“Cold as Ice” by Foreigner blared from a portable speaker as Steve Wilson took to the rink Friday. He and about a dozen other Frontier Airlines pilots were among the hundreds of athletes whose weekend plans were dashed by the unseasonable warmth that forced U.S. Pond Hockey Championships organizers to cancel the second weekend of this year’s event.
Wilson and his fellow jocks were undeterred. They had traveled from Pennsylvania, Iowa, Belgium and many points in between to play hockey. So a group of would-be pond hockey players rented the Bloomington Ice Garden for a few hours to play several pickup rounds instead. Nobody is taking home a Golden Shovel this weekend, so why not have fun, anyway?
“I’ve done a lot in my life but this thing here — 80 dudes coming out to play pickup — it’s just cool,” Wilson said.
The pond hockey tournament, which usually takes place on Lake Nokomis in Minneapolis, is one of multiple events that have been drastically altered or outright canceled by an unusually warm winter. Twin Cities-area lakes are usually frozen solid by early December. In 2023, the region logged a record high 54 degrees and more than an inch of rain that month instead.
Last weekend offered a reprieve from the relatively toasty temperatures. The pond hockey tournament’s first few days went off without a hitch. Then things warmed up again.

“This event sometimes teeters between a couple of degrees, and we’ve had good luck, and we’ve had bad luck,” tournament organizers wrote on Facebook. “Last weekend was good luck, this weekend is bad luck.”
The cancellation led to an influx of visitors at the Ice Garden, according to Manager Lenny Schmitz. This winter, he’s seen an uptick in the number of people booking open skate time due to the lack of ice available outside. He lamented the balmy weather Friday but gladly took the displaced hockey players’ reservations.
“That ice — it doesn’t pay any bills,” Schmitz said.