The Province

Scoring soldier’s new assignment: The net

After winning bronze as a potent shooter in Sochi, 30-year-old goes between the pipes

- DONNA SPENCER THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES

Puzzled looks and furrowed brows greeted Dominic Larocque when he showed up in goalie gear at a Canadian para ice hockey team camp.

Larocque had just helped Canada win a bronze medal at the 2014 Paralympic Games in Sochi, Russia, with three goals and an assist in five games.

“I didn’t want him to switch to goalie,” his teammate Greg Westlake recalled. “I didn’t like it at first.”

New to coaching the national para hockey team in the fall of 2015, Ken Babey knew Larocque had been a productive forward.

“When you have one of the top six forwards from the Paralympic­s switching to goal, it was kind of like, ‘Uh, I don’t know if you want to do this right now,’ ” Babey said.

But Larocque had secretly craved the responsibi­lity and unforgivin­g nature of the position, even when he was an able-bodied forward for the junior A Valleyfiel­d Braves.

“Since I was a kid, I dreamt to be a goalie,” Larocque said. “When I was a kid, I was centre for 10 to 12 years. After that, I went into the army.”

With the Royal 22nd Regiment, the Van Doos, Larocque lost his left leg in an explosion in Afghanista­n in 2007 when the armoured vehicle he was in rolled over an improvised explosive device.

The 30-year-old from Quebec City came to sledge hockey via Soldier On, a program that links injured Canadian soldiers to sport.

Larocque was the first athlete from the program to become a Winter Paralympia­n. He’s one of 10 veterans from the 2014 para hockey squad taking another run at gold in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea.

The 17-member para ice hockey team is the largest contingent of athletes on Canada’s Paralympic team of 55 also competing in curling, alpine skiing, cross-country skiing, biathlon and snowboardi­ng.

The opening ceremonies are Friday. The Canadian Paralympic Committee says the goal for the team is to increase the number of podium finishes from Sochi, where Canadians won 16 medals (seven gold, two silver, seven bronze).

The team opens the preliminar­y round Saturday versus Sweden.

“For us, we don’t expect anything else than the gold medal,” Larocque

said. “My bronze medal in Sochi was one of my favourite experience­s overall, but we expect gold for sure.”

Larocque was Canada’s starter in the final of the 2017 world championsh­ip in South Korea, which was a test event for the Paralympic­s.

He stopped 12 of 13 shots in Canada’s 4-1 win over the United States. Larocque allowed just three goals in four games and posted three

shutouts in the tournament.

“His progressio­n has been amazing,” Babey said. “He and Corbin Watson, another great goalie, battled it out all last year and Dom got the gold medal game and won that.

“He handled his pressure just like he thought he would, with confidence and calm about him.”

He loves the feeling of being a difference-maker — for better or for

worse — in goal.

“What I love is the feeling of, if you make a mistake, they score a goal,” Larocque said.

“Sometimes, for some reason, you don’t have a lot of chances to score a lot of goals, but if the opposing team can’t score, it gives your team more chances to win by a lucky goal or a shootout. I prefer that to be that guy.”

 ??  ?? Dominic Larocque was one of Canada’s top para ice hockey scorers in Sochi. In Pyeongchan­g, he’ll be a goaltender.
Dominic Larocque was one of Canada’s top para ice hockey scorers in Sochi. In Pyeongchan­g, he’ll be a goaltender.

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