Top 77 Quotes & Sayings by Hilary Knight

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American athlete Hilary Knight.
Last updated on November 25, 2024.
Hilary Knight

Hilary Atwood Knight is an American ice hockey forward with the PWHPA and the United States women's national ice hockey team. She previously played for the Les Canadiennes de Montreal of the CWHL and the Boston Pride of the NWHL, with whom she won the inaugural Isobel Cup.

Obviously, different people identify me as the face of women's hockey and whatnot, but like my teammates, I'm just there to perform and compete.
I went to a lot of Chicago Wolves games when I was growing up... They would come out of the tunnel, the pyramid would be there, and the fire would come out of the pyramid. I thought it was the coolest thing.
Just having the hunger to continue to learn motivates me. — © Hilary Knight
Just having the hunger to continue to learn motivates me.
My favorite country that I have visited would have to be Sweden. I'm such a sucker for the Swedish culture, and I learned Swedish in college, so I like to try and navigate my way around.
I have to eat a lot more in the summer because I'm burning more calories.
When I was 5 years old, I told my grandmother I was going to play hockey in the Olympics. Fifteen years later, I competed in my first Olympics.
Now I can give back and be a role model and an advocate for women in sport.
I love going to the movies, whitewater rafting in the summer when I am home in Idaho, biking in the summer in Idaho, paddle boarding in the summer.
My dad was traveling a lot, but when he would come home and cook, he'd cook pizza.
I'm trying to change up the pace in which I approach life so I'm not always go, go, go.
I remember coming out of college thinking, 'OK, I'm gonna get an agent, and I'm gonna make money. I'm gonna make millions of dollars.' And that never happened.
I wear yoga pants and get to work out all the time - it's my job. I feel a little bit different when I go into what I call 'the real world.' It's cool to be able to train as a full-time job, and it's something that I love and will continue to try to make work for the next however-many years.
I am extremely grateful to have had the opportunity to play hockey, especially when there weren't equal opportunities as there are now. But at times, it was challenging. — © Hilary Knight
I am extremely grateful to have had the opportunity to play hockey, especially when there weren't equal opportunities as there are now. But at times, it was challenging.
I absolutely love music. Music is so powerful and can set the tone and change your mood.
Women in general, we tend to shrink ourselves and not have as much confidence as we should in presenting ourselves and our body types. It's OK to be fit and healthy and comfortable within your body, whatever frame you have.
The songs that are on my playlist find themselves there because I can identify with the lyrics, or they have some magical transformative power in the beat.
The Olympics are a completely different beast. It's the most magical moment of your career.
Growing up on an all-boys' team wasn't the easiest thing. I'd have guys come after me on the ice and just hit me because I'm a girl. I'd have parents heckling me from the stands, other parents not wanting me on the team, not making certain teams just because I was a girl.
I believe in lifestyle changes to accommodate a healthy living.
'Playing like a girl' was used as a demeaning term instead of an empowering one. I am proud to be a girl and rocking the ice.
Whenever you go into a game, you want to win, and you want to come out victorious in any way.
I think you are a product of the environment you surround yourself in, and everything you've experienced is a part of you and the fabric you are in.
I think having a strong female figure in my mom as an in-house role model was huge and really motivated me to continue to pursue my passion and my dreams.
When our world is telling girls and women who they should be or what they should look like, it is critical that we empower those girls and young women to be confident with who they are.
Whenever you get Brianna Decker on the ice, and Emily Field and Amanda Pelkey, people are just going to go fast and push the pace.
I've always been sensitive to the phrase 'like a girl,' especially when I was growing up and was told I couldn't play with the boys. It really resonated with me. I was so inspired by the first #LikeAGirl video, and I wanted to be a part of such a powerful message.
I think my role on a team is I love to put the puck in the back of the net. If that opportunity presents itself, and it happens for me, I get really excited.
Fortunately, I have some amazing partners that I work with that continue to support me and enable me to unleash the best me!
I like going on adventures or excursions.
I know there are sort of misnomers that women's hockey isn't as physical or fast as the guys, but women's hockey is very dynamic and tactful in its own ways. It's just as respectable of a sport as any male counterpart.
I think, as an athlete, you tend to be cautious of your body language and what you're doing on the ice. That might be the only moment someone sees you.
It was tough to get to where I am, to get the following that I do have on social media and all the fans out there, which I greatly appreciate, but I would love to have a template so the next girl who grows up doesn't have to go through a lot of the hardships that we faced in our generation.
I would like to go back to school, potentially.
In my first two world championship experiences, I barely saw the ice at all.
The cool thing about a start-up - this is sort of the entrepreneur side of me - is that you can make it grow as much as you can. Or you can squander the talent as much as you want. But it's up to you.
When I graduated from the University of Wisconsin, I was highly encouraged to move to Boston to train as a hopeful for the 2014 Sochi Olympic Games. I remember packing up my car, traveling out here to live with other teammates and share an apartment.
I love my fans.
I absolutely have loved my career path and everything that I've done personally, but it was tough. — © Hilary Knight
I absolutely have loved my career path and everything that I've done personally, but it was tough.
Everything I do is for a gold medal for this country.
I golf for my own entertainment and my teammates' entertainment.
The song 'I Feel the Earth Move' brings me back to those younger years when I was taking my first strides on the ice.
How do we make hockey more affordable? How do we get it into more households? How do we keep it part of the conversation? Those are things that will help us not only increase registration numbers from a grassroots level but also deepen the player pool from the senior national team and the elite level.
As long as I still love the game and I can contribute to a team, I'd love to keep playing.
The real answers aren't in textbooks; they can be found through experiences.
Being surrounded by great women and amazing role models and good teammates allowed me to unfold and evolve into the person that I am today.
I try to get a well-balanced diet with a mix of greens, protein, and carbs.
Going into a locker room that's not even yours to begin with is certainly like you're entering the lion's den.
Whatever I do, I want to impact people's lives in a positive way. — © Hilary Knight
Whatever I do, I want to impact people's lives in a positive way.
I saw the older kids entering the rink carrying hockey sticks and bags, and I was fascinated by the equipment. Once I started skating faster, I was attracted to the speed and dynamics of hockey. I never looked back!
Whenever you step on the ice, you need to be a student of the game and try to hone your craft. You're never going to play a perfect match, but you're always chasing that perfect game.
I am the oldest in our family. I have three younger brothers. I needed to set a great example for them. It instilled a sense of competition in me and hunger to strive to be the best. There's a lot of pride being the only girl and the oldest.
People don't know how fantastic women's ice hockey is. People don't know how fantastic hockey is in general.
It's a great culture to be a part of: there are hockey players all over the world. It has taken me to an education, getting an education at Wisconsin. I've been able to travel the world.
I'm able to be able to achieve certain things that others aren't - whether it's a reaction time or the idea of a coffee that's about to be spilled and I'm able to grab it before anyone else or whatever it is.
My two earliest memories - earning little buttons on our skates when we learned how to skate from one end of the ice to the other and when I first lifted the puck.
I'm a 'blue sky thinker' and dream big.
It was somewhere in Ohio - Cedar Point or something like that - one of those thrill rides. A few cars up, someone's sunglasses had fallen off, and we were on one of those corkscrew parts, and I saw sunglasses and just instinctively grabbed them right out of the air. I was like, 'Oh, my reaction time is really good. This is going well.'
Both of my parents have loved and supported me from my very first strides.
The most valuable advice I can give is plan for your success. Write down your ideal goal, creating checkpoints for yourself along the way that align with the end goal. Set up rewards for achieving both little victories and big ones.
When I was 5, I'm like,' I'm doing this,' whether there's women's ice hockey, men's ice hockey, whatever it was in my future.
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