Missing Olympics still disappointing for Team Canada fan Connor McDavid
This isn't how Connor McDavid expected to watch the Beijing Olympics.
The Edmonton Oilers superstar planned to be on the ice and in the athletes village in China. Instead, he's catching the action from his couch.
“It's always been a dream of mine to play at the Olympics since I was a little kid. So to have that kind of squashed as we were getting close was disappointing,” McDavid told The Canadian Press in a phone interview.
“But just to be able to watch the athletes do their thing and put on a great show from home, it's been a different experience but something I'll still remember. The Olympics are such a special event and any time Canada is over there and participating, I try to support.”
After Oilers games, he comes home to catch whatever event is on. Snowboarding has been a favourite, with some competitions even featuring a familiar face.
McDavid is friends with Mark McMorris, the Canadian snowboarder who slid to bronze in the men's slopestyle. It was the third Olympics in a row the 28-year-old from Regina has won bronze.
“Seeing his performance over the years, it's been really special to watch,” McDavid said. “And he's come home with medals each and every time.”
The hockey phenom is encouraging sports fans to support their favourite Canadian athletes, too. He's partnered with the Cheerios cheer card campaign which allows people to send athletes digital messages of encouragement and celebration throughout the Games.
“It means a lot to have a way for us as athletes to connect with our fans, for them to share their words of encouragement,” McDavid said. “It can really keep us going. It can really keep athletes pushing forward.”
He's also hoping to one day get a chance to feel the same support when he finally takes the ice at the Olympics.
McDavid missed out on the 2018 Pyeongchang Games when the NHL opted not to send players for financial reasons. He was one of three athletes named to Canada's provisional squad for the Beijing Olympics, but the NHL pulled its talent in late December as COVID-19 outbreaks swept through locker rooms across the league.
Team Canada was ousted from the quarterfinals with a 2-0 loss to Sweden on Wednesday. It's the first time in 16 years the men's team has not brought home a medal.
McDavid never expected it would take this long to get a chance to compete for Canada on sport's biggest stage.
“Growing up, NHLers were always at the Olympics,” said the 25-year-old native of Richmond Hill, Ont. “I didn't even realize it could be taken away, that NHL players could stop going to the Olympics. It didn't even cross my mind.”
He's hit milestone after milestone over six NHL seasons, but McDavid remains hungry to wear the Maple Leaf in a best-on-best tournament at the senior level. The closest he's come in recent years was playing for Team North America at the World Cup of Hockey in 2016 on a roster of up-and-coming stars.
While another shot at the Olympics will have to wait until Milano Cortina in 2026, McDavid may get a chance to don a Team Canada sweater sooner than that. NHL commissioner Gary Bettman has said the league is speaking with the NHL Players' Association about reviving the World Cup of Hockey in 2024.
“I like the idea a lot,” McDavid said. “I've definitely been vocal about hockey needing a best-on-best tournament. It's been a long time since we had one. … It's going to be eight years, 10 years since we have our next best-on-best. That's too long of a stretch.”
A best-on-best tournament simply gives players a chance to push themselves, he added.
“It's the best versus the best,” he said. “I think that's what us hockey guys are looking for, something we haven't had for a long time. Just to compete at that high level is what we all want.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 17, 2022.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Parliament on the road to an unprecedented confidence crisis, but there are off-ramps
If no political party is willing to say uncle, the drawn-out stalemate in the House of Commons is heading for an unprecedented situation that could amount to a tacit lack of confidence in the government, without anyone in Parliament casting a vote.
Danielle Smith '1,000 per cent' in favour of ousting Mexico from trilateral trade deal with U.S. and Canada
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says she agrees it could be time to cut Mexico out of the trilateral free trade agreement with Canada and the United States.
Military says more Canadians enlisting as second career amid recruitment struggle
Working on a military truck, within the logistics squadron of CFB Kingston, Private Charlotte Schnubb is elbows deep into an engine with a huge smile on her face.
'We're not the bad boy': Charity pushes back on claims made by 101-year-old widow in $40M will dispute
Centenarian Mary McEachern says she knew what her husband wanted when he died. The problem is, his will says otherwise.
Bela Karolyi, gymnastics coach who mentored Nadia Comaneci and courted controversy, dies at 82
Bela Karolyi, the charismatic if polarizing gymnastics coach who turned young women into champions and the United States into an international power, has died. He was 82.
Trump names fossil fuel executive Chris Wright as energy secretary
U.S. President-elect Donald Trump has selected Chris Wright, a campaign donor and fossil fuel executive, to serve as energy secretary in his upcoming, second administration.
Russia grinds deeper into Ukraine after 1,000 days of grueling war
When Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine in February 2022, the conventional wisdom was that the capital, Kyiv, would soon fall and the rest of the country wouldn't last long against a much larger enemy.
October inflation expected to show mild bump up despite longer-term downward trend
The latest inflation reading due out Tuesday from Statistics Canada is expected to show a slight uptick for the month of October — but economists say the measure is still on a longer-term downward trend.
'A wake-up call': Union voices safety concerns after student nurse stabbed at Vancouver hospital
The BC Nurses Union is calling for change after a student nurse was stabbed by a patient at Vancouver General Hospital Thursday.