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For anyone who’s ever met Billy Bridges, the odds they’ve seen him without a smile are about the same as one day winning the lottery.
For the man who holds sledge hockey so close to his heart, it’s no surprise that he’s flashing a grin so often considering how blessed he feels of playing a sport that’s growing quickly from one Canadian coast to the other.
A Summerside, P.E.I., native who moved to Toronto at a young age to get closer to some of the country’s best hospitals, and who travels across the country every year playing and promoting sledge hockey, there’s no one better suited to talk about the game’s growth across Canada than Bridges.
“I feel like sledge hockey has just gotten so big now,” he says. “No matter where we’d go we used start all of our speeches with ‘If you know sledge hockey, raise your hand,’ and no hands would go up. Now we can just ask ‘Who’s seen Tyler McGregor or Brad Bowden on TV?’ and every hand goes up. It’s great. The sport is really raising awareness and it’s awesome.”
He may not live in Atlantic Canada anymore, but Bridges has never forgotten his roots, and has made it one of his goals to head home as often as possible to continue developing the game he loves so much.
With the 2016 World Sledge Hockey Challenge on the ice in Bridgewater, N.S., this week, Bridges is back on his native coast and playing in front of some familiar faces.
“Billy has been absolutely tremendous to the growth of sledge hockey in Nova Scotia,” says Darren Cossar, executive director of Hockey Nova Scotia. “From when we first started, he’s been giving his time to do clinics for beginners and he really demonstrated the sport to the local press. It was impressive for the kids to see him, but also incredible for the public relations and marketing side of things because he’s made a mandate of putting sledge hockey out there.”
With a handful of programs now in place, Nova Scotia is not only forever grateful to Bridges’ commitment to the development of sledge hockey in its area, but the province embraced the opportunity of working with such a passionate character.
“Both the kids and adults in our programs, that’s all they talk about. It’s Billy Bridges all the time,” says Cossar. “He’s made a lasting impression on every person involved in our programs. It’s just a connection he has with people; he’s real, genuine, and humble. You’d never know meeting him and talking to him that he’s one of the best sledge hockey players in the world.”
Whether you consider him one of or simply the best sledge hockey player in the world, his numbers speak for themselves.
Bridges is the all-time leading scorer for Canada’s National Sledge Team, racking up 161 goals and 172 assists in 184 games entering the 2016 World Sledge Hockey Challenge, all since 2004, when sledge hockey became a part of the Hockey Canada program; by that time, he already had six years of national team experience on his résumé.
But the numbers don’t matter to Bridges, and he’s looking forward to being passed on the all-time scoring charts by the new generation of Team Canada. That means the program is thriving, and that’s most important.
Bridges’ competitiveness on the ice is countered by his humbleness off of it, and that’s made him a spokesperson not of his own exploits, but rather about the sport he’s dedicated more than half of his life to.
Always passionate about hockey in general, Bridges’ spina bifida prevented him from playing organized hockey with his able-bodied friends growing up.
But strapping into a sled for the first time at age 12, he quickly made sledge hockey his new passion, and had a national team roster spot just two years later at the tender age of 14, the youngest player ever to make Team Canada.
“My dad played a lot of hockey in P.E.I. growing up, but for me, sledge hockey is something that just wasn’t around until I was 12,” he remembers. “I played with my brother and father every day, all the way up until I made the national team, and it was great. That’s why now it’s just so much fun to raise the awareness and let people know that everyone can play. If you’re disabled, you’re not going to be by yourself.”
Based off his own experience, Bridges is making sure that everyone with (or without) a disability who is interested in playing Canada’s game not only knows about sledge hockey, but has access to it.
After partnering up with Cossar almost a decade ago, Bridges comes to the East Coast on a yearly basis to help his wife – Canada’s National Women’s Team alumna and Olympic gold medallist Sami Jo Small – with her hockey schools, at which they’ve made it a tradition to strap the students into sleds.
When he left P.E.I. all those years ago, never did Bridges think that he’d be one of the faces of a sport, driving its development so close to home, and bringing him a life he never expected.
After finding sledge hockey success on and off the ice, he has all the reason in the world to keep smiling.
CALGARY, Alberta – With less than a month until the puck drops, Hockey Canada has announced the 17 players who will wear the Maple Leaf with Canada’s National Para Hockey Team and compete for a gold medal at the 2025 World Para Hockey Championship, May 24-31 at LECOM Harborcenter in Buffalo, New York.
The roster – two goaltenders, six defencemen and nine forwards - was selected by head coach Russ Herrington (Unionville, ON), assistant coaches Steve Arsenault (Spruce Grove, AB), Mike Fountain (Gravenhurst, ON), Liam Heelis (Georgetown, ON), Boris Rybalka (Vernon, BC) and Greg Westlake (Oakville, ON). Benoit Roy (Sudbury, ON), director of hockey operations, and Adam Janssen (Richmond Hill, ON) , manager of hockey operations, also provided input.
“Entering the World Championship as the defending champions is not something we take lightly,” said Herrington. “We know that every country will bring their best against us. As a group we have continued to grow and develop over the last year, from the Para Cup to the USA series. This roster has a ton of experience on the big stage, and we are excited to get going.”
The roster includes 16 players who helped Canada win a gold medal at the 2024 World Para Hockey Championship in Calgary (Armstrong, Boily, Burnett, Cozzolino, Dixon, Dunn, Halbert, Henry, Hickey, Jacobs-Webb, Kingsmill, Kovacevich, Lavin, Lelièvre, McGregor, Watson) .
Canada will be joined by China, Germany and Korea in Group A, while Group B
features Czechia, Norway, Slovakia and the United States.
Canada opens its preliminary-round schedule on May 24 at 5 p.m. ET/2 p.m. PT
against Germany and will face Korea on May 25 and China on May 27. The
quarterfinals are set for May 28, followed by the semifinals on May 30 and
the medal games on May 31.
All 20 tournament games will be available for free via livestream at USAHockeyTV.com .
Hockey Canada also announced the support staff that will travel to Buffalo:
Canada has captured five gold medals at Para Worlds (2000, 2008, 2013, 2017,
2024), in addition to four silver (2015, 2019, 2021, 2023) and three bronze
(1996, 2009, 2012).
For more information on Hockey Canada and Canada’s National Para Hockey
Team, please visit
HockeyCanada.ca
or follow through social media on
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Being a goaltender is in Mitchell Garrett’s DNA. No matter what sport he plays, he always wants to be the last line of defence.
After playing as a catcher in baseball and a goaltender in soccer growing up, the Surrey, B.C., product began playing hockey at 10 years old.
“My dad grew up as a soccer player,” Garrett says. “Telling him that I wanted to switch into hockey was not necessarily the news he wanted to hear.”
Garrett played between the pipes for 12 years, usually in house league or occasionally in rep. After high school, he continued to play recreationally with some of his minor hockey teammates.
“I remember when my accident happened, it was like a month before the new season started,” the 29-year-old says. “So that was a shock to them hearing that I wasn’t going to be able to play for them ever again.”
On July 29, 2017, Garrett was camping when he decided to take a friend’s ATV for a drive. When he didn’t return, a search party found Garrett had crashed on the side of the road.
He was airlifted to Vancouver General Hospital and diagnosed with a T4 complete spinal cord injury. Despite his prognosis, Garrett progressed quickly and completed rehabilitation within three months.
“It was a really fast process. I remember everybody telling me this is going much faster than what it’s typically supposed to,” he says. “I really wanted to make myself goal-oriented when I was in rehab because I didn’t want to be there. I just wanted to get going in my life, and I knew it was going to be a major change.”
Throughout the entire process, hockey was always on Garrett’s mind.
“I don’t remember my injury at all. I woke up in the hospital and I’m like, ‘Where am I right now?’ [They told me I’m] in the hospital, and I was like, ‘Oh, well I have a playoff game tonight, I need to go play hockey.’”
Now paralyzed from the chest down after his injury, Garrett immediately shifted his focus to how he could get back on the ice and began researching para hockey.
“I studied [Team Canada goaltender] Dom Larocque. I watched every single interview I could find of him,” he explains. “I remember watching it three or four times over and pausing on the on-ice clips, just really analyzing his setup and trying to figure it out for myself. [He] was a huge inspiration.”
More than nine months after his accident, Garrett returned to the ice and got back in net—this time in a sled.
“It was pretty monumental for me getting back to being a goaltender. My parents were there; my dad was on the ice and my mom was watching,” Garrett recalls. “I remember that skate, I just looked like a fish out of water.
“When I got off the ice, my mom was just like, ‘Is this for you? Do you really want to do this? It looks like you’re struggling out there.’ I just told her eventually it will be smooth, and everything will be good.”
Although he was back on the ice, his new reality did present some challenges for playing para hockey. Without the ability to move anything below his chest, it provided some limitations for being a goaltender again.
“[Other goalies] have their entire core to use and they have their legs and
their knees to stand up on. I remember everybody telling me how much of a
disadvantage I was at, [but I] never even consider that a disadvantage for a
second,” he says. “We’re still playing the same game. We’re still going
after the same goal.”
Mitchell with his dad, Ken Garrett.
Garrett set his eyes on his next goal—earning a spot on Canada’s National Para Hockey Team—and got to work. After every ice time, he would look at his sled setup and make adjustments.
“I have a shed at my place and that’s like the tool shed. That’s where all the hard work off the ice goes down, just to ensure I’m in tip-top shape when I’m out there,” he says. “I was consistently tweaking my sled for the longest time; moving it up, moving it down, figuring out where my blades go.”
His home rink, the Langley Sportsplex, provided free ice time so he could practice throughout the year. On the ice, Garrett’s dad Ken joined him to be a shooter for his practices and he became the head coach of British Columbia’s para hockey team.
“I know I wouldn’t be able to do it without him,” Garrett says. “My dad has been an enormous help throughout this entire process, making sure that it’s the most enjoyable for me.”
His hard work on and off the ice began to pay off, and Garrett was invited to participate in his first selection camp with Canada’s National Para Hockey Team ahead of the 2022-23 season.
“It’s always good to have somebody involved that has experience playing the position and the game prior to their accident,” says Russ Herrington, head coach of Canada’s National Para Hockey Team. “That was the one thing that we noticed right away with Mitch was that both glove hands and his ability to track the puck, that was something that transferred over from his previous experience.”
“It didn’t really go as I planned,” Garrett says about selection camp. “To be honest, it wasn’t a great showing for me. I think maybe I was a little starstruck at the camp. [I had never] played with these caliber players and these are players who I’ve wanted to play with for so long.”
After camp concluded, Garrett took the experience to heart and got back to training even harder for his next opportunity.
“I just told myself that I’m starting to trend in the right direction and
just to stay on track and continue what I was doing because I noticed that
it was working for me,” Garrett says.
Corbyn Smith (left) and Mitchell Garrett celebrate after beating Czechia at the 2023 Para Hockey Cup.
When he returned to selection camp in September, his improvements were evident to the coaching staff.
“I think he’s more comfortable in a sled,” Herrington says. “I think he was a little timid [getting to the top of the crease] early on, and now we see him be a little more assertive in his positioning and challenging the shooter.”
After dreaming of making Team Canada for over six years, Garrett finally got the phone call that he would be making his international debut at the 2023 Para Hockey Cup in Quispamsis, New Brunswick.
“That’s one of the best parts of this job is delivering that type of news. We’re really excited to have him here with us,” Herrington says. “Our veterans do such a good job of celebrating opportunities like that because it wasn’t too long ago that they were donning the jersey for the first time.”
“From my family to my friends to my girlfriend, everybody has really played a part in this process,” Garrett says. “That was a really cool moment on the phone (telling my parents I made the team); you could just feel how proud [my dad] was through the phone.
“For my mom, after that first ice time with her being like ‘Is this right for you,’ and then being able to tell her that I made the team—it was a full-circle moment.”
In Quispamsis, Garrett is looking forward to putting on the Maple Leaf for the first time, playing on the international stage and hopefully inspiring more members of the paraplegic community to start playing para hockey.
“I have to hold back my tears every single time I think about it because [playing for Team Canada] is a goal that I’ve had since I was eight,” he says. “Most people consider other sports just because of my disability… I’m very excited to be changing that narrative.”
PARADISE, N.L. – Canada’s National Para Hockey Team finished with the silver medal at the 2019 Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup after a tight 2-1 loss to the United States on Saturday night at the Paradise Double Ice Complex.
It is the seventh silver medal for the Canadians (2009, 2012, January 2016, December 2016, 2017, 2018 2019) to go along with five gold (2007, 2008, April 2011, November 2011, 2013) and one bronze (2015).
“I thought it was an amazing game. The atmosphere was electric and [Paradise] put on a tremendous event,” said Canadian captain Tyler McGregor (Forest, Ont.). “It was a physical and fast game, exactly what we’d expect out of a match-up against the U.S.
“I thought we showed a lot of resilience and a lot of persistence in battling back. We had an unreal third period, so we’re going home proud of the effort we put forth. I think the product on the ice, not only tonight but all week, was outstanding and for our sport that’s exactly what we asked for.”
The Americans struck first midway through the second period and got another six minutes into the third before Billy Bridges (Summerside, P.E.I.) cut the lead to one just over a minute later with his 189th career goal. Despite several late chances, the Canadians couldn’t find the equalizer.
Dominic Larocque (Quebec City, Que.) was terrific in the Canadian goal, finishing with 19 saves in a crowd-pleasing performance.
“This has been an amazing tournament. I never thought I would get the opportunity to represent my country and province in front of my home crowd,” Said Liam Hickey (St. John’s, N.L.). “Knowing how much work my family and friends have put into this, and to see it go off so well, I am honored that Hockey Canada could come here and we could showcase Newfoundland to the whole world.”
Russia blanks Czechs to win bronze
Russia ensured it left the Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup with a medal for the third time in four appearances, earning a 5-0 win over the Czech Republic for bronze. Nikolai Terentev led the way with two goals for the Russians, who also won bronze in 2013 and silver in January 2016. Ilia Volkov, Airat Khamzin and Aleksei Eremin also scored, while Evgenii Plotnikov made nine saves for the shutout
The 2020 Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup will be played in Bridgewater, N.S.
For more information on Hockey Canada, Canada’s National Para Hockey Team and the Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup, please visit HockeyCanada.ca, or follow through social media on Facebook, Twitter, Twitter.com/HC_Para and Twitter.com/HC_ParaCup.
PARADISE, N.L. – Paradise is set to open its doors to the world as four teams go for gold at the 2019 Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup, Dec. 1-7.
The Paradise Double Ice Complex will welcome Canada, the Czech Republic, Russia and the United States. Canada has won the tournament, known as the World Sledge Hockey Challenge until 2017, five times, most recently in 2013, while the U.S. is looking for a sixth-consecutive gold medal.
"It is a very exciting time right now; the rink is rebranded, volunteers are ready and we can't wait to see these amazing athletes provide lasting memories for themselves and the fans,” said Don Dyke, chair of the host organizing committee. “This is an event we haven't seen before, and fans shouldn’t miss the opportunity to see the best of the best on the ice, including our own Liam Hickey playing for Team Canada."
In the past, the event has created more than $1 million in local economic impact, with the net proceeds of the event benefiting local minor and para hockey programs in Paradise and the surrounding area.
Full-event ticket packages are on sale for $69 at HockeyCanada.ca/Tickets. Packages include all six preliminary-round games, both semifinals and the bronze and gold medal games. All preliminary-round games, the semifinals and the bronze medal game will be streamed live at HockeyCanada.ca. The gold medal game will be shown live on TSN, Hockey Canada’s official broadcast partner, on Saturday, Dec. 7 at 6 p.m. AT/2 p.m. PT; check local listings for details.
For more information on Hockey Canada, Canada’s National Para Hockey Team and the Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup, please visit HockeyCanada.ca, or follow through social media on Facebook, Twitter, Twitter.com/HC_Para and Twitter.com/HC_ParaCup.
Just over eight months after its heartbreaking overtime loss to the United States in the gold medal game at the Paralympics, Canada’s National Para Hockey Team gets a new season underway this week at the 2018 Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup.
But the Team Canada that takes the ice in London will look much different than the one that came within 37.8 seconds of a gold medal in PyeongChang.
Six players from the Paralympic roster are gone, taking time away from the game to nurse injuries and explore their options outside of the game, and there are some notable names among the half-dozen.
The list includes captain Greg Westlake, top defencemen Steve Arsenault, Brad Bowden and Adam Dixon, and forwards Ben Delaney and Bryan Sholomicki; those six players combined for 13 goals and 39 points in South Korea, numbers that will not be easily replaced.
But the absences mean opportunity for six Team Canada rookies making their debuts in London, and head coach Ken Babey likes what those players will bring to the ice.
“I think we’re going to be faster, and I think we’re going to have a lot more energy because of the youth, and hopefully that bodes well for us,” Babey says. “We may be inexperienced at times, but overall we’re still the Canadian team that we have been, and over time we’re going to be stronger than ever.”
And it’s not as if the Canadians are lacking firepower or leadership. The top five scorers from the Paralympics – led by Tyler McGregor and Liam Hickey – are back, and there is plenty of veteran know-how to go around.
“I think the veterans are the key,” Babey says. “Coaches can talk and show things, but it’s really the veteran players that do it in a variety of ways, like being friends, socializing, showing it on the ice, explaining things peer-to-peer, and I think that has a more powerful impact than anything else.
“Our guys have done a really good job, and they’ve responded to that and we’ll see this week how we go. The real test is going to be when you get under pressure and get in some battles, and we’ll see how we do. I like our chances and I like the way the guys have come along.”
They have also benefitted from international experience with Canada’s National Para Hockey Development Team. All six new faces – Alexis Auclair, Rod Crane, Cody Dolan, Anton Jacobs-Webb, Micah Kovacevich and Garrett Riley – have played with the development side, and know the expectations that come with wearing the Maple Leaf.
And despite a new-look roster, those expectations haven’t changed.
“If you play hockey for Canada and your goal is anything but trying to win every single game, then you’re not a Canadian hockey player,” says Billy Bridges, who enters his 21st season with the national team as the all-time leader in games played (219), goals, (183), assists (200) and points (383). “We do appreciate that there is a process and that we do have new players, but veteran or rookie, we need to take pride in our effort.”
The 2018-19 season marks the beginning of a new four-year Paralympic cycle, with sights set directly on Beijing and the 2022 Games, so what better time to reimagine Team Canada?
There may be 1,188 days to go until the Opening Ceremony in China, but the work starts now.
“Right from the get-go, we’ve placed an emphasis on the next four years of developing para hockey in Canada and that starts with this team here,” says Bridges. “It’s special to feed off the energy [of the rookies] and redefine the culture on our team. The guys who aren’t with us this year are impossible shoes to fill, and I hope these guys realize that now is the time for them to establish their own identity as players.”
LONDON, Ont. – Looking to build off its Paralympic silver medal, Canada’s National Para Hockey Team will be in London, Ont., for the Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup, Dec. 2-8, 2018.
The Western Fair Sports Centre will host Canada, Korea and the United States – the three para hockey medallists from the 2018 Paralympic Winter Games - as they compete for the gold medal in a tournament that dates back to 2007 as the World Sledge Hockey Challenge. The Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup is one in a series of international tournaments that showcase the best of the world’s para hockey athletes.
The schedule for the tournament includes six preliminary-round games from Dec. 2-7, and the gold medal game on Saturday, Dec. 8. Fans will be able to take advantage of the best pricing option with the full-tournament package, which include all seven games for only $45.
“London is very fortunate to have been chosen to hold the prestigious Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup,” said Todd Sargeant, chair of the local host organizing committee. “The sport has grown since London first hosted in 2011 and the games will be even faster, more fierce and action-packed than before. We believe that this event will increase para hockey interest and the legacy from the tournament will improve the sport locally for the London Blizzard.”
“These athletes are incredibly dedicated to their team and to their sport, and it shows when they get on the ice,” said Scott Smith, president and COO of Hockey Canada. “This tournament is not only a way to showcase the very best in para hockey, but a way to let Canadians see how much the sport positively impacts a community.”
“We are thrilled to have been selected to host the newly-rebranded Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup in London this December,” said Tony Foresi, chair of the Ontario Hockey Federation Board of Directors. “The event will positively impact the community well beyond the games on the ice with revenue used to increase community awareness and make the sport accessible to as many individuals as possible. “It’s absolutely outstanding how the residents of London and surrounding area come out to support these great events, knowing well that they are aiding in the opportunity for youth to participate in the great game of hockey.”
All preliminary games will be streamed live at HockeyCanada.ca, while the gold medal game will be shown on TSN/RDS, Hockey Canada’s official broadcast partners.
For more information on Hockey Canada and Canada’s National Para Hockey Team, please visit HockeyCanada.ca or follow along via social media on Facebook and Twitter.com/HC_ParaCup.
LONDON, Ont. – Hockey Canada will be back in London this December with world-class hockey at the Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup, Dec. 1-8, 2018, at the Western Fair Sports Centre.
In London as part of the Hockey Canada Foundation Gala & Golf, Hockey Canada announced that long-standing partner Canadian Tire has signed on as the title sponsor of what was formerly known as the World Sledge Hockey Challenge – an international para hockey event that brings together Canada’s National Para Hockey Team and three top para hockey nations for a week-long tournament. The newly-branded Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup will debut in London the first week of December.
“Playing on home ice is always exciting, but to know we’ll be here in London, so close to my hometown of Wallacetown, is very special,” said James Dunn, the 17-year-old Paralympic silver-medallist who recorded two goals and five assists over five games at the 2018 Paralympic Winter Games in PyeongChang last March. “This event is one of the most prestigious on the international para hockey calendar, and to have such a great partner as Canadian Tire on board will continue to elevate the event for our team, and for the other nations invited to take part. My teammates and I are looking forward to having London and area hockey fans come out to cheer us on this December.”
London has a history of hosting Hockey Canada events, including this very tournament in 2011 where Canada won gold, as well as the 2008 World Under-17 Hockey Challenge – not to mention a pre-tournament game last December featuring the Canadian squad that eventually became the 2018 IIHF World Junior Championship gold-medallist.
“We are so pleased to host yet another Hockey Canada event with the Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup,” said Mayor Matt Brown. “We are a sports city through and through, and this once again proves that. I am very much looking forward to this event. I know our community will support it in so many ways.”
“Canadian Tire is passionate about hockey, from kids of all abilities getting on the ice for the first time, to our national team playing for gold, and all the families and fans in between,” said Jeffrey Orridge, senior vice-president, community and partnerships, Canadian Tire Corporation. “We are proud to help bring the Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup to London, and look forward to cheering on Team Canada in December.”
As with other Hockey Canada events, London will benefit from the net profits of all ticket sales to the 2018 Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup, which remain in the community as part of the event legacy to help grow the game. Historically, the tournament has brought an economic injection of more than $1 million to the host community.
“Para hockey is growing across the country, and we’re proud of the growth and uptake we’ve seen here in the London community,” said Todd Sargeant, chair of the local host organizing committee of the 2018 Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup. “We know that London will be out in full force to support this event – from sponsors, to volunteers, to fans in the stands. We’re looking forward to bringing a taste of the exciting action we all got to enjoy from these last Paralympic Games to our hockey community of London.”
To learn more about Hockey Canada, Canada’s National Para Hockey Team, and the Canadian Tire Para Hockey Cup, please visit HockeyCanada.ca or follow on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.
About Canadian Tire
Canadian Tire Corporation, Limited, (TSX:CTC.A) (TSX:CTC) or "CTC," is a family of businesses that includes a retail segment, a financial services division and CT REIT. Our retail business is led by Canadian Tire, which was founded in 1922 and provides Canadians with products for life in Canada across its Living, Playing, Fixing, Automotive and Seasonal & Gardening divisions. PartSource and Gas+ are key parts of the Canadian Tire network. The retail segment also includes Mark's, a leading source for casual and industrial wear, and FGL Sports (Sport Chek, Hockey Experts, Sports Experts, National Sports, Intersport, Pro Hockey Life and Atmosphere), which offers the best active wear brands. The approximately 1,700 retail and gasoline outlets are supported and strengthened by our Financial Services division and the tens of thousands of people employed across the Company and its local dealers, franchisees and petroleum retailers. For more information, visit Corp.CanadianTire.ca.
CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I. – Canada’s National Sledge Team finished with silver at the 2017 World Sledge Hockey Challenge after a 3-2 loss to the United States in the gold medal game Saturday night.
In the 11-year history of the tournament, Canada has now won five gold medals, five silver and one bronze.
“Our guys made a valiant effort. Any chances we had, we either missed or [U.S. goaltender Steve] Cash shut us down,” said Team Canada head coach, Ken Babey (Saskatoon, Sask.). “We just got off to a flat start and turned too many pucks over early in the game; it’s a tough thing to do when you’re playing a U.S. team that has good speed and fire power and that was the turning point.”
The United States had taken a three-goal lead before Adam Dixon (Midland, Ont.) connected with Tyler McGregor (Forest, Ont.) to capitalize on a two-man advantage and put Canada on the board midway through the second period.
Liam Hickey (St. John’s, N.L.) added a second Canadian goal off a McGregor set-up with 10 minutes to go in the third to aid in the comeback attempt. Dominic Larocque (Quebec City, Que.) finished with 11 saves in the Canadian goal.
“Anytime you put yourselves down three it’s tough to get back, especially against a team like that,” McGregor said. “We showed a bit of resilience trying to come back. We had a good third, but trying to come from behind the eight-ball like that is pretty tough. It’s frustrating because we know we’re better than that. We certainly have a lot of motivation to get as good as we can and continue building for Korea [and the Paralympic Winter Games].”
Earlier in the day, Korea doubled up Italy 6-3 in the bronze medal game, medalling for the second time in three years.
The four-team tournament provided edge-of-your-seat action for fans taking in 10 games over five days at MacLauchlan Arena. Team Canada immersed itself in the community with local school presentations, visiting the seniors’ active living centre, as well as meet-and-greets with minor hockey teams.
More than 2,800 school kids packed the arena throughout the week to cheer on the athletes through the local school progam. The World Sledge Hockey Challenge will also leave a lasting legacy in the area as proceeds from the event will go back into the community to be re-invested into the growth of sledge hockey.
The World Sledge Hockey Challenge is the latest stop on Team Canada’s road to PyeongChang and the 2018 Paralympics. The tournament follows the three-game series against Korea in Gangneung, South Korea last month. Action continues in February with a two-game series against the United States ahead of the Games.
For more information on the Hockey Canada and Canada’s sledge hockey programs, visit HockeyCanada.ca and follow along via social media at Facebook and Twitter.
Luke Pierce’s year has been a whirlwind, but he wouldn’t have it any other way.
In June, Pierce was relieved of his duties as head coach of the Kootenay Ice of the Western Hockey League. Already signed up to serve as an assistant coach with Canada Red at the 2017 World Under-17 Hockey Challenge, he added more Hockey Canada responsibilities when he joined Canada’s National Sledge Team an assistant.
“The coaching journey is never linear. You never really know where it is going to take you,” Pierce says. “When Shawn [Bullock, senior manager of hockey operations and men’s national teams with Hockey Canada] first threw the idea by me, it was out of left field, but I took some time to talk to some people that have done it.
“Right from day one, it seemed like something I really wanted to do. I think as trying as my time was in Kootenay, this was a great reset button.”
The Merritt, B.C., product has spent eight seasons behind the bench, joining the coaching ranks as soon as he finished his university career with the Royal Military College in 2009.
Pierce was general manager and head coach of his hometown Merritt Centennials of the B.C. Hockey League for six years and head coach of the Ice for two before being replaced after the team was sold this summer.
“I think the greatest part about coaching is constantly learning,” he says. “The moment you stop making mistakes and stop learning is when you are done. I loved my time in Merritt, but it was certainly time to move on. I was fortunate to be given the opportunity in Kootenay.”
Now it’s on to para hockey, and a new challenge – helping get Team Canada ready for the 2018 Paralympic Winter Games.
“This was a cool opportunity and I am excited,” Pierce says. “My timing couldn’t have been better … these guys have been slugging away at this for four years and I got to slide right in at the time when we are headed for glory.”
Pierce will serve as assistant under head coach Ken Babey, who has been with Team Canada since 2015. The 2017 World Sledge Hockey Challenge will be the first time the two have been behind the bench together, but Babey believes Pierce will be a great fit.
“Luke is a former player and a good communicator, passionate about the game and team orientated – those are all things that we are looking for in a coach that works on our staff and our team,” says Babey. “He is also within the age group of some of our players, so I think he can help with bridging the gap in communication and working with the players on an individual basis.”
The learning curve has been steep for Pierce; he has had to absorb a lot in a short period of time to get ready for Charlottetown. Para hockey is especially different from the stand-up game from a tactical perspective, not to mention understanding the personalities of the players, and the culture of the team.
“My biggest concern was if it was a different game, but I have been surprised with how little it does vary. Obviously, there are some things that are different about it, but the game stays the game,” said Pierce.
“I was shocked at how incredible these athletes are and the pace of the game that they play at and their skill level. It has been good for me to try and find new ways to help them because they are already masters at their sport. I am trying to bring little things that we can add to create wrinkles for other teams.”
Pierce also won’t hesitate to lean on his previous international experience; he was an assistant with Canada West at the 2014 World Junior A Challenge in addition to his U17 position this season.
In northern B.C. last month, Pierce helped Red to a silver-medal finish.
“The U17s was a great experience. Short-term tournaments are all about peaking at the right time, staying patient and building towards that final goal,” he says. “For me and this role, I can focus on those little things that might go unnoticed. Ken has a great handle on the rest of the stuff and I will do whatever I can to support so we peak at the right moment.”
And when this para hockey ride is over?
Pierce isn’t sure where he will end up next, but he isn’t too worried. The hockey world is a small one, and when this chapter ends, he’s excited for a new one to begin.
“Right now, this has been a great dose of reality. What these guys have done and what they have overcome is inspiring,” he says. “I am going to enjoy the hell out of this. If something comes along next, which I am sure it will, I will be a bit more grounded.”
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