A candid line from the casting room of gay hockey drama Heated Rivalry has become the latest flashpoint around the buzzy Max and Crave series, underscoring how frankly the show treats sex and chemistry. In a new interview reported by Deadline, creator Jacob Tierney recalls star Hudson Williams telling him after a chemistry read that another actor was strong, “but Connor felt like he was going to pin me down and f*** me,” a remark that helped seal co-star Connor Storrie’s casting as Ilya Rozanov.
Storrie says he knew “instantly” that Williams should play rival captain Shane Hollander after reading with several contenders, describing an immediate ease between them. Tierney frames the now-viral quote as a shorthand for the mix of threat, attraction and trust he needed in the leads, who spend much of the story locked in a secret, years-long affair that cuts across their on-ice rivalry.
Heated Rivalry adapts Rachel Reid’s queer romance novel about two star players whose professional feud masks a clandestine relationship that stretches over eight years. The six-episode Canadian series premiered 28 November on Crave and Max with a two-episode drop and weekly releases through 26 December. Coverage of the show and cast has highlighted how many explicit scenes survived the jump from page to screen; Teen Vogue reported that Tierney aimed for three sex scenes per episode, while PinkNews notes that he managed to keep nearly all of the book’s encounters.
Williams and Storrie have leaned into that reputation while stressing the guardrails around it. At the series premiere they said there were “no boundaries” between them on set, then quickly pointed to the presence of an intimacy coordinator and a habit of checking in mid-take — “You good? You comfortable?” — during the most explicit scenes. Tierney and the actors describe those scenes as central to character building, arguing that the lovers learn each other’s rhythms and vulnerabilities through sex, with careful attention to consent and safe-sex practices baked into both the script and the shoot.
Audience and critical reaction has split along familiar lines. Queer outlets and romance readers praise the adaptation for honoring the novel’s erotic charge and for centering gay joy in a hyper-masculine sport, while mainstream reviewers at sites like Decider fault the premiere for leaning on physical encounters at the expense of emotional texture and call the show closer to softcore drama than to prestige romance.
Other coverage describes Heated Rivalry as a “controversial” new entry in the sports-TV boom that arrives amid ongoing debates inside hockey about LGBTQ+ inclusion. For Tierney and his leads, the blunt audition quote now circulating on social media has become a tidy origin story for a project that treats desire as the engine of both narrative and performance.





















































