Follow ice hockey at work
Sport Spreadsheet follows live ice hockey — the NHL — as scores, period-by-period lines and the standings inside a spreadsheet that reads as work. A boss key hides it in one keystroke.
The NHL packs 82 games a team into a long winter season, so there's hockey almost every night — and for fans watching from another time zone, or catching an afternoon matinee, the puck drops squarely in the working day. Here's how to keep up with the scores and the standings from your desk without a bright rink on your screen.
Why ice hockey is hard to follow at work
A nightly league with back-to-backs and a coast-to-coast schedule means an early-evening puck drop in the east is the afternoon out west and deep in the workday for European fans. Following a tight third period usually means a live stream — the most conspicuous thing on an office monitor — where a table of scores and points reads as ordinary work.
Ice Hockey we cover
| Competition | Region | Coverage |
|---|---|---|
| National Hockey League | USA | Live |
What you can follow
Live scores and the period-by-period line, plus the divisional and wild-card standings — points, games played, and the race for the playoffs — laid out as rows in the grid rather than a broadcast.
Guides by competition
The numbers, explained
Questions
- Can I follow the NHL at work?
- Yes — live NHL scores, the period-by-period line and the standings, each as a sheet tab that reads as a data dashboard, with a one-key boss button.
- Does the score update live?
- Yes — scores and the standings refresh automatically while a game is on, and a changed score flashes like a recalculated cell.
Open the spreadsheet
Today's ice hockey fixtures and the live table are one quiet tab away. Free, instant, no account.