Connor Storrie Brings U.S. Olympic Hockey Stars to ‘SNL’ Stage in Breakout Hosting Debut
NBC
The ‘Heated Rivalry’ star leaned into hockey culture — and didn’t shy away from politics — during his first time at Studio 8H.
Connor Storrie officially entered Studio 8H as a breakout television star and left it having solidified something bigger: cultural relevance.
The 26-year-old actor made his Saturday Night Live hosting debut this weekend, arriving fresh off the unexpected phenomenon of Heated Rivalry. Absent from the Trump-centric cold open, Storrie took the stage for his monologue to roaring applause, immediately leaning into the meta-awareness surrounding his rise.
“Some of you may have seen all of me on my show Heated Rivalry,” he joked, referencing the series’ unabashedly intimate tone. The crowd erupted again when he added that the hockey drama has “taught a lot of straight women that their sexuality is actually gay men.”
From there, the monologue smartly fused comedy with cultural timing. Storrie admitted to crying when he booked the gig, calling it a lifelong dream, before pivoting back to hockey — the sport that catapulted him to stardom. Questioning whether he convincingly sold the on-ice aspect of the role, he welcomed real-life reinforcements.
Out walked Quinn Hughes and Jack Hughes from the U.S. men’s Olympic hockey team, alongside Hilary Knight and Megan Keller from the U.S. women’s team — a surprise that instantly reframed the moment.
The men jokingly admitted they hadn’t seen Heated Rivalry, while Knight and Keller assured Storrie they were familiar with it. The bit quickly turned sharper, referencing the widely circulated video of members of the men’s team laughing alongside President Trump during a White House appearance in which he suggested the women’s team would have to join the men for their visit.
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Knight and Keller delivered the night’s cleanest punchlines. “It was going to be just us, but we thought we’d invite the guys too,” one quipped. “We thought we’d give them a little moment to shine,” added the other — before reminding viewers that the women’s team’s most recent Olympic victory came two Games ago, while the men haven’t claimed gold in over four decades.
The segment ended on a note of collective good humor, but the subtext was unmistakable: Storrie understands the moment he’s in.
Leading up to Saturday, SNL leaned heavily into his cultural momentum. Teasers included an “accent duel” sketch and a chaotic bit involving cast member Sarah Sherman and musical guests Mumford & Sons. The show even released a blooper reel — a rare push that signaled NBC’s awareness of his viral appeal.
Storrie’s hosting debut arrives just months after Heated Rivalry became one of the year’s most unexpected breakout hits. Originating on Canada’s Crave and streaming in the U.S. on HBO Max, the queer hockey drama — based on Rachel Reid’s popular Game Changers novels — centers on a near decade-long relationship between rival players Ilya Rozanov (Storrie) and Shane Hollander (Hudson Williams).
The series didn’t just find an audience. It created stars.
In January, Storrie and Williams presented at the Golden Globes before serving as torchbearers in the 2026 Olympic Torch Relay — an optics-savvy pairing that cemented their crossover appeal. Storrie is already in talks to join Molly Gordon and SNL writer Allie Levitan’s upcoming A24 comedy Peaked, while Williams will next star in Crave’s Carrie-Anne Moss-led thriller Yaga.
Meanwhile, Heated Rivalry has already secured a second season renewal. Production is slated to begin this summer with a Spring 2027 release target. Rachel Reid’s next installment in the Game Changers series, Unrivaled, has also been delayed to 2027 — extending the franchise’s cultural runway.
If Saturday night proved anything, it’s that Storrie isn’t just riding the hockey wave. He’s steering it.



