BusinessMirror

IN HOCKEY, WOMEN ALSO UP IN ARMS

- By Will Graves The Associated Press

PITTSBURGH—Hilary Knight has a gold medal. What she would like is a full-time job. Not just for her. For the other 200-plus members of the Profession­al Women’s Hockey Players’ Associatio­n (PWHPA), too. One that pays all of them well enough to simply go play instead of forcing most to find side gigs just to get by. One that provides adequate medical insurance. One that provides something resembling stability.

At the moment, the forward who scored the first goal for Team USA in the 2018 Olympic gold medal game victory over Canada doesn’t believe such a job exists. It’s why Knight and the rest of the PWHPA announced in May they would not play in North America during the 2019-2020 season, a decision that meant the 30-year-old would be sacrificin­g at least one winter—if not more—of her prime in the pursuit of something resembling equality.

Six months into a self-imposed sabbatical, Knight is equal parts anxious and resolute. Asked how long the PWHPA can hold out and she’s politely blunt.

“I don’t think there’s a set answer to that,” she said. “Obviously, as players, we want to compete. We want to play in a league right now. However, we don’t have a league right now to play in so my answer would be, ‘Yesterday is too long.’ But at the same time, it’s as long as it takes for us to fulfill our needs of finding a sustainabl­e, viable solution.”

At least Knight is keeping busy. She knows that makes her one of the lucky ones.

While the majority of the PWHPA either plays internatio­nally or not at all waiting for a league— preferably one backed by the National Hockey League (NHL)—to materializ­e, Knight and the rest of Team USA and Team Canada began preparatio­ns for the 2019-2020 Rivalry Series by working out last week at the Pittsburgh Penguins’ practice facility. In a way, the training camp, which included a pair of sold-out exhibition­s was a sign the movement the PWHPA started is gaining support.

The two superpower­s decided to get together after the Four Nations Cup in Sweden was canceled when top Swedish players pulled out of national team events due to concerns over salary and working conditions.

The PWHPA members believe there is palpable momentum for change, pointing to the support they received during the first three stops of “The Dream Gap Tour” earlier this fall. The three-day showcases in Toronto, New Hampshire and Chicago included intrasquad games between members of the PWHPA, as well as clinics that allowed them to work alongside the girls they know will one day benefit from the stand the associatio­n is making now.

“I don’t think we knew what to expect after that news that happened in May,” Canadian star Marie Philip Poulin said. “It was a great start and hopefully it’s going to keep going.”

The tour will likely continue in 2020, though the details have yet to be ironed out. Between that and the Rivalry Series—which officially begins in Hartford, Connecticu­t, on December 14—the top Canadian and American players are keeping plenty busy. At least in the short term. What happens after the 2020 World Championsh­ips wrap up in April is uncertain.

“Hockey wise, we’ve been getting what we need to to be ready in the long run [for internatio­nal play],” said Team Canada forward Melodie Daoust. “But we’re not where we want to be, being treated like profession­al or having more hockey games. But the answer to all of that is we’re waiting for the NHL to step in.”

A step the NHL remains reluctant to take with the National Women’s Hockey League still in play. While the Canadian Women’s Hockey League closed after 12 years of operation last spring—due in part to competitio­n with the NWHL for talent—the five-team NWHL is in the midst of its fifth season, soldiering on without the same star power.

“It’s a glorified beer league to me,” said Knight, who won a scoring title with the NWHL’s Boston Pride before moving on to the CHWL. “It’s serving a purpose but it’s not elite talented players that are playing at a high level.”

Asked if the PWHPA can create a league that meets its needs without the NHL’s support, American Kendall Coyne Schofield offers a qualified yes.

“If the NHL’s not going to step in, we could but I think we all have the understand­ing that the NHL would provide the resources that we would want to see in a true profession­al league,” Coyne Schofield said. “We have not seen a legitimate profession­al league to date and we know that the infrastruc­ture that the NHL has, the resources it has, the buildings they have, the staff that they have is something that this game needs. We need to wait and see what they do.”

And they intend to wait however long is necessary. “In terms of the sacrifice players are making, I think you can ask anyone, it’s 100 percent worth it knowing that we’re fighting for something that’s going to last forever,” the 27-year-old Schofield said. “And for me, my clock is ticking, but if I can leave this game better than it was, that’s what’s most important.”

Even if it leads to some potentiall­y messy politics down the road. Though current NWHL players are not “scabs,”—the NWHL does have its own players’ associatio­n—there is a chance one day that the women playing in the NWHL now could one day be competing with members of the PWHPA for roster spots if another league comes to fruition.

“If they’re vibing with what we’re trying to do and our mission, they’re more than welcome to hop into the

PWHPA and join just as any member has joined,” Knight said. “We’ve got a really talented group and we’re trying to carve out a better future. Not having health care and getting paid pennies to go play and call yourself profession­al, that’s not something any of us are interested in. So when people wake up and see the bigger picture, come and join us.”

The PWHPA remains adamant there is an appetite for profession­al women’s sports. The National Basketball Associatio­n (NBA)-backed WNBA recently completed its 23rd season. The National Women’s Soccer League received a significan­t boost last summer while piggybacki­ng off the Women’s World Cup, which led to expanded television coverage. Schofield said the WNBA in particular gives her optimism.

For now, the best players are scattered all over the world, either playing profession­ally overseas or strictly for their national teams or not playing at all, which in a way has added a new wrinkle to the white-hot tug of war between the Americans and the Canadians. Yes, when they pull on their respective sweaters, it’s the same as it ever was. Off the ice, however, there’s a sense of detente for the greater good.

“We’re all fighting for the same cause,” Philip Poulin said. “We’re in it together. It’s so much bigger than the country we’re playing for right now. We’re together. We’re going to keep going. We’re going to go at it and we’re going to work together until it works.”

One of the quieter revolution­s in Philippine colleges and universiti­es in the past two decades has been at Far eastern University (FeU).

To my knowledge, it began with the upgrading of their educationa­l system when former Secretary of education edilberto de Jesus came on board. There was a marked improvemen­t in the educationa­l program, the facilities and the quality of teachers. I should know since my

brother also taught there for quite a number of years. Maybe there were others in between, but I do know that the Racela brothers—nash and Olsen—have also done a great deal for the school and their basketball program.

One of the members of their staff is their life coach—Mr. ed Garcia, who is a batchmate of my father from the Ateneo (Grade School 1954, High School 1958 and College 1962). Since his lengthy

sojourn in the United States, he returned and he is helping out FeU’s sports program.

He recently shared with me a diary that he has put together about the team that he has worked with for the last six years of his life. How he works with the boys as they deal with life, school, big games, wins and losses. He has brought over a simple creed, “players for others”—an adaptation of the creed we try to live by if you went to school in Loyola Heights—“a man for others.”

I recall how years ago, some of the team’s key players figured in a massive fist fight over bullying. There were stories of all sorts of shenanigan­s. They were at most dysfunctio­nal. But having good people in charge has really helped the team and from afar, you have to appreciate this team or even the ones that came in the past.

Going through the outline of their program is impressive from team building sessions to personal pledges to group conversati­ons to name a few. It is good to know that there are objectives in everything that they do from preseason tournament­s to trips out

of the country. These are precious experience­s and wonderful opportunit­ies to learn.

And it is even better to hear how the players have responded to something that is obviously different from what they have experience­d before.

My take on college sports, it has gotten too commercial­ized for everyone’s good. The amateur spirit has died a long time ago. It has also become the playground of the rich and powerful.

So it is good to see some schools that place studies ahead of all; that place emphasis on the first word of the phrase “student-athlete.”

The season might have ended in a manner that they did not want. It is difficult because some will be moving on to the next stage of their lives and careers. But that is why they are being guided to understand life’s lessons. They might have lost one battle in the game of life—and a big one at that. However, it is but one of many they will constantly play for. Now, these Tamaraws will be better prepared for the rest of their days.

 ?? AP ?? HILARY KNIGHT: It’s as long as it takes for us to fulfill our needs of finding a sustainabl­e, viable solution.
AP HILARY KNIGHT: It’s as long as it takes for us to fulfill our needs of finding a sustainabl­e, viable solution.
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