Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Sports

Canadian tech, Calgary prof helped get Avalanche's Landeskog back on the ice

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Nov, 2025 02:32 PM
  • Canadian tech, Calgary prof helped get Avalanche's Landeskog back on the ice

In the spring of 2024, Colorado Avalanche captain Gabriel Landeskog hobbled into the University of Calgary's Integrative Neuromuscular Sport Performance Lab to try and resume his NHL career.

He hadn't played an NHL game since June 26, 2022, when he and the Avalanche hoisted the Stanley Cup above their heads after a Game 6 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning. But behind that triumph was Landeskog's deteriorating knee. 

Landeskog underwent cartilage replacement surgery in the spring of 2023 after a season on the sidelines. It was his fourth surgery after a skate sliced his right kneecap during the 2020 playoff bubble in Edmonton.

His rehabilitation after cartilage replacement was one step up, two steps back. 

"He was really struggling, and the main issue was he had made a couple of attempts at this point to get back on the ice and both times had been really affected by a flare-up in his knee," said Dr. Matthew Jordan, who is an assistant kinesiology professor and the sport performance lab's lead researcher in muscle strength and power.

"He's got a lot of poise. It's one of the words I used to describe Gabe, but I could tell he was worried, and I could tell that he was concerned about how he was going to salvage his career. He had a long, long way to go to rebuild to get back to playing an NHL game."

Landeskog and Jordan connected through University of Calgary alum Marcin Goszczynski, a strength and conditioning coach and massage therapist for elite athletes who will serve as Canada’s therapist in Olympic men’s hockey in February.

Landeskog met with Goszczynski and Jordan in Calgary in early 2024 to discuss a possible path forward, returning to the University of Calgary about half a dozen times afterward for testing.

"There are days when you wonder if you’re done playing this game, and that’s when it starts getting difficult because it’s the only thing you’ve ever done," Landeskog said. "I had a paper route as a kid and did some other odd jobs, but it was always hockey."

The 32-year-old Swede, once the NHL’s youngest captain at 19, was running out of options.

"It was proving itself to be very difficult of a journey," Landeskog said. "I didn’t know what the ending was going to look like. I was stubborn and not giving up."

Technology co-developed by Jordan became central to Landeskog’s rehabilitation.

Jordan is the scientific adviser to Vancouver-based Plantiga, which developed an insole with a sensor that Landeskog placed in both his skate boots and street shoes.

Microchips in the insoles measured his biomechanics, detecting subtle limps that signalled regression and warned when he needed to ease his workload.

Putting out a fire while it's still a wisp of smoke instead of a five-alarm blaze was Jordan's analogy. 

Landeskog was monitored not just in the gym and on the ice, but also while walking his dog or heading to his car. He’d drop the microchips from his insoles into a docking station to upload the data to the cloud.

Jordan could see on a dashboard how Landeskog's gait responded to increasing workloads.

"We could literally pick up the subtle changes in how Gabe's walk patterns were ebbing and flowing," Jordan explained. 

"A little red light would flash up in his dashboard, and it would say, 'Hey, Gabe is in a red-light zone right now where his movement patterns have changed. It's time to stop and let his body recover and repair.'"

Landeskog eventually learned to trust the data.

"The athlete in us just wants to go, go, go and wants to compete, get back and keep pushing, so the data was good sometimes to pull in the reins a little bit," he said.

"You can trick yourself into thinking you’re feeling pretty good. At the end of the day, I was playing the long game and thankful that we did."

Landeskog tested his knee in a pair of American Hockey League games last spring before making his NHL return in Game 1 of Colorado's first-round playoff series against the Dallas Stars, which Jordan attended.

"Man, it was electric right when they announced his number," Jordan recalled. "To see his wife and his kids in the corner ... knowing the journey he'd been on, just felt a lot of gratitude for being able to see an outcome that's positive. He looked great out there."

The Avalanche were eliminated in seven games, but the silver lining for the captain was that he'd successfully returned to the NHL. Landeskog averaged almost 14 minutes per game in Colorado's first 16 this season, and continues to get feedback from his insoles.

"Yep, they’re here," he said. "Honestly, they are the lifesaver for me in terms of my training and rehab. The data we get from them has been so instrumental. We’ve been able to see patterns and see asymmetries between my right leg and left leg before things even start bothering me. 

"The sensors themselves are very forefront in technology, especially when it comes to athletes and return to play from injury. That will be a huge asset for teams moving forward in all kinds of sports, to be able to use technology like that."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

MORE Sports ARTICLES

Argentina wins record 16th Copa America title, beats Colombia 1-0 after Messi gets hurt

Argentina wins record 16th Copa America title, beats Colombia 1-0 after Messi gets hurt
Argentina defeated Colombia 1-0 in the Copa America final Sunday evening in a match that was delayed more than an hour because of crowd issues, including fans breaching security gates. Hours before Argentina won its record 16th Copa America title, fans got past the gates at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, one of the host sites for the 2026 World Cup.

Argentina wins record 16th Copa America title, beats Colombia 1-0 after Messi gets hurt

Shubman Gill confirms Abhishek Sharma to open with him in first T20 against Zimbabwe

Shubman Gill confirms Abhishek Sharma to open with him in first T20 against Zimbabwe
With the next edition of the T20 World Cup to be hosted by India and Sri Lanka in 2026, the T20Is against Zimbabwe mark the beginning of a new two-year journey for the current world champions in the shortest format.

Shubman Gill confirms Abhishek Sharma to open with him in first T20 against Zimbabwe

Mumbai erupts to celebrate 'Team India festival' with T-20 World Cup victors

Mumbai erupts to celebrate 'Team India festival' with T-20 World Cup victors
Much before the team members landed in a Vistara flight from Delhi, thousands of people had gathered outside the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport (CSMIA), the entire road from the airport to Nariman Point and also the 1.8-km long route to the Wankhede Stadium.

Mumbai erupts to celebrate 'Team India festival' with T-20 World Cup victors

Meeting with PM Modi to the victory parade in Mumbai: Team India's full schedule after arriving home

Meeting with PM Modi to the victory parade in Mumbai: Team India's full schedule after arriving home
The Indian team led by Rohit Sharma will arrive home at Indira Gandhi Internationa Airport (IGI) in New Delhi at 6 am after which they will meet PM Narendra Modi and will depart for Mumbai at 9:30 am.

Meeting with PM Modi to the victory parade in Mumbai: Team India's full schedule after arriving home

Virat Kohli ends T20 career on a high as India wins World Cup

Virat Kohli ends T20 career on a high as India wins World Cup
Captain and fellow opener Rohit Sharma, despite their low-scoring partnerships at the World Cup, insisted throughout that he and Kohli were the first names on the team list. His faith was repaid in the final against South Africa on Saturday, when Kohli led India's batting with 76 from 59 balls in a competitive total of 176-7.

Virat Kohli ends T20 career on a high as India wins World Cup

Top Cats: Panthers win their 1st Stanley Cup, top Oilers 2-1 in Game 7

Top Cats: Panthers win their 1st Stanley Cup, top Oilers 2-1 in Game 7
Aleksander Barkov put his hands at either end of the Stanley Cup and began skating away to start the celebration that the Florida Panthers have wanted forever. And as he began to hoist hockey's chalice for the first time, he had one thought.

Top Cats: Panthers win their 1st Stanley Cup, top Oilers 2-1 in Game 7