There are times when it feels like Arizona Coyotes goalie Connor Ingram materialized out of nowhere, breaking through at 26 years old to become one of the NHL’s top netminders this season.
“You get the guys who are just pure hype machines that go straight to the NHL. And then there’s the guys like us, who grind away for several years before we get an opportunity. I think there’s something to be said for them,” Ingram told ESPN. “Some guys get their opportunities early. Some guys take a couple tries before they figure it out.”
It’s taken seven professional seasons for Ingram to figure it out on the ice, through multiple AHL and ECHL stops, stints with the Nashville Predators and the Coyotes, and nine games in Sweden he’d actually rather forget about.
“Our team over there got accused of throwing games,” said Ingram. “It’s actually a crazy story.”
Ingram has also had to figure things out off the ice, where an undiagnosed obsessive-compulsive disorder and lingering depression nearly had him retire from hockey in 2021 — before he sought help.
“I tried to white knuckle it through that kind of stuff. And you can’t,” he said.
Ingram started the season with an 11-5-0 record and a .920 save percentage through 17 games. ESPN analyst and former NHL goalie Kevin Weekes called Ingram “the most underrated goalie” in the NHL this season, and a “top-tier candidate for the Vezina Trophy.” Arizona GM Bill Armstrong called him one of the most important reasons why the Coyotes were a surprising playoff contender two months into the season.
Armstrong claimed Ingram on waivers in Oct. 2022. It was out of necessity, given how thin the team was at the position. But the team’s scouts had also identified Ingram as having all the attributes they were looking for in a goaltender.
The Coyotes felt Ingram played well last season, with a .907 save percentage in 27 games and analytics showed he was above replacement level. Armstrong said Ingram returned this season “in great shape, mentally and physically,” having slimmed down a bit in the offseason.
Armstrong has always seen a similarity between hockey goalies and baseball pitchers.
“As they mature, it comes together at a certain age. Then everybody says, ‘Oh my God, who knew the 26-year-old goaltender could stop the puck?'” he said. “The right opportunity appears and they blow it out of the water.”
Armstrong has a theory that goalies, like pitchers, can get stronger mentally as they improve physically. “They sometimes have to go through all these different ups and downs in their life to learn a little bit at each time,” he said.
Like that situation in Sweden.
“The hockey itself was great,” he said. “But the end of it wasn’t fantastic.”
THE NHL WAS DARK in the fall of 2020, with the COVID-19 pandemic forcing a delay in the start of the 2020-21 season. Ingram was coaching a youth hockey team in Saskatoon, where he grew up.
After being drafted 88th overall in 2016 by the Tampa Bay Lightning, he had been traded to the Predators in 2019. The Predators informed him that they had found a place for Ingram to play ahead of the NHL season. Goalie Kevin Poulin had been injured while playing for Björklöven, a Swedish pro team. They were looking for a quick fix in goal. Ingram took the offer and traveled overseas.
It was December 2020. Björklöven was second in the league standings for Swedish Allsvenskan, a second-tier league. They were playing a lesser opponent in Mora and built a 3-0 lead during the game.
But something odd was happening in the betting markets during the game.
While Björklöven opened on one sportsbook as a -130 favorite, they were only a -150 favorite having built that considerable lead. Normally, the money line remaining that low would indicate that significant money was being placed on the underdog to rally in the game. But logic dictated they would not.
So, it was curious. Very curious. It got to the point where some sportsbooks were taking the game off their boards because of this seeming inexplicable wagering pattern, given the circumstances of the game.
Mora would, in fact, rally. They scored eight straight goals to win 8-4. Six of the goals were scored on the power play. Ingram gave up five goals on 14 shots in the game before being pulled. As Sportsnet noted at the time, it was Ingram’s final start for the team before his loan agreement to the club expired.
In the aftermath of the loss and the suspicious wagering activity, there were accusations made about Björklöven throwing the game. The team’s CEO, Anders Blomberg, was quick to welcome an investigation into the allegations from the league and the betting company.
“If it turns out to be true, it is of course completely unacceptable and something that must never occur in our association,” he said.
Two days after the allegations were made against Björklöven, the Swedish Ice Hockey Association announced the team and its players had been cleared of any wrongdoing. It found no evidence of match-fixing and reported that the incident was “based on human error” at one of the betting companies.
Unfortunately for Ingram, his reputation had already been seriously damaged. An erroneous report by a Swedish radio station claimed that Ingram had been “fired” after the game by Björklöven for throwing the game.
“This news outlet had our GM’s number. It sent him a text asking if I was involved in [match-fixing], since I was the last guy there on an NHL deal,” Ingram said. “Our GM texted them back and was like, ‘Yep, he already admitted to it. It was totally him. We’ve caught him. He’s going back home or whatever.'”
Except it turned out this was not an SMS conversation between the station and Björklöven general manager Per Kenttä. The unknown person on the other end of the messages answered questions “in a credible way,” as the station later noted in a correction. But it was a wrong number.
“They texted this number thinking it was our GM and whoever this number was just f—ing buried me for no reason. They were just like, ‘Oh, I’m gonna have fun with this’ and it almost ended my career. All this stuff comes out about how I’m throwing games. It got picked up back in North America,” Ingram said.
The investigation had cleared the team, and hence had cleared Ingram. Blomberg told Sports Expressen that the radio station report was made on “completely incorrect grounds and on sloppy journalistic work.”
Ingram said the news outlet reached out to him after realizing its mistake.
“They sent me like an email just being like, ‘We’re so sorry we used your name. We had false information. Like, please don’t sue us,'” he summarized.
When Ingram received that email, he was already back in the U.S. with the Predators. He considered continuing the fight to clear his name but was advised by the team not to bring even more attention to the accusations. No action was taken.
“I don’t even know if I’m allowed back in Sweden. I might be on an Interpol list somewhere,” he said. “So that was a tough couple days in my life.”
They’d just get tougher for Ingram.
INGRAM HAD RETURNED TO Nashville after that Sweden debacle, around Christmas time. He wasn’t feeling right. He hadn’t been for a while.
The NHL opened its 2020-21 season in January, a 56-game campaign shortened by the COVID-19 pandemic. Each team was allowed to expand its roster to include a taxi squad in anticipation of COVID-related absences. Ingram was on the Predators’ taxi squad during an early season road trip to Dallas. That’s where he had a heart-to-heart with goaltending coach Ben Vanderklok.
“I just said I didn’t want to do it anymore. That I was ready to go home,” Ingram said.
The two talked more, in depth, about everything that Ingram had been thinking and feeling about his life.
Vanderklok suggested Ingram enter the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance program for help. Ingram credits that as a turning point in his life and career.
“He sent me there instead of letting me retire, and I wouldn’t be here without him,” the goalie said.
He arrived at the program ready to work on what he perceived to be a problem with alcohol.
“I got there and the lady was like, ‘You don’t have a problem with this. You don’t drink every day. You have an OCD problem,'” he said. “And I was like, ‘Whoa, wait, what does that mean?'”
Ingram learned that he had been living with undiagnosed obsessive-compulsive disorder. He then learned how to define those aspects of his life that were spiraling. He learned about completion tendencies and his “all or nothing” feelings. He came to understand his fear of contamination. He learned where his idiosyncrasies as a goalie ended and his OCD began.
“They obviously overlapped for me. I’m a big routine guy and there’s a line between routine and superstition, where if things don’t go right, then it can cause problems,” Ingram said. “Having a routine is a good thing. Having superstitions of what time you go to bed or what numbers are bad are obviously a different story. At the time, I had no idea of the difference and now like I kind of decipher and decide what’s real or not.”
Ingram said he learned that along with his OCD, he was dealing with depression, much of it linked to the 2018 bus accident involving the Humboldt Broncos junior hockey team.
Sixteen people were killed and 13 more were injured when a semi-truck that failed to yield at a flashing stop sign struck a coach bus carrying the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League team. Ingram, a native of Saskatchewan, briefly played in the SJHL during the 2013-14 season.
“I was close with a lot of those Humboldt Broncos guys. I lost some really good friends,” he said. “Those kids are my age. A lot of guys I played with.”
While people around the hockey world were leaving sticks outside their front doors in honor the Broncos, Ingram left his goalie mask outside of his as tribute. Logan Schatz, the captain of the team, was a friend.
The only loss Ingram had experienced at that point in his life was losing his grandparents when he was younger. He had never even conceived of a loss like the Humboldt tragedy, or how he’d react to it.
“That was something that I just kind of buried and went about my life,” Ingram said. “It wasn’t great. I was trying to [deal with] it on my own, and obviously I couldn’t.”
Armstrong said the Coyotes were aware of Ingram’s personal history when they claimed him on waivers.
“But we were also aware of the new Connor,” Armstrong said. “We were impressed by who he was on the day that we took him. He’s really at a good place in his life.”
ARMSTRONG SAID INGRAM’S greatest attribute is his hockey IQ, which can be a deciding factor in a goalie’s NHL success. It’s something Hockey Hall of Famer Martin Brodeur helped Armstrong understand when they were both executives with the St. Louis Blues, working on their draft board.
“I went to watch this particular goaltender in the draft, and he said that goalie could never be a starter. I asked him why, and Marty said that he used too much energy to make saves,” Armstrong recalled. “That there was no way he could play the next night or in back-to-back games because he uses too much energy.”
“Connor doesn’t use a lot of energy because his reads are so accurate,” he continued. “When he’s on, the game is very simple for him, and he makes all the saves look extremely easy because of his hockey IQ and tracking the play. It’s off the charts.”
His strong play early on has helped steady the Coyotes, enabling them to contend in the West.
The Coyotes’ season started off unusually, with their preseason trip to Australia for two exhibition games to playing 11 of their first 17 regular-season games on the road. They were a team with a ton of new faces, from veteran offseason acquisitions like defenseman Matt Dumba and forward Jason Zucker to rookie sensation Logan Cooley, who left college to join the Coyotes this season.
Off the ice was the usual uncertainty about the franchise: Voters rejected an arena plan for Tempe, the team vowed to bring an alternative plan to the NHL by midseason, and the Coyotes are playing their second straight season in Mullett Arena on the campus of Arizona State University.
“I think the team was really kind of fragile. Kind of searching for how good they were,” Armstrong said.
Through 27 games, they’ve learned they’re pretty good. The Coyotes, who have made the playoff once in the last 11 seasons, entered Tuesday with a 13-12-2 record (.519 points percentage) that had them in the first wild-card spot in the West, six points behind the Winnipeg Jets for third place in the Central Division.
“It’s been good. I mean, the vibe is always better when you’re winning,” Ingram said. “Just being around the guys when things are going well has been a lot of fun.”
It’s taken a while for the Coyotes to contend again. It’s taken a while for Ingram to make his mark as an NHL goalie.
“You can’t make a seed grow,” said Armstrong. “It kind of does on its own, when it wants to.”
ORLANDO, Fla. — Scott Frost walks into the UCF football building and into his office, the one he used the last time he had this job, eight years ago. The shades are drawn, just like they used to be. There are drawings from his three kids tacked to the walls. There are still trophies sitting on a shelf.
He still parks in the same spot before he walks into that same building and sits at the same desk. The only thing that has changed is that the desk is positioned in a different part of the room.
But the man doing all the same things at the University of Central Florida is a different Scott Frost than the one who left following that undefeated 2017 season to take the head coach job at Nebraska.
UCF might look the same, but the school is different now, too. The Knights are now in a Power 4 conference, and there is now a 12-team College Football Playoff that affords them the opportunity to play for national championships — as opposed to self-declaring them. Just outside his office, construction is underway to upgrade the football stadium. The same, but different.
“I know I’m a wiser person and smarter football coach,” Frost said during a sit-down interview with ESPN. “When you’re young, you think you have it all figured out. I don’t think you really get better as a person unless you go through really good things, and really bad things. I just know I’m where I’m supposed to be.”
Out on the practice field, Frost feels the most at home — he feels comfort in going back to the place that has defined nearly every day of his life. As a young boy, he learned the game from his mom and dad, both football coaches, then thrived as a college and NFL player before going into coaching.
He coaches up his players with a straightforwardness that quarterbacks coach McKenzie Milton remembers fondly from their previous time together at UCF. Milton started at quarterback on the 2017 undefeated team, and the two remained close after Frost left.
“I see the same version of him from when I was here as a player,” Milton said. “Even though the dynamic in college football has changed dramatically with the portal and NIL, I think Coach Frost is one of the few coaches that can still bring a group of guys together and turn them into a team, just with who he is and what he’s done and what he’s been through in his life. He knows what it looks like to succeed, both as a coach and a player.”
Since his return, Frost has had to adjust to those changes to college football, but he said, “I love coming into work every day. We’ve got the right kids who love football. We’re working them hard. They want to be pushed. They want to be challenged. We get to practice with palm trees and sunshine and, we’re playing big-time football. But it’s also just not the constant stress meat grinder of some other places.”
Meat grinder of some other places.
Might he mean a place such as Nebraska?
“You can think what you want,” Frost said. “One thing I told myself — I’m never going to talk about that. It just doesn’t feel good to talk about. I’ll get asked 100 questions. This is about UCF. I just don’t have anything to say.”
Frost says he has no regrets about leaving UCF, even though he didn’t get the results he had hoped for at his alma mater. When Nebraska decided to part ways with coach Mike Riley in 2017, Frost seemed the best, most obvious candidate to replace him. He had been the starting quarterback on the 1997 team, the last Nebraska team to win a national title.
He now had the coaching résumé to match. Frost had done the unthinkable at UCF — taking a program that was winless the season before he arrived, to undefeated and the talk of the college football world just two years later.
But he could not ignore the pull of Nebraska and the opportunities that came along with power conference football.
“I was so happy here,” Frost said. “We went undefeated and didn’t get a chance to win a championship, at least on the field. You are always striving to reach higher goals. I had always told myself I wasn’t going to leave here unless there was a place that you can legitimately go and win a national championship. It was a tough decision because I didn’t want to leave regardless of which place it was.”
Indeed, Frost maintains he was always happy at UCF. But he also knew returning to Nebraska would make others happy, too.
“I think I kind of knew that wasn’t best for me,” he said. “It was what some other people wanted me to do to some degree.”
In four-plus seasons with the Cornhuskers, Frost went 16-31 — including 5-22 in one-score games. He was fired three games into the 2022 season after a home loss to Georgia Southern.
After Frost was fired, he moved to Scottsdale, Arizona, where his wife has family. He reflected on what happened during his tenure with the Cornhuskers but also about what he wanted to do with the rest of his career. He tried to stay connected to the game, coaching in the U.S. Army Bowl, a high school all-star game in Frisco, Texas, in December 2022. Milton coached alongside him, and distinctly remembers a conversation they had.
“He said, ‘It’s my goal to get back to UCF one day,'” Milton said. “At that time, I was like, ‘I pray to God that happens.'”
If that was the ultimate goal, Frost needed to figure out how to position himself to get back there. While he contemplated his future, he coached his son’s flag football team to a championship. Frost found the 5- and 6-year-olds he coached “listen better than 19-year-olds sometimes.”
Ultimately, he decided on a career reboot in the NFL. Frost had visited the Rams during their offseason program, and when a job came open in summer 2024, Rams coach Sean McVay immediately reached out.
Frost was hired as a senior analyst, primarily helping with special teams but also working with offense and defense.
“It was more just getting another great leader in the building, someone who has been a head coach, that has wisdom and a wealth of experience to be able to learn from,” McVay told ESPN. “His ability to be able to communicate to our players from a great coaching perspective, but also have the empathy and the understanding from when he played — all of those things were really valuable.”
McVay said he and Frost had long discussions about handling the challenges that come with falling short as a head coach.
“There’s strength in the vulnerability,” McVay said. “I felt that from him. There’s a real power in the perspective that you have from those different experiences. If you can really look at some of the things that maybe didn’t go down the way you wanted to within the framework of your role and responsibility, real growth can occur. I saw that in him.”
Frost says his time with the Rams rejuvenated him.
“It brought me back,” Frost said. “Sometimes when you’re a head coach or maybe even a coordinator, you forget how fun it is to be around the game when it’s not all on you all the time. What I did was a very small part, and we certainly weren’t going to win or lose based on every move that I made, and I didn’t have to wear the losses and struggle for the victories like you do when you’re a head coach. I’m so grateful to those guys.”
UCF athletics director Terry Mohajir got a call from then-head coach Gus Malzahn last November. Malzahn, on the verge of finishing his fourth season at UCF, was contemplating becoming offensive coordinator at Florida State. Given all the responsibilities on his desk as head coach — from NIL to the transfer portal to roster management — he found the idea of going back to playcalling appealing. Mohajir started preparing a list of candidates and was told Thanksgiving night that Malzahn had planned to step down.
Though Frost previously worked at UCF under athletics director Danny White, he and Mohajir had a preexisting relationship. Mohajir said he reached out to Frost after he was fired at Nebraska to gauge his interest in returning to UCF as offensive coordinator under Malzahn. But Frost was not ready.
This time around, Mohajir learned quickly that Frost had interest in returning as head coach. Mohajir called McVay and Rams general manager Les Snead. They told him Frost did anything that was asked of him, including making copies around the office.
“They said, ‘You would never know he was the head coach at a major college program.” Mohajir also called former Nebraska athletic director Trev Alberts to get a better understanding about what happened with the Cornhuskers.
“Fits are a huge piece, and not everybody fits,” Mohajir said.
After eight conversations, Mohajir decided he wanted to meet Frost in person. They met at an airport hotel in Dallas.
“He was motivated,” Mohajir said. “We went from coast to coast, talked to coordinators, head coaches, pro guys, all kinds of different folks. And at the end of the day, I really believe that Scott wanted the job the most.”
The first day back in Orlando, Dec. 8, was a blur. Frost woke up at 3:45 a.m. in California to be able to make it to Florida in time for his introductory news conference with his family.
When they pulled into the campus, his first time back since he left in 2017, Frost said he was in a fog. It took another 24 hours for him and his wife, Ashley, to take a deep exhale.
“Rather than bouncing around chasing NFL jobs, we thought maybe we would be able to plant some roots here and have our kids be in a stable place for a while at a place that I really enjoyed coaching and that I think it has a chance to evolve into a place that could win a lot of football games,” Frost said. “All that together was just enough to get me to come back.”
The natural question now is whether Frost can do what he did during his first tenure.
That 2017 season stands as the only winning season of his head coaching career, but it carries so much weight with UCF fans because of its significance as both the best season in school history, and one that changed both its own future and college football.
After UCF finished 13-0, White self-declared the Knights national champions. Locked out of the four-team playoff after finishing No. 12 in the final CFP standings, White started lobbying for more attention to be paid to schools outside the power conferences.
That season also positioned UCF to pounce during the next wave of realignment. Sure enough, in 2023, the Knights began play in a Power 4 conference for the first time as Big 12 members. This past season, the CFP expanded to 12 teams. Unlike 2017, UCF now has a defined path to play for a national title and no longer has to go undefeated and then pray for a shot. Win the Big 12 championship, no matter the record, and UCF is in the playoff.
But Frost cautions those who expect the clock to turn back to 2017.
“I don’t think there’s many people out there that silly,” Frost said. “People joke about that with me, that they’re going to expect you go into undefeated in the first year. I think the fans are a little more realistic than that.”
The game, of course, is different. Had the transfer portal and NIL existed when Frost was at UCF during his first tenure, he might not have been able to keep the 2017 team together. The 2018 team, which went undefeated under Josh Heupel before losing to LSU in the Fiesta Bowl, might not have stayed together, either.
This upcoming season, UCF will receive a full share of television revenue from the Big 12, after receiving a half share (estimated $18 million) in each of his first two seasons. While that is more than what it received in the AAC, it is less than what other Big 12 schools received, making it harder to compete immediately. It also struggled with NIL funding. As a result, in its first two years in the conference, UCF went 5-13 in Big 12 play and 10-15 overall.
Assuming the House v. NCAA settlement goes into effect this summer, Mohajir says UCF is aiming to spend the full $20.5 million, including fully funding football.
“It’s like we moved to the fancy neighborhood, and we got a job that’s going to pay us money over time, and we’re going to do well over time, but we’re stretching a little to be there right now, and that requires a lot of effort from a lot of people and a lot of commitment from a lot of people,” Frost said. “So far, the help that we’ve gotten has been impressive.”
Mohajir points out that UCF has had five coaching changes over the past 10 years, dating back to the final season under George O’Leary in 2015, when the Knights went 0-12. Frost says he wants to be in for the long term, and Mohajir hopes consistency at head coach will be an added benefit. Mohajir believes UCF is getting the best of Frost in this moment and scoffs at any questions about whether rehiring him will work again.
“Based on what I’m seeing right now, it will absolutely work,” Mohajir said. “But I don’t really look at it as ‘working again.’ It’s not ‘again.’ It’s, ‘Will it work?’ Because it’s a different era.”
To that end, Frost says success is not recreating 2017 and going undefeated. Rather, Frost said, “If our group now can help us become competitive in the Big 12, and then, from time to time, compete for championships and make us more relevant nationally, I think we’ll have done our job to help catapult UCF again.”
You could say he is looking for the same result. He’s just taking a different route there.
Houston transfer safety A.J. Haulcy committed to LSU on Sunday, his agency, A&P Sports, told ESPN.
Haulcy, the top player still available and No. 1 safety in ESPN’s spring transfer portal rankings, committed to the Tigers after taking an official visit Sunday. Miami, Ole Miss and SMU were also contenders for his pledge.
The 6-foot, 215-pound senior defensive back has started 32 games over his three college seasons and earned first-team All-Big 12 honors in 2024 after producing 74 tackles, 8 pass breakups and 5 interceptions, which tied for most in the conference.
The Tigers also landed USF transfer Bernard Gooden, one of the most coveted defensive tackles in the spring transfer window.
Haulcy began his career at New Mexico in 2022, earning a starting role as a true freshman and recording 87 tackles, including a career-high 24 against Fresno State, and two interceptions. The Houston native entered the transfer portal at the end of the season and came home to play for the Cougars.
As a sophomore in 2023, Haulcy recorded a team-high 98 tackles and received votes for Big 12 Defensive Newcomer of the Year from the league’s coaches.
Haulcy chose to re-enter the portal April 21 after Houston’s spring game, as did starting cornerback Jeremiah Wilson, who’ll continue his career at Florida State. Wilson and Haulcy were the Nos. 11 and 12 players, respectively, in ESPN’s spring transfer rankings.
BYU picked up a pair of key transfer portal additions Saturday, as brothers Bear and Tiger Bachmeier told ESPN that they have committed to play for the Cougars next season.
The brothers are transferring from Stanford and project to be key players of the immediate and long-term plans for the BYU program.
Bear, a quarterback, committed Saturday morning at the end of his visit, he told ESPN. He is a class of 2025 recruit who committed to Stanford out of high school and enrolled there this spring.
Both Bachmeiers elected to transfer in the wake of Stanford’s dismissal of head coach Troy Taylor in March. After visiting BYU coach Kalani Sitake’s program in recent days, the brothers committed.
For Bear, he is expected to be one of the backups for successful incumbent quarterback Jake Retzlaff in 2025 and compete for the starting job at BYU in 2026.
Bear was attracted to BYU’s open offensive scheme and a rich history of quarterbacks that includes a strong recent run under offensive coordinator Aaron Roderick. He also referenced BYU’s historical success, which stretches from Jim McMahon to Ty Detmer to Steve Young.
“The ability to come in and win games and [Coach] Roderick’s scheme and the pedigree of quarterbacks they have produced in history and recently is enticing,” Bear told ESPN.
Tiger told ESPN he committed to BYU later Saturday. He’ll arrive at BYU having graduated from Stanford in two-and-a-half years with a degree in computer science. He’ll enroll in a graduate program at BYU, he said.
Tiger will be expected to be an immediate contributor at wide receiver. He caught 46 balls over two seasons at Stanford for 476 yards and two touchdowns. He has two years of eligibility remaining.
Bear and Tiger are the second and third brothers to play major college football in their family. Their older brother, Hank Bachmeier, played quarterback at Boise State, Louisiana Tech and Wake Forest, where his college career concluded last year.
There is one more Bachmeier brother remaining: Buck Bachmeier will be a freshman in high school in the fall.