this post was submitted on 09 Feb 2026
60 points (95.5% liked)

Canada

11499 readers
568 users here now

What's going on Canada?



Related Communities


🍁 Meta


🗺️ Provinces / Territories


🏙️ Cities / Local Communities

Sorted alphabetically by city name.


🏒 SportsHockey

Football (NFL): incomplete

Football (CFL): incomplete

Baseball

Basketball

Soccer


💻 Schools / Universities

Sorted by province, then by total full-time enrolment.


💵 Finance, Shopping, Sales


🗣️ Politics


🍁 Social / Culture


Rules

  1. Keep the original title when submitting an article. You can put your own commentary in the body of the post or in the comment section.

Reminder that the rules for lemmy.ca also apply here. See the sidebar on the homepage: lemmy.ca


founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
 

The province has traditionally supplied an average of four Quebec-born players per squad since the National Hockey League began allowing teams to send players to Olympic rosters. In 2010, at the Vancouver Olympics, when Canada won gold, all three goalies were Quebecers: Martin Brodeur, Marc-André Fleury, and Roberto Luongo.

In a historic first, since 1952, Canada’s twenty-five-man hockey delegation won’t have anyone from la belle province, where the game was born, where kids are raised to bask in the memory of Les Glorieux, and where the Montréal Canadiens’ legacy of twenty-four Stanley Cups (the most in the NHL) acts as a unifying force, transcending language and politics.

While the news reverberated across the country, in Quebec it was treated as a national tragedy, prompting hard questions about the province’s ability to produce elite talent. On social media, Montreal journalist Brendan Kelly called the Team Canada roster announcement an “indictment of Hockey Québec,” referring to the provincial body in charge of moulding future national players.

The author of Habs Nation: A People’s History of the Montreal Canadiens, which explores the deep relationship between Montreal’s legendary hockey team and Quebecers, Kelly says he understands why Quebecers are alarmed. “We live for hockey here,” he says. “It’s such an important part of our history, and it’s just fallen off the cliff. And successive Quebec governments have just sort of let it happen.”

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] Gyangrene@piefed.ca 2 points 14 hours ago* (last edited 14 hours ago)

Beat the Swiss 4-0 Saturday, and Czechia 5-1 Monday – our women's team looks better than some of our NHL teams out there. It's making me want to start watching the PWHL and pick up a Spectres jersey!