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Browsing: Heritage
The NHL announced Saturday the teams will face off in the 2026 Tim Hortons NHL Heritage Classic at Winnipeg’s Princess Auto Stadium.
The event set for Oct. 25, 2026, marks the league’s eighth Heritage Classic and first since 2023.
Winnipeg will host its second outdoor showcase after falling to the Edmonton Oilers at the home of the CFL’s Blue Bombers in October 2016 before a crowd of 33,240. The Jets are 1-1-0 all-time in regular-season outdoor games. Winnipeg defeated the Calgary Flames in overtime at the 2019 Heritage Classic in Regina.
Montreal, which will skate in its fifth outdoor game and first in nine years, is 2-2-0 in four contests in the elements. Montreal defeated Edmonton in the 2003 Heritage Classic in the Alberta capital and fell to the Flames in Calgary in 2011.
The Canadiens played in the Winter Classic on New Year’s Day 2016, defeating the Boston Bruins in Foxborough, Mass. The Canadiens also topped the Senators in Ottawa at the NHL100 Classic in 2017.
“When Winnipeg hosted the Heritage Classic in 2016, we were blown away by the amazing fan response and how great the venue was,” Steve Mayer, the NHL’s president of content and events, said in a statement. “Given the success the Jets have had since we were last there, it’s fitting to bring another outdoor spectacle to Winnipeg.”
Earlier this week, news that the Winnipeg Jets would host the Montreal Canadiens at Princess Auto Stadium on October 25, 2026, leaked online after a post on the Jets†official website announced the event, only to be taken down. Clearly, the league wasnâ€t ready to announce the news, but it is indeed happening.
Itâ€s been quite a few years since the Canadiens played outdoors. The last time they did it was in the leagueâ€s NHL 100 Classic back in 2017 when they took on the Ottawa Senators at Lansdowne Park. In front of 33,959 fans, the Habs were shut out 3-0 by the Sens. The temperature at puck drop was minus eleven Celsius, and it got colder as the game went on. Montreal was outshot 38-28 and could only win 29% of the faceoffs. Carey Price, who was making his 10th consecutive start, played well, but he couldnâ€t score any goals.
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The Habs†performance was a stark contrast with the 2016 Winter Classic in Foxboro, where the visiting Canadiens beat the Boston Bruins 5-1. Brendan Gallagher was one of the stars of the game, putting up a goal and an assist in what was his return to action after missing 17 games because of two broken fingers, which needed surgery. Paul Byron (2), David Desharnais, and Max Pacioretty had scored the other goals, but it was the then 23-year-old who had sparked the Habs to life. Even more impressive was the fact that the Canadiens were without star goalie Price and that Mike Condon, a Holliston, Massachusetts native, was manning the net.
At the Canadiens†practice on Friday, the winger was asked about the upcoming Heritage Classic by RDS†Luc Gelinas and was surprised to hear about it:
Awesome, it will be nice and warm, he said with a big grin, before adding: Thatâ€s great, thatâ€s a lot of fun. I still remember those games, some of the most fun hockey games; it reminds you of your childhood experiences, so Iâ€m excited for these guys to experience it.
– Gallagher on the upcoming Heritage Classic
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The veteran also recalled that when the Canadiens played the first Heritage Classic in Edmonton in 2003, he had tickets to the game, but his dad decided he should go with his team to Fort McMurray to play their game rather than go watch. His team had won by 15 or 16 goals; Iâ€m not sure they needed us there. He laughed it off, adding that his decision might have been motivated by the extreme cold that day.
The game was held to commemorate the Edmonton Oilers‘ 25th anniversary in the NHL and the 20th anniversary of their first Stanley Cup win, in front of 57,167 fans at Commonwealth Stadium. In a polar-temperature game, the Habs won a 4-3 thriller in which Jose Theodore saved 34 of 37 shots and famously wore a toque over his mask.
Eight years later, the Sainte-Flanelle took on the Calgary Flames at McMahon Stadium in Alberta and were shut out 4-0 by Mikka Kiprusoff. Funnily enough, soon-to-be Hab Rene Bourque had scored two of the four goals while Alex Tanguay, a former Hab, also scored.
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The Canadiens have a 2-2-0 record in outdoor games and will be hoping to win a third match in Winnipeg next October. One has to wonder if the NHL will ever give the Habs a chance to play an outdoor home game, but for now, theyâ€ll have to make do with being the road warriors.
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Talk continues to build around Winnipegas the likely host for the NHLâ€s next Heritage Classic, and new rumors suggest the Winnipeg Jets may face the Montreal Canadiens if the event is officially approved. Nothing has been confirmed by the league, but speculation has intensified in recent days as the NHL considers bringing back its outdoor game series.
The rumors around the event began on the October 22 edition of Hockey Night in Canada. During the weekly headlines segment, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman told host Ron MacLean that the league was looking at reviving the Heritage Classic and that Winnipeghad emerged as a strong candidate. Friedman did not expand further but said, “looks like thereâ€s going to be one next year and the whispers from out west is that Winnipeg is going to be a serious contender to host it.â€
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Since then, Winnipeghas consistently appeared as the expected host city, though no official announcement has been made, and the opposing team remains unconfirmed. Recent unverified reports point to the Montreal Canadiens as the likely opponent for the Jets, but neither the NHL nor either club has commented on the speculation.
If selected, Princess Auto Field, the home stadium of the CFLâ€s WinnipegBlue Bombers, would be the venue. The stadium previously hosted the 2016 Heritage Classic when the Jetsmet the Edmonton Oilers. Winnipeg lost that game 3-0, with Edmonton led by a young Connor McDavid who recorded an assist.
The Jetslast appeared in a Heritage Classic in 2019 in Regina, where they defeated the Calgary Flames in overtime at Mosaic Stadium. That win evened Winnipegâ€s outdoor game record at one victory and one loss.
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Winnipegâ€s history of hosting large events and its strong fan base have kept the city in regular consideration for NHL outdoor games. The league typically confirms Heritage Classic details several months in advance, and for now the possibility of a Jets–Canadiens matchup remains only a rumor but a potential exciting matchup for a standalone event.

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September 30, 2025 | Diane Webb
National Sporting Heritage Day is on 30 September and in conjunction with this I attended a webinar run by Sporting Heritage on identifying and supporting collections at risk.
So, what collections are at risk? Virtually everything in some form, from individuals and local club level, to leagues and county, to national and even international level, whether in original hard copy form or information held digitally.
In our sport, there have been some catastrophic losses, with perhaps the most well-known being when the ETTA offices received two direct hits during the first blitz in World War II and everything was destroyed, all records, correspondence, furniture etc.
The history of about 15 years activity for table tennis, the carefully prepared address list of players and ticket purchasers all went, all the handbooks and innumerable records necessary for such a large organisation were under a huge pile of rubble.
When the then assistant secretary, Marjorie Carrington, saw it she sat down and wept and never really forgave Mr Hitler! Work began to build the collection up.
There have been other instances of loss, information held on computers which crashed and not backed up, with the loss of hundreds of photographs and other documentation. There is also loss through physical damage – mould, water, fire etc – or through theft, malicious destruction or neglect.
Often if someone who has held records moves house, a clear-out is effected and valuable material thrown out, and similarly when someone dies or just loses interest. The list is almost endless.
With digitally held records there are also issues in ensuring material is not lost. Websites change, servers change and information is not necessarily transferred to the new website or server. Digitised material is scattered to the ether.
With the loss of printed material, such as programmes or magazines, it is harder and often more time-consuming to find information searching through many website articles rather than having everything in one place. With the decline in local press, that source of information is also lost.
If you add to that, there is what could be called institutional memory which can put collections at risk. A change in personnel whether staff, board and committee members or volunteers results in the loss of personal knowledge. Changes may mean collections are not known about and their value may not be appreciated.
If all this sounds doom and gloom, what can be done?
The first step is to identify what you have and, as importantly, identify what is missing. Know who holds what and where and who has legal ownership. Positively manage your archives, have a plan and include succession planning. Make as many people aware of your heritage as possible, draw up an inventory, have a ‘transcribathon†or ‘scanathon†to digitise material.
Let people who make donations know their material is appreciated and valued and where possible displayed, create oral histories, share what you have, make new people aware of your heritage, have preserving your heritage as an agenda item at your next committee meeting and/or contact former members to see what they have. Ensure storage is suitable and safe.
As with most things in life there is likely to be a cost, whether paying for storage in the cloud or in a storage facility or purchasing an external hard drive. Perhaps the most important cost of all is peopleâ€s time.
It may seem a huge task but it is important to remember even if you can only do a small part in helping preserve your heritage everything you do will leave it in a better condition than when you started.
What have Table Tennis England been doing to preserve their heritage? Various projects have been undertaken or are ongoing and much of this can be found in the ‘Visit the document archive†section on the website.
Oral histories are also being recorded, records created, videos transferred to digital format, a Flickr page for many of our artefacts and a number of other areas of work.
If you would like to discuss anything in this article or would like to help preserve English table tennis heritage, then please contact me.
September 30, 2025 | Diane Webb
National Sporting Heritage Day is on 30 September and in conjunction with this I attended a webinar run by Sporting Heritage on identifying and supporting collections at risk.
So, what collections are at risk? Virtually everything in some form, from individuals and local club level, to leagues and county, to national and even international level, whether in original hard copy form or information held digitally.
In our sport, there have been some catastrophic losses, with perhaps the most well-known being when the ETTA offices received two direct hits during the first blitz in World War II and everything was destroyed, all records, correspondence, furniture etc.
The history of about 15 years activity for table tennis, the carefully prepared address list of players and ticket purchasers all went, all the handbooks and innumerable records necessary for such a large organisation were under a huge pile of rubble.
When the then assistant secretary, Marjorie Carrington, saw it she sat down and wept and never really forgave Mr Hitler! Work began to build the collection up.
There have been other instances of loss, information held on computers which crashed and not backed up, with the loss of hundreds of photographs and other documentation. There is also loss through physical damage – mould, water, fire etc – or through theft, malicious destruction or neglect.
Often if someone who has held records moves house, a clear-out is effected and valuable material thrown out, and similarly when someone dies or just loses interest. The list is almost endless.
With digitally held records there are also issues in ensuring material is not lost. Websites change, servers change and information is not necessarily transferred to the new website or server. Digitised material is scattered to the ether.
With the loss of printed material, such as programmes or magazines, it is harder and often more time-consuming to find information searching through many website articles rather than having everything in one place. With the decline in local press, that source of information is also lost.
If you add to that, there is what could be called institutional memory which can put collections at risk. A change in personnel whether staff, board and committee members or volunteers results in the loss of personal knowledge. Changes may mean collections are not known about and their value may not be appreciated.
If all this sounds doom and gloom, what can be done?
The first step is to identify what you have and, as importantly, identify what is missing. Know who holds what and where and who has legal ownership. Positively manage your archives, have a plan and include succession planning. Make as many people aware of your heritage as possible, draw up an inventory, have a ‘transcribathon†or ‘scanathon†to digitise material.
Let people who make donations know their material is appreciated and valued and where possible displayed, create oral histories, share what you have, make new people aware of your heritage, have preserving your heritage as an agenda item at your next committee meeting and/or contact former members to see what they have. Ensure storage is suitable and safe.
As with most things in life there is likely to be a cost, whether paying for storage in the cloud or in a storage facility or purchasing an external hard drive. Perhaps the most important cost of all is peopleâ€s time.
It may seem a huge task but it is important to remember even if you can only do a small part in helping preserve your heritage everything you do will leave it in a better condition than when you started.
What have Table Tennis England been doing to preserve their heritage? Various projects have been undertaken or are ongoing and much of this can be found in the ‘Visit the document archive†section on the website.
Oral histories are also being recorded, records created, videos transferred to digital format, a Flickr page for many of our artefacts and a number of other areas of work.
If you would like to discuss anything in this article or would like to help preserve English table tennis heritage, then please contact me.
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