Vancouver Sun

Golden memories replaced by dark times for women’s hockey

- STEVE KEATING

Many of Canada’s top women’s hockey players are using golden memories to help them through the dark days as the fight to rebuild a fractured sport drags on with no end in sight.

There were plenty of smiles, embraces and even laughter when members of Canada’s gold medal-winning team from the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics reunited for induction into the Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame on Wednesday, offering a brief distractio­n from the chaos surroundin­g the women’s game.

But beyond the ceremony and a day of reliving happy memories, there has been precious little for women’s hockey to celebrate.

When the Canadian Women’s Hockey League (CWHL) announced in April that it was ceasing operation, it left the future of women’s profession­al hockey in North America in disarray and many of the world’s best players without a club.

Many of those players, including

Marie-philip Poulin, who scored both goals in Canada’s 2-0 win over the U.S. in the 2010 Olympic final, have spent their time barnstormi­ng North America as part of the Dream Gap Tour to raise awareness about efforts to build a sustainabl­e league.

While the sport has enjoyed a steady rise in popularity and competitiv­eness on the Olympic and internatio­nal stages, progress on the domestic front has not kept pace.

The Dream Gap Tour was played in front of supportive and enthusiast­ic but small crowds in community rinks far different from the packed NHL arenas that cheered them on for Olympic gold or even the thousands that turned out for the CWHL’S final game.

In a country where hockey is often compared to religion, it is not a place Poulin expected her sport to be nearly a decade after her Vancouver heroics.

“You want a sport to succeed and 10 years later, where we are at, it is quite sad,” Poulin told Reuters. “We don’t have a league.

“We want to grow the game, we believe in our product, so it is a year that is going to be a trial, it’s not going to be easy. But in the long term it is something we need to do.

“It’s not the journey we were expecting but in the long term we are going to look back and it is going to be worth it.”

Following the demise of the CWHL, which operated six franchises including one in China, the United States based National Women’s Hockey League (NWHL) was left as the only profession­al option in North America. It has just five teams.

With each team working with a salary cap of $150,000 split between rosters of 20-22 players, even the NWHL cannot deliver on the stability and livable wages players are seeking.

In contrast, the average wage of an NHL player runs into the millions.

Believing they had reached a point where they had to take a stand, players announced the formation of the Profession­al Women’s Hockey Players’ Associatio­n (PWHPA) in May with nearly 200 of the game’s best vowing to sit out the current season to support the creation of a viable profession­al league.

“Definitely there is an opportunit­y for a very viable league,” said Melody Davidson, who coached Canada to gold in Vancouver and continues to work for Hockey Canada as head scout for the national team program.

“I think right now everybody is like, ‘what do we want to do here? Does anyone want to take the lead on it? What does it look like?’ “It is going to take some time.” Jayna Hefford, a four-time Olympic gold medallist for Canada who was serving as interim commission­er of the CWHL when in folded, is working in a leadership position with PWHPA and says talks with various stakeholde­rs are ongoing.

“It is uncertain times, but we are making progress and moving forward,” assured Hefford. “It takes time to create change ... But I don’t think anyone knows the timeline.”

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