n many cities, the hats are collected by team staff and presented to the player who scored the hat trick in the dressing room. "If the player who achieved the hat trick wants them, they're his," said Jason Rademan, media relations for the Dallas Stars.
Alexander Ovechkin(notes) of the
Washington Capitals had four hat tricks this season, including one in a Stanley Cup Playoffs classic that also saw rival
Sidney Crosby(notes) tally one. He's one of the players who checks the hats before they're shipped away.
"Ovie has asked before where the hats were, and he's grabbed a hat or two," said Nate Ewell of the Capitals. "He even grabbed a red Caps hat at one point."
2. The garbage: Remember what mom used to say about wearing other kids' hats back in elementary school? Turns out that health concerns about the indiscriminate origin of the hats is a consideration.
Mike Sundheim, media relations for the
Carolina Hurricanes, said that a portion of the hats that are in decent shape are given to the players, but that "the majority of the older, well-worn ones pretty much have to go in the trash because of health concerns."
That was echoed by VP of communications Tom McMillan of the Pittsburgh Penguins, although he said a student once did a project with the Penguins in which he took hats thrown on the ice, had them "cleaned and medically approved" and then donated them to charity. Which brings us to ...
3. Donations: Teams that don't trash the hats give them to any number of local charities. Some teams are a bit more discerning, like the Carolina Hurricanes, who only "donate any new-looking ones, i.e. tags are still on, to charity," said Sundheim.
If for some reason you thought the homeless population in your city had embraced hockey, now you know the real story.
Finally, the most exciting trend in the NHL when it comes to hat tricks ...
The giant transparent hat bin: The
Columbus Blue Jackets have a giant case on the main concourse of their arena that houses all the hats the team has collected since the franchise's first hat trick, according to Karen Davis of the Jackets. That means every trick from
Geoff Sanderson(notes) in February 2001 through
Rick Nash(notes) in March 2009.
McMillan of the Penguins said that his organization has donated hats in the past to the
Western Pennsylvania Sports Museum, which houses a similar bin.
The trend is catching on: The Washington Capitals have been saving hats for more than a year now, planning their own transparent bin on the concourse of the Verizon Center in D.C.
"So people can see their hats, and encourage fans to throw more for the next hat trick," said Ewell.
Provided, of course, that Ovechkin doesn't dive in and snag a few for himself.