2010 controversy changed women’s hockey, but Canada, U.S. still out front
ESPOO, Finland — The hand-wringing over women’s hockey in 2010 changed the game in ways not easily measured because Canada and the United States keep moving the goalposts for the rest of the world.
When the U.S. and Canada outscored their opposition by a combined 88-4 in the 2010 Winter Olympics, then-International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge said “we cannot continue without improvement.”
Where the International Ice Hockey Federation’s CDN$2.1 million investment in female hockey in the four years after 2010 is most evident is in the churn among countries ranked third to 10th in the world.
The North American hockey fan might shrug at this year’s relegation of 2006 Olympic silver medallist Sweden for the first time in women’s world championship history.