The cool Utah Mammoth logo has a neat hidden element in it
The cool Utah Mammoth logo has a neat hidden element in it
The Mammoth are no longer extinct.
Well, in the NHL, at least.
The Utah Hockey Club has announced its rebranding: despite having a cool name and other possible cool monikers, they will henceforth be known as the Utah Mammoth (which we knew thanks to a leak from their YouTube channel).
Solid. Yeti would have been better, but thanks to a copyright dispute, that was out.
So now we have a cool new Utah Mammoth logo, which has a neat little hidden element: some mountains on the head. I like it! Here's a look at the new logo and their uniforms (they're keeping the "UTAH" branding for road games, which isn't as good):
To view this content, you'll need to update your privacy settings. Please click here
and view the "Content and social media partners" setting to do so.
A new Ice Age dawns. Introducing Utah Mammoth. #TusksUp pic.twitter.com/B2yuoflDRt
— Utah Mammoth (@utahhockeyclub) May 7, 2025
To view this content, you'll need to update your privacy settings. Please click here
and view the "Content and social media partners" setting to do so.
Meet the Utah Mammoth, permanent name and identity of #NHL's newest franchise - formerly #UtahHC.
Inside the fan-driven branding process which spanned 850,000 votes, came together in 13 months and includes a few juicy easter eggs. #TusksUp
Story: https://t.co/TRrHaez2dJ pic.twitter.com/B5AGwx72DQ
— Frank Seravalli (@frank_seravalli) May 7, 2025
To view this content, you'll need to update your privacy settings. Please click here
and view the "Content and social media partners" setting to do so.
Utah Hockey Club is now officially the Utah Mammoth!
They'll wear the (very cool) logo at home and UTAH on the road. Gear goes on sale today at team store and jerseys will be available later this summer. Their NHL draft picks will wear them in June.#TusksUp @utahhockeyclub pic.twitter.com/CegnWAjl1s
— Greg Wyshynski (@wyshynski) May 7, 2025
Awesome.
This article originally appeared on For The Win: Utah Mammoth logo has hidden element in it

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
Florida Panthers down Edmonton Oilers in double overtime to even up Stanley Cup Final
Another game, another overtime needed to proclaim a winner. This time around it was the Florida Panthers defeating the Edmonton Oilers 5-4 in double overtime to win Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final and even the series at 1-1 on Friday at the Rogers Place. Just over eight minutes into the second extra period, Panthers center Brad Marchand scored on a breakaway, beating Oilers goalie Stuart Skinner to help Florida escape with the victory. However, it was an unlikely hero that got Edmonton through to overtime to begin with. The 40-year-old Corey Perry scored to knot things up with 17.8 seconds left in the third period, the latest tying goal in Cup Final history. The previous record was held by Tod Sloan in Game 5 of the 1951 Final. For the first time since 2014 and the sixth time in NHL history, the series is the first to feature overtime in each of its first two games. The 37-year-old Marchand was asked about his mother after the game, who was in attendance at the game. Despite joking that his mother was the type of hockey mom that you 'need to put a muzzle on,' he also added that he couldn't have enjoyed the career he's had without her. 'She gets pretty amped up at the games,' Marchand told reporters. 'They've always been so supportive. Like all of our parents, I don't think there's a player in this league that can say that their parents are not the main reason why they are here. The sacrifices they all make. And when you go on a journey as a team and you get to the finals, you're going on a run, it's not just for you, it's for everybody that helped you get here and all your loved ones that are enjoying the moments whether they are here or not. 'It's special to have them in the building but hopefully we have a lot of great memories in the future as well.' With the Oilers coming off a Game 1 overtime win and the fans still feeling bliss, Friday's game got off to a blistering start. Panthers forward Sam Bennett got the scoring started two minutes into the game, netting his postseason-leading 13th goal and NHL record 12th on the road to quiet the raucous Oilers fan inside and outside the arena. But Edmonton's Evander Kane and Evan Bouchard responded with two goals to propel the Oilers to the lead about halfway through the opening period. A minute later, Florida defenseman Seth Jones beat Skinner and found open net to tie things up, before Oilers star Leon Draisaitl scored on the power play to give Edmonton a 3-2 lead at the end of a frenetic first period. Second period was all Panthers, with Dmitry Kulikov tying the game yet again and Marchand snatching the lead after a shorthanded goal. It remained 4-3 until Perry's goal late in the final period in regulation. Florida goalie Sergei Bobrovsky was sharp as he always is, stopping 42 of the 46 shots he faced. The series now shifts to Sunrise, Florida on Monday for Game 3.


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Panthers embrace identity as NHL's ultimate road warriors: ‘Us against the world'
EDMONTON — A couple of years ago at an NHL GMs meeting, Ken Holland brought up a rather interesting idea. He wondered about giving the higher seed the option to open a playoff series on the road. In that scenario, the higher seed would play on the road in Games 1-2 and 6, and be at home in Games 3-4-5 and 7. Advertisement The Florida Panthers would probably support it if the league ever put it up for a vote. They love opening series on the road, and that would guarantee it for them either way, as a top seed or lower seed. How could they not embrace it? Their thrilling 5-4 win in double overtime Friday night at Rogers Place improved their playoff road record to 24-11 since the start of the 2023 playoffs. I mean, seriously. They have been the ultimate playoff road warriors, going 8-4 in '23, 7-4 in '24 and now 9-3 so far in the '25 playoffs, one shy of the all-time NHL record for road wins in a playoff year, handing the Oilers only their second home loss of the playoffs. It's what the Panthers do. 'Our game travels,'' Panthers blueliner Seth Jones said after playing a team-high 34:35 Friday night. 'We don't change our game based off where we're playing. Obviously it's great to play at home in front of our fans and feel that energy and feel that momentum at times. We play the same way in front of them (as on the road). 'We want to play a simple game, (a) north-south game. And just try to make their life difficult.'' They went 3-0 in Tampa in the opening round, 2-2 in Toronto in the second round, including twin 6-1 routs at Scotiabank Arena in Games 5 and 7, and of course went 3-0 in Carolina in the Eastern Conference final. So if you think for a moment that not having home-ice advantage in the Stanley Cup final against the Oilers concerned the defending champs one bit, get real. And if you think they were rattled after coughing up a 3-1 lead in Game 1 and losing, think again. These guys arrived at the rink on Friday fully convinced and confident they would tie the series 1-1. They did, but it sure wasn't without drama. Corey Perry scored with 17.8 seconds left in the third period, forcing overtime, and Rogers Place erupted. It was the kind of stunning moment that could deflate and derail many teams on this stage. Advertisement Not the Panthers. They re-grouped. They found a way in overtime. 'To get this point, you have to be resilient, and be able to bounce back, and both these teams do that,'' double-OT hero Marchand said postgame. And again, they found a way on the road. 'We've been great on the road all playoffs long,'' Conn Smythe Trophy candidate Sam Bennett said postgame. 'We're a confident group on the road. We enjoy being on the road, we enjoy being together, you get to spend more time together, dinners together, in the lounge together all night. And it really just brings our group together. 'And I think that's part of the reason we're having so much success on the road.'' Consider other road warrior facts: • The Panthers are the first team in NHL history to eclipse 50 goals in a single playoff season. • Bennett scored his 12th road goal of these playoffs Friday night, breaking the Stanley Cup playoff record for most road goals in one playoff year, previously held by Mark Scheifele in 2018. • The Panthers have a league-best 41 percent success rate on the road for their power play, 14 for 34 after Friday night with the man advantage, opening the scoring in Game 2 with a power-play goal from Bennett. They love the road. 'We have no choice,'' said Panthers star winger Matthew Tkachuk, pointing to the fact they've started every series on the road in these playoffs as the lower seed. 'We knew we were going to be on the road for the rest of it. We forced ourselves (into) it. … We feel comfortable on the road. It's a simple game. It's a hard game. It's an adversity-type of game, an adversity-type of atmosphere. We've said it a bunch. It's that us against the world mindset, but you really feel it especially being down in a series. Your back's not necessarily against the wall, but you treat it as a big-time must-win in a hostile environment, and I feel like that's when we're at our best. So, hopefully we can use that to our advantage.' Advertisement Of course, Holland's idea wouldn't have helped the Panthers this year, because as Tkachuk pointed out, they've opened all four playoff series on the road already as underdogs. But perhaps it's Florida's opponents during this three-year run that might have taken the option as per Holland's format tweak just to take away Florida's ability to steal early series momentum as they now have against Tampa Bay, Carolina and perhaps against Edmonton after getting the split and heading home for Games 3-4 of the Cup final. What is it about the makeup of the Panthers that makes them so comfortable on the road? I asked Panthers head coach Paul Maurice that question earlier in these playoffs. 'We are not a team that is a heavy match team,'' he said. 'It has a lot to do with it. We don't have to come out of our rhythm of the game when we go on the road. I don't pull lines off the ice. We have a general thing we want with our forward matchup and a more specific D match. That would be true of most teams, I think. 'There is not a big change for us in what we do,'' he continued. 'We haven't, in the past, relied on feeling good to win. We don't have to snap it around. We will talk about our execution twice a year. We don't need it to be pretty or beautiful on the road. Our style suits that kind of game.'' They're a physical, abrasive team that is scared of no one. That game travels well on the road. That's the on-ice part. But as Bennett said earlier, the off-ice part explains just as much, too. The Panthers are as tight-knit as any team in the league. That's actually one of the most difficult challenges of modern-day NHL teams: organically seeing players wanting to hang out as a group. These aren't the old days where team bonding means going on a bender on an off-night. But every story I hear is how the Panthers love hanging out together, and it happens more naturally on the road. That's no small thing. There's a real brotherhood on the defending champs. And I think it also helps explain their road prowess over the last three years. They'll probably need that again to win another Cup. This series is going long. No one's running the table here. If this goes the max, Florida will need to find their ultimate road game come June 20.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Panthers outlast Oilers in second overtime, tie Stanley Cup Final 1-1
The Florida Panthers will host the Edmonton Oilers in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final on Monday in Sunrise, Fla. File Photo by Archie Carpenter/UPI June 6 (UPI) -- Brad Marchand carved ice on a breakaway and slid the puck through goalie Stuart Skinner's legs in double overtime Friday to beat the Edmonton Oilers 5-4, prevent a historic collapse and tie the Stanley Cup Final at 1-1. "To be honest, I blacked out," Marchand said on the TNT broadcast, when asked about his Game 2 winner. "I don't even know where it went. It was obviously a fortuitous bounce. We'll take it." Advertisement Marchand, who scored twice, won the game 8:09 into the second bonus period in Edmonton. The Panthers, who led 3-1 on Wednesday in Game 1 before losing in overtime, nearly collapsed again when they surrendered the latest regulation goal in the history of the Stanley Cup Final on Friday, but leaned on their depth for late scoring opportunities. "I think it helps a ton with the amount of experience this team has," Marchand said. "A lot of guys have been through big moments. They feel comfortable in them. ... We definitely have that confidence in our group that we can be resilient in situations." The Oilers outshot the Panthers 46-42, but totaled 23 giveaways. The Panthers recorded 17 giveaways, 12 takeaways and 60 hits, compared to 39 for their foes. Defenseman Seth Jones logged a goal and assist for the Panthers. Forward Anton Lundell and defenseman Nate Schmidt registered two assists apiece. Advertisement Sam Bennett lit the lamp for the first score of Game 2. With that goal, the Panthers forward set an NHL record for the most road goals (12) scored in a single postseason. The first score of the night was prompted by an errant initial attempt by Carter Verhaeghe. Fellow Panthers forward Evan Rodrigues collected the loose puck and hit it into the slot for Schmidt, who spotted Bennett in the right circle. Bennett finished the play by swiping a wrist shot by goaltender Skinner's glove side. The Oilers took advantage of a Panthers turnover in the neutral zone and leveled the score about 5:32 later. Forward Evander Kane finished that play with a wicked blast over net minder Sergei Bobrovsky's glove and into the right side of the net. Oilers defenseman Evan Bouchard collected a rebound off his own shot and scored from long range on a follow-up attempt for a 2-1 lead 9:19 into the first period. Jones tied the score once again for the Panthers with a goal at the 11:37 mark. But star forward Connor McDavid helped the Oilers grab back the lead by carving up the Panthers defense during a power play and feeding Leon Draisaitl for a goal 60 seconds later. Advertisement The Panthers' offense clawed back in the second period, outshooting the Oilers 14-9 and scoring twice to regain momentum. Defenseman Dmitry Kulikov tied the game when he sniped a long range shot off the right post and in behind Skinner 8:23 into the bridge frame. Marchand gave the Panthers their first lead when he scored a shorthanded goal off a breakaway. Lundell fed Marchand for that score, which came with 7:51 remaining in the period. The Panthers carried their narrow edge into the third period. Bobrovsky and the defense swarmed over the final minutes, but the Oilers pulled Skinner to put another skater on the ice. They finally broke through when forward Corey Perry found the net with less than 18 seconds remaining in regulation, sending the game into overtime. Defenseman Jake Walman had an initial attempt deflected at the start of the sequence. The puck then bounced into the slot, where it found Perry. He proceeded to smack a shot off defenders and into the left side of the net. Advertisement The Panthers dominated scoring opportunities in the first overtime, outshooting the Oilers 13-9, but hit the post on one chance and failed to convert on a breakaway later the first bonus period. They continued to threaten in the second overtime, throwing waves of skaters onto the ice and racing toward the Oilers net. Lundell corralled the puck deep in Panthers territory to spark the game-winner. He then needled a pass between the Oilers defense, finding Marchand in the neutral zone. Marchand fought off the pressure before calmly pushing the puck between Skinner's legs, quieting the home crowd and tying the series. "The boys were a little tired, but that's a huge win for us," Bennett said. "We fought back. That's tough to regroup, But our team did a great job of refocusing." Advertisement The Panthers will host the Oilers in Game 3 of the best-of-seven game series at 8 p.m. EDT Monday in Sunrise, Fla. Game 4 will be Thursday in Sunrise. The series will head back to Edmonton on June 14 for Game 5. All Stanley Cup Final games will air at 8 p.m. EDT on TNT and Max.