APRIL 15, 2026
Ryan Malone spent 12 years in the NHL. Then the jersey came off, and he had to figure out who he was without it.
“As men, you're creating your purpose. There's something more in there for you to do.”
Ryan Malone spent 12 years in the NHL — the kid from St. Clair whose dad scouted Jaromir Jagr for the Penguins. Then the career ended. No more locker room. No more accountability. No more name on the back of the shirt. In this conversation with Greg Weimer, Ryan walks through the identity crisis that followed his retirement, the stay-at-home dad years in Minnesota, the volunteer fire school that taught him “real skills compared to growing up with hockey,” and the night he checked himself into a mental hospital during a manic episode.
What makes Ryan’s story worth sitting with is what he built on the other side. On his knees in that hospital room, he found faith. Back in Pittsburgh, he rallied the hockey community to save RMU’s Division I programs — raising $1.5 million in cash when everyone was counting them out. Today the Malone Family Foundation supports veterans and first responders through hockey, wellness camps, and the mind-body-spirit approach Ryan pieced together from Gary Roberts’ pH strips, Sid Crosby’s 5 a.m. discipline, and his own hardest year.


In this episode, gain insights on:
“ As men, you're creating your purpose. There's something more in there for you to do.”
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