Canada Football Sporting athletics hockey experts Leadership Canada

Fixing hockey culture requires more than just leadership change, experts say

cbc.ca

The resignation of the CEO and board of Hockey Canada in the wake of a sexual assault scandal is not enough to cause meaningful change in the sport's culture, according to hockey commentator Tara Slone.

Slone, the former host of Hometown Hockey and Top of Her Game on Sportsnet, said changing leadership will not accomplish anything if the status quo is upheld.  "I think hockey currently has a built-in culture of entitlement, a built-in culture of misogyny, a built-in culture of secrecy," Slone said. "One of the primary things that I'd like to see shift, and I know that a lot of the sponsors are looking to this, is, to create a culture of enjoyment where hockey is fun and cultivates a good, well-rounded human being, as opposed to just cultivate winners." She said hockey is a very insular culture that is predominantly white.

If hockey is to foster a spirit of inclusion, Slone said, it needs to look for people who have experiences outside the "hockey norm." Slone said Hockey Canada's announcement that an interim board will be appointed to examine the governance of the organization ahead of an election scheduled for Dec.

17 raises questions about how appointments will be made. Wendy MacGregor, an independent safe sport consultant, told CBC Radio's Information Morning that the problem is not limited to hockey.

Related News
(Reuters) -Winger Claudia MacDonald has been recalled to the England team for Saturday's women's Rugby World Cup semi-final against Canada at Auckland's Eden Park after missing the last two matches through injury.
Full face shields could become mandatory for Junior A hockey players by mid-December, according to Hockey Canada.
CALGARY — Hockey Canada says it has become a full signatory to Abuse-Free Sport, the new independent program to prevent and address maltreatment in sport in Canada.
CALGARY — Hockey Canada says it will not collect a participant assessment fee for the upcoming season.
Hockey Canada says it will not collect a participant assessment fee for the upcoming season.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.