Medicine Hat News

Eager to unite the country

Canada’s sports organizati­ons ready to rebound when pandemic passes

- JOHN CHIDLEY-HILL

Tom Renney remembers exactly where he was during the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

It was the first time the New York Rangers had ever held their training camp in Manhattan. Renney, who was entering his second season as the team’s director of player personnel, was at Madison Square Garden as players checked in for their physicals when the first plane struck the World Trade Centre.

The spectre of 9/11 still haunted New York City four years later when Renney began his first training camp as the Rangers’ head coach. Sensing that the Rangers could be a rallying point for a hurting city, Renney told his team that they had to play the 2005-06 season for the fans.

“You know what? We owe this city and we owe the New York Rangers fans everything we have,” Renney recalls. “This is not about hockey, this is about allowing a city that supports us like nobody else the chance to feel good, and feel like there’s a rebound and feel like there’s something that they can feel good about.

“I said, that is our responsibi­lity and our obligation to the Rangers fan. And quite honestly, you know, the National Hockey League.”

That season the Rangers became the first team to do a post-game stick salute to thank their fans, a practice that is now common around the NHL. Renney led the team to a third-place finish in the Atlantic Division and New York’s first playoff berth since 1997.

Renney is now the chief executive officer for Hockey Canada and although he doesn’t know when profession­al or amateur sports will return, he says that like his time with the Rangers, they will play a critical role in healing the country when the COVID-19 pandemic ends.

“I believe Canadians are very resilient people. I think the hockey community is a resilient group, not just those that play it, but those that love watching it,” said Renney. “When the time is right, I think our participan­ts and volunteers across the country will relish the role in leading Canada back to normal.”

Hockey, like all elite sports, is on hold as officials do their bit to help stop the spread of the COVID-19 virus. The NHL has paused its season and the Memorial Cup, Canada’s national major junior championsh­ip, was cancelled along with the Canadian Hockey League’s playoffs.

There’s no telling when the NHL, NBA, Major League Baseball, CFL or any other profession­al sport will return. But like Renney, Golf Canada CEO Laurence Applebaum says his sport will be ready to unite Canadians when restrictio­ns on public gatherings are lifted.

Also like Renney, Applebaum has seen firsthand how sports can bring a community together after a tragedy.

Applebaum was the vice president of Salomon Canada, a sports equipment manufactur­er, a decade ago and was in Vancouver for the 2010 Winter Olympics. He remembers a literal and figurative cloud hovering over Vancouver after Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritash­vili was killed during a training run hours before the Games opening ceremony.

“The sport community came together to mourn him and the weather changed and it ended up evolving into an incredible celebratio­n of sport and humankind coming together,” said Applebaum. “So my prevailing theory is the sun will rise again (when the pandemic is over).

“And golf, golf will rise again and return to being an incredible part of our lives. It’s just going to take some time.”

 ?? CP PHOTO / FRANK GUNN ?? Hockey Canada CEO Tom Renney speaks at the unveiling of Team Canada’s Olympic hockey jersey during an event in Toronto on Wednesday Nov. 1, 2017. Tom Renney, now the chief executive officer for Hockey Canada, was director of player personnel for the New York Rangers when the Sept. 11, 2001 attack on the World Trade Center happened.
CP PHOTO / FRANK GUNN Hockey Canada CEO Tom Renney speaks at the unveiling of Team Canada’s Olympic hockey jersey during an event in Toronto on Wednesday Nov. 1, 2017. Tom Renney, now the chief executive officer for Hockey Canada, was director of player personnel for the New York Rangers when the Sept. 11, 2001 attack on the World Trade Center happened.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada