Medicine Hat News

USA Hockey women’s dispute rages on with politician­s involved

- STEPHEN WHYNO

WASHINGTON Pressure is mounting on USA Hockey in its wage dispute with the women’s national team.

On Monday, 16 U.S. senators wrote a letter to executive director Dave Ogrean, urging him to resolve the matter. The message came four days before the start of the women’s world championsh­ip, which players threatened to boycott if significan­t progress was not made toward an agreement.

USA Hockey’s board of directors held a meeting Monday afternoon, but had not emerged with a resolution as of late Monday night. Players said Sunday in a statement that they were hopeful USA Hockey would agree to what was hammered out after 10-plus hours of in-person talks a week ago.

The senators, all Democrats, cited the Ted Stevens Olympic and Amateur Sports Act and told Ogrean he should ensure the team receives “equitable resources.”

They joined a chorus of support that includes unions representi­ng players from the NHL, NBA, NFL and Major League Baseball.

Prominent NHL agent Allan Walsh tweeted Sunday, “Word circulatin­g among NHL players that American players will refuse to play in men’s World Championsh­ips in solidarity with the women.”

The U.S. is the defending champion at the Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Women’s World Championsh­ip, which begins Friday in Michigan.

In negotiatio­ns over the past 15 months, players have asked for a four-year contract that pays them outside the six-month Olympic period. The senators’ letter notes the $6,000 that players earn around the Olympics and USA Hockey’s $3.5 million annual spending on the men’s national team developmen­t program and other discrepanc­ies.

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