Puck clean-up duty is in the glue that binds Canadian women’s hockey team
ESPOO, Finland — Tradition and ritual are building blocks in a hockey team’s culture.
Almost three decades after the first women’s world hockey championship in Ottawa, certain rites are ingrained in the Canadian team.
Pushing your chairs back under the table after a meal and uniformly tucking your helmet under the same arm as your teammates while standing on the blue-line is just what you do.
So is picking up the pucks in and around the net and putting them in the bucket at the end of every pre-game warmup.