Connor Storrie and Hudson Williams are heading into the last two episodes of Heated Rivalry’s six-episode first season with a problem most breakout leads would happily take: a weekly torrent of fan posts, theories, and questions that drift from the show into their personal lives. In an interview with Deadline, the co-stars joked that filming the series’ sex scenes felt easier than shooting the hockey action, a comparison that fits a production built on two kinds of choreography.
That attention has also revived a familiar celebrity side plot: speculation about an actor’s sexuality. Series creator Jacob Tierney has pushed back in multiple interviews, arguing that there is no reason the actors’ private identities need to be public. “You can’t ask questions like that when you’re casting… It’s actually against the law,” Tierney said, describing the limits on what productions can ask and the weight he put on commitment, preparation, and chemistry.
Produced for Canada’s Crave and released internationally on HBO Max, the series adapts Rachel Reid’s romance novels about rival pro hockey players Shane Hollander and Ilya Rozanov, whose on-ice feud doubles as cover for a long-running relationship. The project premiered with two episodes on Nov. 28 and is releasing weekly on Fridays through the Dec. 26 finale, after Warner Bros. Discovery secured HBO Max rights in the U.S. and Australia.
With Episode 4 now out, the leads are already managing expectations for the ending. In a conversation with TheWrap, Storrie said, “we do the book through and through,” then added, “There’s no rug-pulls,” as the series moves toward its endpoint. Williams, in the same interview, framed the “rivalry” as something the characters understand the media wants to sell, even when it fails to match how the two men see each other.
The explicit intimacy that has fueled much of the show’s buzz has also drawn attention to craft. Intimacy coordinator Chala Hunter has described using controlled “simulation,” including anchor points “just above” the body’s most sensitive areas, plus padding and garments that protect performers. Tierney has framed sex as character work, saying it is “how these two characters get to know each other.”
The conversation lands in a sports world still marked by silence around men’s hockey. Observers point to women’s hockey, which has produced visible queer couples, while the men’s NHL has yet to see an openly gay player.





















































