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Toledo Walleye Roll Out the Cobalt Carpet: A Celebration Fit for Champions
When the Toledo Walleye talk about rolling out the carpet for their fans — and for their players — they mean it literally. The Walleye organization recently unveiled a striking cobalt blue carpet for their players’ entrance onto the ice at Huntington Center, transforming the pre-game ritual into a moment of pure theatrical celebration. The bold display, shared on the team’s official Facebook page, quickly captured the attention of the Fish Pond faithful and hockey fans across the ECHL.
“The cobalt carpet wasn’t just a decoration — it was a statement. Toledo is here, Toledo is proud, and Toledo is ready to compete for the Kelly Cup.”
What Is the Cobalt Carpet?
The cobalt carpet is a vivid, team-colored blue carpet rolled out directly onto — or leading to — the ice surface at Huntington Center in downtown Toledo, Ohio. Matching the Walleye’s signature team colors of blue, gold, and white, the carpet serves as a dramatic runway for players as they make their entrance before a game or celebration. Think of it as hockey’s answer to Hollywood’s red carpet, but bolder, colder, and quintessentially Toledo.
The tradition builds on the Walleye’s well-established “Blue Carpet” walk culture, where fans line Madison Plaza at the Madison Street entrance to Huntington Center — sometimes as early as 4:15 p.m. — to cheer players as they arrive before puck drop. Photos and autographs are part of the fan experience, making it one of the more intimate and electrifying pre-game rituals in minor league hockey.
The Moment: Players Take the Ice in Style
The cobalt carpet entrance was more than just a visual flourish. It marked a moment of collective pride for a franchise that has consistently been one of the ECHL’s premier organizations. As players skated or stepped across the lush cobalt blue carpet and onto the ice, the scene underscored what the Toledo Walleye represent: excellence, community, and championship-caliber hockey year after year.
The imagery, documented and shared on the team’s official Facebook post, resonated immediately with fans — a single frame communicating the weight of the season’s accomplishments and the excitement of what lies ahead in the 2026 Kelly Cup Playoffs.
A Season Worth Celebrating: 10 Consecutive Playoff Berths
The cobalt carpet celebration takes on even more meaning when placed in the context of the 2025-26 season. In late March 2026, the Toledo Walleye clinched a berth in the Kelly Cup Playoffs for the 10th consecutive season — a remarkable streak of sustained excellence that dates back to the 2014-15 season (excluding the COVID-cancelled 2019-20 campaign and the 2020-21 season in which the Walleye did not participate).
The Walleye punched their ticket in dramatic fashion: needing overtime and an outside assist from the Iowa Heartlanders — who defeated the Cincinnati Cyclones in regulation — Toledo sealed their postseason fate. Despite falling 4-3 in overtime to the Bloomington Bison, the Walleye had done enough. Goals from Tanner Kelly, Colin Swoyer, and Garrett Van Wyhe helped fuel a stunning three-goal comeback from a 3-0 deficit before the final buzzer, showcasing the never-say-die character that defines this team.
A Legacy of Excellence at Huntington Center
Toledo’s hockey story is one of the richest in the ECHL. After years as the Toledo Storm — a franchise that captured back-to-back Riley Cup championships in 1993 and 1994 — the team was reborn as the Walleye in 2009 and quickly established itself as a powerhouse at the ECHL level. Since returning to play at Huntington Center in downtown Toledo, the Walleye have earned the Brabham Cup (regular season title) multiple times and reached the Kelly Cup Finals in 2019, 2022, and most recently in 2025, where they fell 4-1 to the Trois-Rivières Lions.
Over the past five seasons alone, the Walleye have posted a staggering 40-6-2 record against Central Division opponents, cementing their status as the benchmark franchise in their division. The team’s NHL and AHL affiliations with the Detroit Red Wings and Grand Rapids Griffins have further strengthened the pipeline of talent flowing through Toledo.
What the Cobalt Carpet Means to Toledo
For Toledo sports fans, the cobalt carpet is more than a prop — it’s a symbol. In a city that has embraced its Walleye with ferocious loyalty, the cobalt carpet represents the franchise’s unapologetic belief in itself and in the community it represents. It signals playoff hockey is back, that the Huntington Center will once again roar with the energy of a fanbase that knows what this team is capable of.
The Walleye’s first two home games of the 2026 Kelly Cup Playoffs are scheduled for Thursday, April 23 and Saturday, April 25 at Huntington Center. Fans looking to extend the celebration can also attend watch parties at Hensville Park and Fifth Third Field, where massive viewing screens, food, beverages, and the Pond Patrol await.
Looking Ahead: Can the Walleye Finally Hoist the Kelly Cup?
With three Kelly Cup Finals appearances in seven years and a roster that has continued to reload and compete at the highest level, the question for Toledo is no longer whether they can get there — it’s whether this is finally the year they bring the Cup home. The cobalt carpet entrance was a fitting declaration of intent: the Walleye are dressed, ready, and walking into the 2026 playoffs with championship expectations.
The Fish Pond is loud. The carpet is cobalt. And Toledo hockey is alive.










