Ice Hockey Romance Novels Fuel Surge in Fanbase, Especially Among Women
نظرة سريعة
- Ice hockey romance novels and TV adaptations like 'Heated Rivalry' and 'Off Campus' are driving a significant increase in fans, particularly women, attending ice hockey games in Australia.
- The Australian Ice Hockey League is experiencing a surge in popularity, with teams like the Canberra Brave seeing sell-out crowds and increased media attention.
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Ice hockey romance novels and their adaptations have gained significant popularity, particularly among women, leading to increased attendance at ice hockey games. This trend is boosting the sport's profile and viewership.
As hordes of ice hockey fans stream into Canberra's AIS Arena, groups of women congregate excitedly outside.
Taylor Elfverson said she and her friends were having "a girls' night out".
"I watched a few episodes of that Off Campus [show] and thought, 'let's go see an ice hockey game'," she said.
There is no denying ice hockey is hot right now.
Queer hockey romance series Heated Rivalry became a massive streaming success when it premiered late last year.
Last month, Off Campus — a romantic drama about college hockey players — attracted 36 million viewers in its first 12 days, breaking Amazon Prime's viewership record in the 18-34 female demographic.
Both were adapted from ice hockey romance novels, a subgenre that has developed a devoted fandom, particularly through TikTok.
'Undeniable' impact
Canberra Brave chief executive Stephen Campbell said the flow-on effect of these shows for the Australian Ice Hockey League was "undeniable".
"I think it's fantastic — it's great for the sport," he said.
While women have always been involved in the sport, crowds at games have historically skewed male.
This year, more than 67 per cent of tickets to Canberra Brave games were purchased by women.
Players like Casey Kubara have watched the ice hockey romance frenzy unfold.
"It's kind of taken the sport by storm," he said.
He has not watched the TV shows or read the books but said he was happy the genre was shining a light on the sport.
"I'd say [ice hockey] is too aggressive and violent to be romantic," he laughed.
"It's honing in a lot of people's attention that wouldn't even have known that we had ice hockey in Australia."
The Canberra Brave, which relocated to the larger 3,000-seat AIS Arena in 2025, has been selling out every game.
It is a similar story across the league.
"We're getting TV deals now with the league just signing with ESPN, all the teams have a bigger social media presence," Kubara said.
'People aren't ashamed'
One of those sponsors is Canberra's dedicated romance bookstore.
"We've got a whole section of our shop that is designed for sports romance — it is a massive part of the romance genre," Astoria Romance & Fantasy Bookstore owner Beth Taylor said.
"Ice hockey is by far the biggest part."
She said the intensity and physicality of the sport translated well into romance.
"[Reading] romance has typically been something we hide … but I think it's coming forward — people aren't ashamed of it, they're proud of it, they're bringing their books to games," she said.
Ms Taylor, who also runs a romance book club, said the group attended its first ice hockey game last year and "fell in love with it".
"Being there live, it's just the most wonderful atmosphere — it's electric."
أسئلة مفتوحة
- Will this trend sustain long-term?
- How will teams leverage this new fanbase?

