JianYang
Registered User
- Sep 29, 2017
- 20,431
- 20,777
I don’t think there is much hockey Canada can do.
20+ years ago a family on the lower middle class range could afford their children to play hockey.
Just to give you an idea, my niece that is around 15 years old and playing high level women hockey in the Ottawa region, her cost for the year is $15 000.
When I played 30 years ago it was probably a thousand including summer hockey school.
I can’t imagine how regular families living in the Vancouver or Toronto area can afford hockey.
Also, you need to look at the demographics we added to Canada the last 20 years, especially the last 10, which are more likely to pick cricket, basketball or soccer.
Hockey as we know it in Canada is forever gone, unless we suddenly start creating $150k for everyone and lower the cost of living.
The changes have already happened. Canada has never been more talented than they are right now in football. They have accomplished certain things that were unthinkable just a decade ago.
Likewise, Canada is producing more NBA level talent than ever before. Jamal Murray just put up over 50 points last week and sga is a legitimate superstar, and that's just the tip of it.
While hockey in canada is in decline, we also need to put things in context. Canada is still #2 in registered hockey players (no longer #1). On the hockey stage, Canada has the 3rd largest population among the elite teams behind usa and Russia. All nations feel similar pinches when it comes to average families trying to afford this game right now.
So in a hockey context, Canada should still be a big player for a long time to come. But the expectation should no longer be that Canada is some huge head over heels favourite going into a tournament.
The gap has been closing big time, and the USA in particular has been putting out almost as good rosters since 1996, and now their roster is finally better, and if we are being honest with ourselves, it was only a matter of time.
I fully expect that it'll get booed, but it'd be ridiculous to. The booing has nothing to do with hockey, or the players on the ice, but some sports fans aren't bright enough to get that.
We will see. Montreal booed the American anthem in 2002 playoffs. Boston fans responded with a standing ovation for the Canadian anthem when the series shifted back there.