Staying in the present
Billy Bridges says he’s focused on this year’s tournament, not last year’s loss
Onward and upward. Billy Bridges said he’s moved on from last year’s 5-2 loss in the gold medal game of the World Sledge Hockey Challenge at MacLauchlan Arena.
“Our coach’s theory has definitely been to have no rearview mirror, that’s wins or losses,” the Summerside native said Wednesday, as he prepared for this year’s event back in Charlottetown for a second straight year.
“We finished the season last year with winning the world championship, so it was nice to get back at them, but we definitely still have something to prove here.”
This year’s four-team tournament starts on Sunday.
Charlottetown has hosted the event three times with Canada winning gold in 2008 and silver in 2009 and 2016. With friends and family in the stands watching, Bridges said winning gold would be great.
“We want to win this real
bad,” he said.
Canada led last year’s final 1-0 after the first period, but the States responded with three goals in the first three minutes of the second stanza and never looked back. They led 5-2 heading to the third and the score would hold up as USA celebrated its third straight challenge
championship.
“They’re such a good team. They were undefeated all last year until the gold medal game (of the world championship where) we beat them 4-1 in the final,” Bridges said. “I think we had something to prove there, and we still do now.”
Team Canada arrives today to get set for the tournament. While the team wants to win the challenge, the 20 players have extra motivation with the 15-player roster for March’s Paralympics in Pyeong-Chang, South Korea, still not finalized.
But it’s more than just scoring three goals in a game to help solidify a spot on the national team, Bridges said. It’s also about being a good team player.
“We don’t have individual heroes,” he said. “We want to create a full team, a deep team that we can play three lines.”
Bridges, 33, has been to four Paralympics, winning gold in 2006, bronze in 2014 and finishing fourth in 2002 and 2010.
“I would to love to have another gold on my chest,” he said. “I know how special that is, how special that team was and how amazing it felt to have that gold.”