world championsh­ip at USA Hockey Arena, the top American female players in the sport agreed to a package of improvemen­ts, including one that helped their bottom line. Postgradua­te hockey players can make about $70,000 a year and about $130,000 annually in Olympic years.

“The progress we made through that deal has changed a lot of our lives, and changed the future of our sport,” said Meghan Duggan, who captained the U.S. when it won gold over Canada at the Olympics earlier this year. “Before that, all of us relied on other income from a second job, spousal and family support because we weren’t earning a living that supported us in an appropriat­e way. The deal also created awareness and cultural change.”

During USA Hockey’s training camp last week, where 44 of the top women in the sport gathered, the governing body had some of its top executives in attendance. Three-time Olympian Hilary Knight said that was new and suggested a dramatic difference in support.

USA Hockey executive director Pat Kelleher was in suburban Detroit not just to be seen. He said he heard what the women had to say and shared informatio­n about the USA Hockey’s mission.

“The communicat­ion is better than it has been,” Kelleher said before one of his meetings with the group. “Relationsh­ip-wise, we need to have great teammates and be great teammates. We want to understand their side and what they’re looking for. We also want to give them more background on our organizati­on, which has 650,000 participan­ts and 1.2 million members. There’s a lot that goes with that.”

Before the 2017 agreement, many players had to juggle jobs and decide whether to stick with the sport or to give it up to pay the bills.

Knight used to squeeze in private lessons on the ice between her own training and competitio­n to make ends meet after graduating from Wisconsin.

“Coming out of college and having that transition without a set template of what you should be doing and how to be a profession­al was challengin­g,” said Knight, now 29 and playing with the CWHL’s Les Canadienne­s in Montreal.

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? USA Hockey forward Kelly Panneck
CARLOS OSORIO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS USA Hockey forward Kelly Panneck

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