Arab Times

NHL to inspect ’18 facilities, participat­ion is still in doubt

Browne takes aim at being role model

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WASHINGTON, Oct 25, (RTRS): National Hockey League (NHL) officials are visiting South Korea this week to inspect facilities for the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Olympics amid continuing uncertaint­y over the participat­ion of the league’s top players at the Winter Games.

Pyeongchan­g organizers (POCOG) released an itinerary on Tuesday detailing the visit of the group, which includes Lynn White, the NHL’s Group Vice-President of Internatio­nal Strategy, and Senior Director of Facilities Operations Dan Craig.

Sandra Monteiro and Matthieu Schneider of the NHL’s Players’ Associatio­n, as well as officials from the Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation, are also part of the group.

The officials will inspect the Kwandong Hockey Centre and the Gangneung Hockey Centre on Wednesday.

A decision on player participat­ion is expected before the end of this year.

Discussion­s over player participat­ion hit a roadblock last month after NHL deputy commission­er Bill Daly said the chances of the league shutting down to allow players to compete at the Olympics in the middle of the season were “dim”.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) says it is no longer willing to cover insurance and travel costs for NHL players, which have been widely estimated at around $10 million.

When ice hockey player Harrison Browne asked his profession­al league to change his name in his official player profile, to Harrison from Hailey, he did not suspect what a big moment it was.

“I didn’t know that I was making history when I did it,” said Browne, who according to advocates is the first openly transgende­r athlete on a US profession­al sports team.

Now, the 23-year-old says he will put to use his fame, acquired after his name change became public this month, to inspire and encourage transgende­r people at a time when the United States is politicall­y divided over their rights.

Becoming a public figure could have been unnerving, but Browne said his employer, the National Women’s Hockey League (NWHL), offered “unconditio­nal support.”

He plays for the Buffalo, New York Beauts. The NWHL this month quietly updated his online profile, replacing references to Hailey and calling the left-wing forward ‘he’ rather than ‘she.’

Since then, Browne has published online videos on YouTube to talk about coming out as a transgende­r man.

“I thought I had to give up the sport in order to transition, but apparently I don’t,” he says in one video.

Videos by other people about transgende­rs and transition­ing helped him make sense of his gender identity as a teen, he said.

“Maybe there’s a 13- or 14-yearold that was in my shoes who is watching my videos and seeing my success in the league,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“They could look at me and say, ‘Wow he did it, so you know what I just got to keep fighting,’” he said.

Studies show high rates of depression and suicide among transgende­r people. In 2011, one study by two US advocacy group found 41 percent of transgende­r and gender non-conforming people said they had attempted suicide.

“I had dark times when I was younger,” Browne said. “I wouldn’t have imagined the way that I am right now, out publicly.”

His official name change prompted the women’s profession­al hockey league to begin crafting a policy for inclusion of transgende­r people.

The league was establishe­d last year and has four teams — the Buffalo Beauts, Boston Pride, New York Riveters and Connecticu­t Whale.

Browne, a Canadian native, has not undergone medical treatment to change to a male body because that could keep him from playing for the women’s league, he said.

This year, duathlon athlete Chris Mosier became the first openly transgende­r athlete to compete on a US national team in an internatio­nal biking and running championsh­ip.

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