National Post (National Edition)

OHL’s zero-tolerance policy having its desired effect

Hard stance took aim at hazing, abuse

- John Chidley-hill

Eric Wellwood and Jeff Kryzakos can’t believe the difference a decade has made in the Ontario Hockey League.

Both played in the major junior league in the mid2000s, when they say hazing and verbal abuse were prevalent in OHL locker rooms. Now, as coaches, they feel that kind of toxic behaviour has been practicall­y erased.

“It’s completely different. It’s mind-boggling to me the progressio­n that the league has made in such a short time,” Wellwood, the head coach of the Flint Firebirds, said Tuesday. “The last time I played in this league was the end of the 2010 season and now we’re in to 2018 and the changes are astronomic­al.”

Kryzakos agrees that although there was hazing in the OHL when he was a player, the league has evolved in many ways.

“Did it go on? Absolutely. Was it a part of the culture in the OHL previously? Yeah,” said Kryzakos, an assistant coach with the Mississaug­a Steelheads. “But it’s not now and hasn’t been for a long long time. I really give the league and commission­er Dave Branch credit.

“I don’t know that there’s a more progressiv­e league in the world, not just when it comes to hazing but head hits, fighting, all that stuff.”

As players, both Wellwood and Kryzakos were close to people who say they experience­d extreme forms of hazing. Kryzakos is close friends with Dan Carcillo, and a former teammate of Dave Pszenyczny and Charles Amodeo. Those three came forward in late November, alleging that the Sarnia Sting in the early 2000s had a toxic culture of physical and emotional abuse.

Wellwood made his OHL debut for the Windsor Spitfires in the 2006-07 season, two years after the team was rocked by a hazing controvers­y that saw Moe Mantha given a one-year suspension as general manager and 25 games as coach for an incident involving several of his players. A new ownership group had taken over the Windsor franchise by the time Wellwood joined the team and had worked to wipe out the hazing culture.

In response to a complaint filed by Carcillo in 2003 and the Spitfires controvers­y, the OHL’s board of governors developed the OHL Enforcemen­t Program in 2009, designed to attempt to eliminate hazing and impose penalties if violations occur.

“Players don’t even think about doing the actions that, maybe in the past, guys were getting away with,” said Wellwood. “There are all these educationa­l programs that the OHL has put in place. The league has taken the initiative to clean that culture up and I think they’ve done a fantastic job of taking it from where it was to where it is now.”

The OHL’s zero-tolerance policy toward hazing and abuse includes mandatory annual seminars. All players must acknowledg­e in writing every year that they understand the OHL’s policy and are encouraged to bring any concerns forward.

Additional­ly, the OHL introduced a mental health program in 2014, in partnershi­p with the Canadian Mental Health Associatio­n, designed to educate players on the importance of talking about issues and recognizin­g signs of struggle among their peers.

“Our guys go through so much training now that I never went through as a player,” said Kryzakos, who played for the Owen Sound Attack between 2005 and 2006. “Mental health, respect toward women. The attempts to make better people, not hockey players, but better people, by the league are endless.”

Both coaches believe that broader societal changes have helped change hockey culture as well. Homophobic or other derogatory words that were once commonplac­e are now frowned upon by the players even before they participat­e in leaguemand­ated anti-bullying workshops.

“The kids are a part of the new society, they didn’t grow up with what we grew up with, the way people talked,” said Wellwood. “Any coach nowadays has to have an understand­ing of how these kids are being brought up.” staying with the New York Yankees, J.A. Happ would like to see Manny Machado join him in the Bronx.

“You get any kind of player like that on a team, that wouldbeexc­iting,”thepitcher said Thursday, three days after finalizing a US$34-million, two-year contract.

Machado, one of the top free agents along with Bryce Harper this off-season, visited the Yankees on Wednesday. New York’s level of interest in him is unclear, though the Yankees say they hope to add an infielder while shortstop Didi Gregorius recovers from Tommy John surgery.

Pitching was a priority and the Yankees kept Happ after failing to sign free agent Patrick Corbin.

A first-time all-star, Happ was acquired from Toronto on July 26 as a summer rental and went 7-0 with a 2.69 ERA in 11 starts for New York. He finished 17-6 with a 3.65 ERA for the season. He lost at Boston in the AL Division Series opener, allowing five runs in two innings — including J.D. Martinez’s three-run homer in the first.

“The body of work is maybe more indicative of the type of player you are. I certainly

MIND-BOGGLING TO ME THE PROGRESSIO­N (MADE).

 ?? JIM McISAAC / GETTY IMAGES ?? After being traded from Toronto in late July, J.A. Happ went 7-0 in pinstripes with a 2.69 earned run average.
JIM McISAAC / GETTY IMAGES After being traded from Toronto in late July, J.A. Happ went 7-0 in pinstripes with a 2.69 earned run average.

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