Colorado
Fredrik Olofsson, Troy Terry and the Thunderbirds team that etched a place in Colorado youth hockey history: “It is pretty incredible”
Brandon Carlo walked into the locker room after another strong first period and couldn’t believe his eyes — or ears.
Carlo, the captain of his Colorado Thunderbirds U16 AAA team during the 2012-13 season, saw his teammates having a grand time with music blaring throughout the room. There was just one minor issue.
It was the first intermission of a tournament game — a semifinal, no less.
“They were blasting music in between periods like we had already won,” Carlo said. “I was like, ‘Can we turn that (stuff) off?’”
“They” were a room full of kids with dreams of playing professional hockey, but it was a reminder that they were still teenagers. Carlo quickly realized the culprits were future Avalanche forward Fredrik Olofsson and Lightning forward Mikey Eyssimont, who, along with Carlo, now a Bruins defenseman, were three of the five players from this particular Thunderbirds squad who reached the NHL.
The Thunderbirds have crafted a proud and successful history of developing players who matriculate to higher levels in the sport since the program began in 2002, but the 2012-13 U16 AAA team was a special one.
“Just trying to keep all of those guys in line when we were winning all the time was so hard,” Carlo said. “We had some fun personalities. We definitely had a confidence and a swagger that year, which was fun. At times I look back and wish I had more of that still. That group was incredible.
“Freddy and Mikey were always the (stuff) disturbers. They were just having fun and living in the moment and I respect it now.”
Carlo, Eyssimont and Olofsson were all born in 1996. They were joined by a diminutive kid from the ‘97 group, Troy Terry, as part of a collection of talent that produced one of the Thunderbirds’ most dominant seasons at any age level.
“I mean, it’s crazy to look back now, but I think then we knew how good of players we had,” said Terry, who now plays for the Ducks. “But to kind of take a step back and look now at how many guys made it to the NHL, it is pretty incredible. Those are all guys that I root for and happy to see we’re all doing well and playing at the highest level.”
Participation in youth hockey grew in Colorado after the Avalanche arrived from Quebec, with notable spikes after Stanley Cup runs in 1996 and 2001. The Thunderbirds were born after the second title.
It started with two teams in 2002, but began to grow a few years later until there was a club for each age group from 11 to 18.
“It took a few years to really get competitive and to where we were at,” said Angelo Ricci, who is the executive director of the Thunderbirds program and a skills coach for the Philadelphia Flyers. “We’ve had a lot of former Avs help our program, from (Joe) Sakic, (Pierre) Turgeon, (Adam) Foote, Milan Hejduk and others. The list goes on. Ken Klee. It was really nice to build a rapport with those guys. They were doing it for the right reasons, to help out the kids.”
The Thunderbirds were a formidable program by 2012, and Ricci’s U16 AAA team often had high expectations and successful results. None of the ‘96 kids were teenage phenoms along the lines of some of their opponents — namely future No. 1 pick Auston Matthews with the Arizona Bobcats. But there was no denying they were deep and talented.
Ricci knew early on that this group had the goods.
“I remember our first practice with those guys,” he said. “Troy Terry was like 125, 130 pounds soaking wet and not very tall yet. Then they start practicing and playing some 3-on-3, doing some drills and you see well, he’s smart and he’s got a good stick, strong on the puck. You could see bits and pieces with all of these guys.
“I’d love to say, ‘Yeah, I saw (a bunch of future NHL guys).’ What we saw was growth in their game and the ability to absorb information and want to be coached.”

One of the most talented youth hockey teams ever assembled in the state of Colorado could have been even greater, had a rising star in the coaching ranks not intervened. It was a powerhouse group, but its leading scorer from the previous year left the team early in the season.
Dylan Gambrell scored 12 points in his first four games before joining Dubuque in the United States Hockey League. The coach in Dubuque was Jim Montgomery, who took over the DU hockey program one year later.
“I was kind of not happy about that,” Ricci said with a hearty laugh. “No, it was our job to help the kids move up.”
Even without Gambrell, who went on to play at DU for Montgomery and has more than 200 NHL games on his resume, and Dominic Turgeon, who decided to play for Portland in the WHL that year, this Thunderbirds team was a juggernaut.
“That year, we were so good defensively. If we played about 70 games, I don’t know if we were allowing a goal per game,” Ricci said. “And we were scoring four, five or more almost every night. One thing is they really worked. We had some great practices, and that’s where you really saw their games grow.”
Ricci estimated the team’s final record was 65-4. The Thunderbirds went weeks at a time without losing.
There were days when they showed up at the rink, particularly against an opponent from the region, and the outcome was almost a foregone conclusion. For Carlo, one game against the Colorado Rampage stood out.
“I’ll never forget that one,” said Carlo, who grew up playing with some of the kids on the Rampage before switching to the Thunderbirds. “We knew we should be winning that game, and the other team kind of knew, too. We played them in a full-on soccer game, like full field, before the hockey game. We were just outside and I don’t know how exactly it came about, but it felt like there was more on the line with that soccer game.”

Besides being locker room DJs, Eyssimont and Olofsson were the team’s top two scorers and often played on a line with Terry. He has had the most decorated NHL career to date of the bunch, having scored 60 goals for Anaheim over the two previous seasons even though he was a fifth-round NHL draft pick.
“The joke between Mikey and I was always that we showed (Terry) the way,” Olofsson said. “A lot of guys maybe didn’t have the closest friends from school, because AAA (hockey) demanded so much time that we spent so much time with each other. We were just having a blast. It was super competitive within the team just to like, do stuff — to produce points, score goals, everything else. It was a race to get as much as possible.”
The AAA hockey life is not an easy one. There is a ton of travel, with several in-season tournaments, plus the teams in the Rocky Mountain region are spread out to begin with.
Håkan Olofsson has three sons who have all played hockey since they were little. Fredrik’s older brother, Gustav, played in the NHL for the Seattle Kraken and currently plays for their AHL club. Håkan has watched a lot of competitive youth hockey teams from different parts of the world.
The Olofsson kids played in Sweden, Austria and San Jose before the family settled in the Denver area.

“That team was very strong. They were a winning machine,” Håkan said. “Our favorite memories were less about the results — even though they usually won — and more about the camaraderie that we saw grow with the boys and the families that kept everything together. The entire parent group was great. We just had a good time together traveling to these tournaments.”
The Olofsson kids lived in Broomfield, but practices and home games were at Big Bear Ice Arena in Denver and Family Sports Center in Centennial. The Carlos lived in Colorado Springs, and Gambrell billeted with them until he left for the USHL.
That meant a lot of long car rides and long nights at the rink, particularly when they were stuck with a late practice time. Håkan noted that sometimes those late nights occurred simply because the guys on the team enjoyed hanging out together long after practice.
“Our parents were happy when we started to get our licenses,” Fredrik Olofsson said. “You’d get out of school and do your homework in the car if your parents were driving. Just hit the road and be at the rink until whenever. Maybe get home at like 10 (p.m.).
“We’d always be on the ice late because of school. We’d get done at 8:30, 9 and you’re just hurrying to get to Qdoba before it closes.”
Angie Carlo was the team’s manager, so she handled the logistics when they were on the road. She also drove her son and Gambrell to Denver from the Springs for practices and games, while also picking up goalie Cale Morris in Larkspur along the way.
One of her favorite memories from Brandon’s time with the Thunderbirds was when she had Domino’s Pizza delivered to the Boston airport because they arrived so late after a long travel day with a plane full of hungry teenagers.
“The kids all remember the goals they scored and the games they won,” Carlo said. “I remember some of the messes they left. No, honestly, that was such a great group of kids to be their manager. They were so respectful. It made my job easy.”
While the Thunderbirds could count their losses from that season on one hand, the final one was the most difficult.
Their ultimate goal was to reach the national championship tournament, which was held in Pittsburgh that season. The Thunderbirds fell just short, and one of Olofsson’s current teammates with the Avalanche played a big role in the upset at the district tournament in Utah.
“That’s a blast from the past,” Avs defenseman Caleb Jones said. “Yeah, my Dallas team beat them. We didn’t have the talent they had. They were good.”
The Dallas Stars Elite U16 team did have Jones and Max Letunov, who was a second-round pick and currently plays in the KHL with Avs prospect Nikolai Kovalenko.
And they had a goalie play one of the games of his life.
“Man, we were so much better than those guys,” Ricci said. “It was 2-1. I think the shots were 52 or 55 to 12. Nowadays, we would have made it to nationals because they’ve added at-large bids. Back then, only the district winners went.
“But it happens, just like you see in the NCAA basketball tournament.”
While the postseason ended with a disappointing loss, that team etched a place in Colorado youth hockey history because of all the future pros wearing Thunderbirds sweaters.
It wasn’t just the five NHL guys, either. Several others played in the AHL, ECHL or had a full NCAA career. Morris was named the NCAA goalie of the year at Notre Dame, and recently played with Gustav Olofsson for the Coachella Valley Firebirds against the Colorado Eagles in Loveland.
None of them were a phenom at 15 years old, but Carlo was in the NHL at 19 and Terry became a high-profile prospect after starring for the Pioneers in college and for the U.S. team at the world junior championships. Olofsson and Eyssimont had winding paths, but they’re all NHL regulars now.
“It just shows there is hope,” Ricci said. “There is a path if you stick to it and you have the skill set. It’s not just the NHL, but to get to college or play junior hockey. It’s fun to see a local guy succeed. It just sends a good message that you can play in a nontraditional hockey market.”
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Colorado
Man who killed demonstrator in Colorado firebombing sentenced to life in prison
BOULDER, Colo. — A man was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole after pleading guilty Thursday to killing one person and injuring a dozen others in a 2025 firebombing attack on a demonstration in Boulder, Colorado, in support of Israeli hostages in Gaza.
Mohamed Sabry Soliman looked down at a desk throughout the sentencing. He has meanwhile pleaded not guilty to federal hate crime charges for the attack last June. Prosecutors are weighing whether to seek the death penalty in the federal case, according to his attorneys.
Authorities say Soliman threw two Molotov cocktails at demonstrators at a pedestrian mall in downtown Boulder, a city of 100,000 people northwest of Denver that’s home to the University of Colorado.
Karen Diamond, 82, was injured in the attack and later died. A dozen others were also injured.
Soliman is an Egyptian national who federal authorities say was living in the U.S. illegally. Investigators allege he planned the attack for a year and was driven by a desire “to kill all Zionist people.”
Speaking to the court through an interpreter for nearly a half hour, Soliman offered apologies to the victims and condolences for Diamond’s death. “There are no words that can express my sadness for her passing,” Soliman said.
He said he wasn’t asking for leniency at sentencing for his convictions in state court and wants prosecutors pressing federal hate crime charges against him to seek the death penalty.
“If I went back, I would not have done this as this is not according to the teaching of Islam,” Soliman said. “What I did came out of myself and only myself.”
District Attorney Michael Dougherty said Soliman’s guilty pleas don’t show an acceptance of responsibility but rather “a surrender to the strength of the evidence” against him. Despite Soliman’s claims he doesn’t hate people who practice the Jewish faith, Judge Nancy Salomone concluded Soliman targeted the victims because they were Jewish. “You chose a time and a place and a set of circumstances and weapons that were designed to inflict the most pain that you could,” the judge said.
In a statement read earlier in court by a prosecutor, Diamond’s sons asked that Soliman not be allowed to see his family again “since he is responsible for our mother never seeing her family again.”
Andrew and Ethan Diamond said their mother suffered “indescribable pain” for over three weeks before her death. “In those weeks, we learned the full meaning of the expressions ‘living hell’ and ‘fate worse than death,’” Diamond’s sons said in the statement.
Soliman’s federal attorneys have said in court filings the attack “was profoundly inconsistent” with Soliman’s prior conduct and “came as a total shock to his family.”
At the time of the attack, Soliman had been living with his family in a two-bedroom apartment in Colorado Springs — about 97 miles away. He had moved to the U.S. from Kuwait in 2022 with his wife and their five children and worked in a series of low-paying jobs.
The couple divorced in April.
Investigators allege Soliman told them he intended to kill the roughly 20 participants at the weekly demonstration at Boulder’s Pearl Street pedestrian mall. He threw two of more than two dozen Molotov cocktails he had with him while yelling, “Free Palestine!”
Police said he told them he got scared because he had never hurt anyone before.
Federal prosecutors allege the victims were targeted because of their perceived or actual connection to Israel. Soliman’s federal defense lawyers argue he should not have been charged with hate crimes because he was motivated by opposition to Zionism, the political movement to establish and sustain a Jewish state in Israel.
An attack motivated by someone’s political views is not considered a hate crime under federal law.
State prosecutors have identified 29 victims in the attack. Thirteen were physically injured. The others were nearby and considered victims because they could have been hurt. A dog was also injured in the attack, and Soliman was charged with animal cruelty.
Soliman’s wife, Hayam El Gamal, and their children spent 10 months in immigration detention until a federal judge in Texas ordered their release in April.
An immigration appeals court had dismissed their case to stay in the U.S. and issued a deportation order. But U.S. District Judge Fred Biery in San Antonio allowed their release on the condition that El Gamal and her oldest child, who is 18, wear electronic monitoring.
Soliman’s attorneys seek to block the family’s deportation until a judge determines they won’t need to be present for court proceedings in his federal case.
Colorado
Rockies’ Michael Lorenzen says he can pitch at Coors Field, despite Mets scoring seven runs on 11 hits in five innings
Toss out Wednesday night’s results. Michael Lorenzen believes he can pitch at Coors Field. His manager thinks so too.
The box score said otherwise: Over five innings, the Mets had 11 hits off the Rockies’ right-hander, leading to seven runs as the Mets cruised to a 10-5 win.
The announced crowd at Coors was 11,155 on a night when the temperature at first pitch was 41 degrees. That is the lowest home crowd in Rockies history. However, the Rockies said that many fans exchanged their tickets for another game after this week’s snow, postponed games, and the fact that Wednesday’s game was pushed back from a 6:40 p.m. start to a 7:20 p.m. start.
The fans who stayed away were probably glad they did, because the Rockies suffered their sixth consecutive loss, and their sweep of the Mets at Citi Field on April 24-26 seems long ago and far away.
Manager Warren Schaeffer saw a mixed bag from Lorenzen.
“That’s a lot of hits, 11, and he had three walks in there that hurt,” Schaeffer said. “Good pitch mix, but they were on him. When he threw it over the plate, they put the ball in play — whether hard sometimes or not. They made it work, so hats off to them.”
Lorenzen’s night began ominously when Juan Soto hit Lorenzen’s third pitch of the game 435 feet and into the left-centerfield seats. It was the first leadoff home run of Soto’s career.
Lorenzen said he “wasn’t making excuses,” but said he did feel like he threw decent pitches, save for a leadoff homer by Soto and a triple by MJ Melendez two batters later.
“I wouldn’t say they were on me, there was a lot of, like, 77 mph hits,” said Lorenzen, who is 2-4 with a 6.92 ERA after eight starts (nine appearances). “There was one Coors-style double in there. There were a lot of bloops that were hit over second base on changeups and sinkers.”
The right-hander, whom the Rockies signed to a one-year, $8 million contract, with a team option worth $9 million next season, owns a 9.64 ERA after four starts at Coors this season.
But Schaeffer put his full faith and trust in Lorenzen, Coors or no Coors.
“I see too small of a sample size to make a thing (out of) that one,” Schaeffer said. “The first game that he pitched against Philadelphia (nine runs on 12 hits over three innings) was a throw-away game. Michael will be fine. He wanted to come here, to pitch here specifically. He’ll figure it out.”
Lorenzen said it’s “just been kind of frustrating” for him this season.
“I feel like I’ve thrown the ball pretty well, and today, I thought I threw it great,” he said. “It’s just that balls aren’t hit where you hope they would be hit. Weak contact isn’t hit where you would hope it would be hit. I wouldn’t say it’s a Coors Field thing.”
The Rockies’ four-run sixth inning cut New York’s lead to 8-4. The inning featured a leadoff home run by rookie TJ Rumfield, his sixth, and a two-run homer by Jake McCarthy, his first of the season.
Meanwhile, the Rockies barely laid a glove on New York starter Freddy Peralta, who continued his dominance at Coors Field. The right-hander blanked the Rockies for five innings, allowing four harmless singles over. He walked two and struck out one.
Peralta made his major league debut at Coors on May 13, 2018, carrying a no-hitter into the sixth inning and striking out 13 over 5 2/3 innings. On May 2, 2023, he struck out 10 innings, allowing two runs.
Pitching probables
Thursday: Mets RHP Christian Scott (0-0, 4.26 ERA) at Rockies LHP Jose Quintana (1-2, 4.07), 1:10 p.m.
Friday: Rockies TBD at Phillies LHP Jesus Luzardo (3-3, 5.09), 4:40 p.m.
Saturday: Rockies LHP Kyle Freeland (1-3, 5.04) at Phillies RHP Aaron Nola (2-3, 5.06), 4:05 p.m.
TV: Rockies.TV
Radio: KOA 850 AM/94.01 FM
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Colorado
Colorado anglers fear drought will make it ‘hard to keep fish alive’ this summer
Colorado’s trout fisheries could face a difficult summer, impacting the state’s billion-dollar angling industry, as widespread drought conditions drive predictions that streamflows will be well below-average.
Kirk Klancke, the president of the Colorado Headwaters Chapter of Trout Unlimited, said he is concerned that the drought will stress fisheries this summer, especially if temperatures are anywhere near as elevated as they were this winter.
“If this summer is anything like this past winter was, the chances are pretty good that there’s going to be fish kills in our streams,” Klancke said. “It’s 100% given that, without some miracle monsoon season, we’re going to see (river) temperatures that threaten trout — and fishermen who care will be fishing in the mornings.”
Colorado, and much of the West, experienced one of the hottest, driest winters on record. In March, a climate change-fueled heatwave rapidly melted off the state’s already historically poor snowpack to record-low levels. With little snow left to melt, only about half the normal amount of water is expected to flow through most rivers this summer, and some rivers could see closer to a quarter of the normal flows, according to the latest Colorado Water Supply Outlook report.
Colorado’s angling industry generates nearly $2 billion in total economic output annually and supports over 15,000 jobs statewide, according to the state government. The state has 6,000 miles of streams, including over 360 miles that Colorado Parks and Wildlife has designated as Gold Medal trout fishing, and more than 1,300 lakes and reservoirs. Fly fishing, especially for rainbow and brown trout, is among the most popular forms of fishing in the state.
While every summer has its “ebbs and flows,” Patrick Gamble, a fly fishing guide for Straightline Sports in Steamboat Springs, said anyone visiting Colorado to fish this summer should expect the experience to be a little different that past years.
With the low flows, Gamble said he’s already called a number of his customers who had booked June trips on the Yampa River to reschedule for earlier in the spring, since he doesn’t expect the river to flow later in the summer. As temperatures get hotter heading into the summer, he said anglers should also plan to fish in the cool of mornings, rather than on hot afternoons, or at higher elevations to avoid harming trout populations.
“This year, when you have less water, there’s still as much pressure — just as many eagles, ospreys, more river otters than ever and angling pressure to boot,” Gamble said. “Coming off the lowest snowpack in recorded history, it’s definitely super concerning.”
Drought likely to stress trout populations
With most of Colorado’s rivers expected to experience extremely low streamflows, Klancke said, “we’re really worried this year is going to be really hard to keep fish alive,” especially if there are above-normal temperatures.
When rivers run low, the water is spread thin and warms faster, Klancke explained. That is a problem because hot water holds less dissolved oxygen, which cold-water species like trout — the primary targets of Colorado’s angling industry — need to breathe, he said.
“Your river is built like a solar collector,” Klancke said. “When your flows are depleted, it’s the same width of streambed, but the river spreads out over that width, and it’s very shallow. The rocks collect the heat because they are exposed when the river is shallow. That heats up the river.”
When water temperatures approach 71 degrees Fahrenheit, Colorado Parks and Wildlife public information officer Rachael Gonzales said trout become stressed and will feed less. If conditions are severe enough, Gonzales said the state wildlife agency can issue voluntary or mandatory closures of certain stretches of river. She said aquatic biologists are monitoring the rivers and will determine if actions are needed this summer.
Trout Unlimited and most Colorado fly fishing outfitters recommend anglers stop fishing for trout when water temperatures hit 68 degrees, so as not to harm the fish. Even during a year with a normal snowpack, Klancke said that some streams hit this threshold several days a year.
“At 68 degrees, we tell people to just quit fishing because you can catch a fish and have all the thrill of playing him, getting him in a net, releasing him properly, but when he swims away, he’s expended so much energy he can’t recover,” he said. “At 68 degrees, it really becomes catch and kill, instead of catch and release.”
Anglers stress ethical fishing during drought year

While anglers hope the period of wetter, cooler weather Colorado has seen over the last couple of weeks continues, long-term forecasts suggest the West could be in for a hot summer.
Over the next three months, western Colorado is likely to see above-normal temperatures and average to slightly-below average precipitation, according to the National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center.
“The most important message for this summer is, if you’re a catch-and-release fisherman, fish with a thermometer and know what temperatures threaten trout,” Klancke said. “It’s not just water conservation in a drought year, it’s how we handle our fisheries and keep these fish alive.”
Across Colorado, Trout Unlimited and other conservation groups are working to educate visitors about the drought conditions and how hot water can impact trout. This summer, Klancke said the Colorado Headwaters Chapter will launch into “high gear” radio and newspaper education campaigns and volunteers leaving flyers under the windshields of vehicles parked along rivers in Grand County on hot days.
The warmer it gets this summer, the fewer “easy-access” trout fishing locations there will be in the lower Yampa Valley, Gamble said. But that doesn’t mean there won’t be any fishing; it just means anglers may have to move to higher elevations, where temperatures are cooler.
“Being trout-centric in the state of Colorado, you definitely epitomize a hot summer day with a dry fly and searching a river bank with a grasshopper fly,” Gamble added. “But, sometimes that just means you need to be up at 9,000 feet, instead of down at a valley floor at 7,000 feet, to find water that releasing a trout in is ethical.”
Gonzales said that in addition to starting early and avoiding warm water, it is also important to not overcrowd an area. She suggested anglers also target warm-water species of fish, like pike, which face fewer impacts during hot weather.
Because the vast majority of Colorado’s fly fishing guides are ethical anglers and won’t fish in conditions that stress fish, Klancke said many fly fishing guides may work mornings only on hot days. If this summer sees extended periods of warmth, he said that could have ripple effects across the industry.
“This is particularly hard on our guides because our guides now are going to half day,” he said. “Think about it — they’re going to have their income cut in half. … To have your work hours cut in half is just really hard on professional guides.”
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