The Peterborough Examiner

Field hockey team aiming for Olympics

Women’s team raising funds after losing Own The Podium funding

- NEIL DAVIDSON

The Canadian men’s field hockey team has booked its ticket to the Tokyo Olympics. Now it’s the women’s turn.

Like the men, the women have Ireland standing in their way. But unlike the men, the women will have to win on the road this weekend in Dublin, southern Ireland — after having to raise the money to get there.

The women, ranked 15th in the world, face the eighthrank­ed Irish in a two-legged playoff Saturday and Sunday at Energia Park, former home of the Leinster rugby team.

The Canadians sat out the last six Olympics, last competing in 1992 when they finished seventh in Barcelona.

Having lost their Own The Podium funding, the women have turned to family, friends and supporters to fund their Olympic qualifying journey.

Unable to continue paying coach Gilles Bonnet, Field Hockey Canada gave the South African his notice earlier this year. It was a shock to the women, who credit Bonnet for their rise up the rankings.

But then things got worse. “We also received the news that in order to have our program, we’d have to fund it ourselves ... We really couldn’t believe what we were hearing from our national sporting organizati­on,” said captain Kate Wright, who leads all Canadian women with 222 games played for Team Canada.

The team and its supporters put together a business club, searching to make ends meet. Three anonymous donors stepped forward to pay Bonnet’s

contract through the Ireland series.

“We haven’t received any financial support through Field Hockey Canada this year. In order to run our program, we had to do it ourselves,” said the Kingston-born Wright.

Bad news about a sponsor dropping out affected play in a warmup loss to Belgium as players pondered having to dig into their own pocket to get to Ireland, said Wright.

But an unexpected, anonymous donation of $25,000 filled the void.

“We’d like to hopefully thank that person one day because it allows us to focus on what’s really important in this crucial time period,” said Wright.

On Bonnet’s suggestion, the women moved to Belgium in September 2018 to join club teams. It gave them access to elite coaches and trainers while allowing the Amsterdam-based Bonnet to work with them regularly. The Canadian women get accommodat­ion, some transporta­tion help and are paid a modest amount by their European clubs — partly to play and partly to coach youth teams. They also get Sport Canada’s carding stipend.

Over the last six weeks, they have played 13 exhibition games for Canada, often in back-toback matches to get ready for the qualifying showdown.

The Irish are coached by former New Zealand assistant coach Sean Dancer, a former Australian under-21 player. He took over in April, inheriting a team that turned heads by finishing runner-up at the 2018 World Cup.

While the Canadian women have had to do without a strength and conditioni­ng coach because they can’t afford one, Bonnet says the team has been well-prepared in the leadup to this weekend.

“I think there’s been some excellent excellent work from some unique people, Diane Gillis for one, who stands head and shoulders above everybody else in the last year that has kept this team going and made sure that we are funded to what we need to do to be competitiv­e.”

Gillis is team manager — and Kate Wright’s mother, not to mention a former Canadian internatio­nal long jumper (as Diane Coffey). Mike Gillis, Kate’s father, played 246 NHL games before becoming a player agent and then running the Vancouver Canucks as GM and president of hockey operations from 2008 to 2014.

Wright’s husband, Philip also represente­d Canada in field hockey.

As to his future, Bonnet says he will be moving on immediatel­y after the playoff, calling an end to what he calls a “great project.”

“And that’s OK. I have peace with that ... Post that I have other opportunit­ies, but that’s not important,” said Bonnet, who took over as full-time coach in May 2018. “And I’m not in any discussion­s with Field Hockey Canada about if we’re successful what will that mean. That’s not a discussion on the table.” The Canadian women lost their Own The Podium funding for 2019-20 after receiving $200,000 in 2017-2018 and $75,000 in 2018-2019.

They had received $2,150,000 in the Rio quadrennia­l when they were centralize­d in Vancouver. The men, who qualified for Rio, only got $300,000 although that has been boosted to $1,470,000 ahead of Tokyo.

“Own The Podium, they tend to focus on teams or athletes who have already made it to the podium,” said Wright “Which is great and we support all sports and all athletes, but at the same time it doesn’t give teams like us an opportunit­y to get the podium.”

Field Hockey Canada CEO Susan Ahrens, a former coach and Scottish internatio­nal player who previously served as the organizati­on’s director of hockey developmen­t, says the women go into the weekend on the heels of a preparatio­n program that is “top-five in the world.”

“Of course it’s never enough,” she added. “All of us want to do more. But Field Hockey Canada has given a lot to our national teams and will continue to because they’re an extremely important part of our organizati­on.”

She says an analysis of funding over the last five years showed 70 per cent of funding has gone to both national teams.

According to Field Hockey Canada’s financial statements, the women’s team received $994,536 for the year ending in March 2019.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Canadian women’s field hockey team sat out the last six Olympics, last competing in 1992 when they finished seventh in Barcelona. A win in Dublin will send them back in 2020.
ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS The Canadian women’s field hockey team sat out the last six Olympics, last competing in 1992 when they finished seventh in Barcelona. A win in Dublin will send them back in 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada