World record for longest ice hockey pass is set in the State of Hockey

February 27, 2019 at 12:12PM

Ideal weather conditions allowed a couple of hockey guys in the State of Hockey to glide into the record book.

The Guinness World Records has certified that the longest ice hockey pass was made on a mirror-smooth Lake of the Isles in Minneapolis late last fall.

The passer: hockey enthusiast Zach Lamppa, of Detroit Lakes. The recipient: Stanley Cup champion and Wild and Gophers analyst Tom Chorske.

A Guinness representative on hand for the Nov. 20 effort said that his bosses in London determined that the pass must exceed 894 feet, or the length of nearly 4½ NHL-size rinks.

With two stripes-wearing high school officials on hand to direct the effort to claim the record for this newly established category, Lamppa and Chorske were given a few practice tries. All came up short.

Notified that now was the time to make his first official long-distance pass, the lefthanded Lamppa loaded up and muscled a wrist shot that slid … and slid … and eased past the spray-painted mark before coming to a gentle rest on Chorske's blade. Distance: 904 feet and 4 inches.

While it wasn't exactly like hoisting the Stanley Cup as Chorske did as a New Jersey Devil in 1995, Lamppa was happy to receive the Guinness world record certificate just the same as a video crew wrapped up documentation.

Zach Lamppa followed through on what turned out to be a world record for the longest hockey pass.
Zach Lamppa followed through on what turned out to be a world record for the longest hockey pass. (Screengrab from SSQTCH video/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
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Paul Walsh

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Paul Walsh is a general assignment reporter at the Minnesota Star Tribune. He wants your news tips, especially in and near Minnesota.

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