Canadian Geographic

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Canada celebrates the 100th anniversar­y of its first Olympic hockey gold medal

- BY STEPHEN SMITH

Canada’s historic golden connection to Antwerp, Belgium

THE KING OF THE BELGIANS hoped Antwerp’s shell-pocked roads would be repaired in time for the summer Games of the VII Olympiad. In place of an athlete or a Greek god, the statue at the stadium when the main event launched in July 1920 depicted a Belgian infantry soldier hurling a grenade. In a city that had been under siege in 1914, then occupied by German troops through to the Armistice in 1918, it’s no surprise that the First World War shadowed every aspect of the 1920 Olympics.

For Canada, the Games got underway prior to the opening ceremony, in April, with the first-ever hockey tournament in Olympic history held at Antwerp’s Palais de Glace. Winning gold 100 years ago, Canada’s team set a standard for Olympic hockey dominance that would last for three more successive Games.

Wearing the maple leaf that year were the Winnipeg Falcons, who had earned their way to the Olympics as national senior amateur champions, having defeated the University of

Canada‘s first Olympic hockey team poses for a photo after claiming gold on Apr. 26, 1920, at the Palais de Glace in Antwerp, Belgium.

Toronto for the Allan Cup in March. Rooted in Manitoba’s Icelandic community, the Falcons had been a fixture of Winnipeg’s hockey landscape for more than a decade. In the spring of 1916, the roster had enlisted, almost to a man, with the Canadian Expedition­ary Force to serve in the infantry on the Western Front or, as in the case of 1920 team captain and future NHL star forward Frank Fredrickso­n, to take to the skies with the Royal Flying Corps. Another Nhler-to-be, defender Bobby Benson, had been shot in the knee on his previous visit to Europe, when he was in the fight in northern France.

The weather had been fair for their nine-day crossing to Liverpool aboard Canadian Pacific’s S.S. Melita. Frank Fredrickso­n managed to cut his head falling out of his bunk on the ship, but he still went on to lead the team in scoring at the Games. The team took light training on the deck — jogging and calistheni­cs — and entertaine­d their fellow passengers with “musical entertainm­ents.”

Along with the hosts, the other teams that gathered in Belgium came from France, Switzerlan­d, Czechoslov­akia, the United States and Sweden. The skilled U.S. squad was Canada’s main challenger. Most of the Swedes, meanwhile, were bandy players (a game where skaters use sticks to direct a ball into a net) who had never seen a competitiv­e hockey game, let alone played in one.

The Palais de Glace in downtown Antwerp was demolished in 2016, but in 1920 it featured a full and energetic orchestra, with room for some 1,500 spectators, many of them accommodat­ed rinkside at café tables.

“Spectators dined and drank as they watched the various nations play hockey,” wrote W.A. Hewitt, who accompanie­d the Falcons and reported on the proceeding­s for several Canadian newspapers. The nets were unconventi­onal — “like a folded gate” — and the rink was narrower than what the Canadians were used to. Still, Hewitt wrote, “The Canadians declare the ice in excellent shape.”

Olympic hockey that year was seven-aside, no substitute­s permitted, and played out over two 20-minute periods rather than three. Under the tournament’s knock-out format, Canada’s road to gold lasted just three games. Having swamped Czechoslov­akia 15-0, they took on the talented Americans next. Soldiers from the local British garrison cheered on the Canadians, while U.S. occupation troops backed their team as the Canadians prevailed 2-0. The next day, they wrapped up the championsh­ip by overwhelmi­ng the plucky Swedes, 12-1. That lone goal against was big news: Canadian goaltender Wally Byron was so shocked to see a puck pass him that he fell to the ice.

After a sombre week spent touring Belgium’s battlefiel­ds, the Canadians returned home, docking on the East Coast in mid-may. Fêted in Montreal and Toronto, the Falcons were welcomed home to Winnipeg with a parade, a banquet and gifts of gold watches. “On the ice as on the battlefiel­d,” a proud editorial asserted, “Canada gets what she goes after.”

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 ??  ?? Despite being part of the summer Games of the VII Olympiad (right), the seven-aside hockey tournament — featuring games with two 20-minute periods — was held at Antwerp‘s Palais de Glace (left) in April.
Despite being part of the summer Games of the VII Olympiad (right), the seven-aside hockey tournament — featuring games with two 20-minute periods — was held at Antwerp‘s Palais de Glace (left) in April.
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