Congrats to alternate captain @katbt617, head coach @TroyRyanHockey, assistant coach @KoriCheverie, and athletic therapist Danielle McNally who represented our province so proudly on the Olympic stage.
Millions of Canadians tuned in coast-to-coast, in what is sure to be one of the most watched hockey games in history.
One of them at ‘Big Leagues’ in Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia, just minutes from where Crosby and Nathan MacKinnon grew up playing.
Cole Harbour MLA Leah Martin was also in attendance, and said it was a celebration.
“We are so excited to be here, with our whole community coming out to celebrate. We could not be more proud to be from Cole Harbour. We’re gritty, tough and resilient,” said Martin during the game.
Big Leagues in Cole Harbour during the gold medal game between Canada and the U.S. (Caitlin Snow photo)
The flag bearers for the Milano Cortina 2026 closing ceremonies have been chosen for Team Canada.
The Canadian Olympic Committee has named Olympic champions Steven Dubois and Valérie Maltais.
Milano Cortina 2026 is the second Olympic appearance for Dubois and the fifth for Maltais. Dubois won short track speed skating gold in the men’s 500m and silver in the mixed team relay. Maltais won three medals in long track speed skating – gold in the women’s team pursuit and bronze medals in the women’s 1500m and 3000m races.
For Dubois, the Olympic title won in the men’s 500m at Milano Cortina came after a difficult start to the season, suffering a hip injury and returning to training just weeks before the opening stop of the ISU World Tour in Montreal. The perseverance and determination that Dubois displayed throughout the season and throughout the Games were rewarded with two medals at Milano Cortina, making him a five-time Olympic medallist.
“I came into these Games and really wanted to enjoy the experience and bathe in the Olympic spirit. There is no better way to enjoy and experience this than being the flag bearer for your country. This is a bonus, and it means a lot; it’s the cherry on top to represent every Canadian athlete who has worked so hard to get here,” stated Dubois.
Maltais’ bronze in the women’s 3000m was Team Canada’s first medal won at Milano Cortina 2026. Her success continued with gold in the women’s team pursuit and bronze in the 1500m, her first medal at that distance. Maltais is now a five-time Olympic medallist, with medals in both long track and short track speed skating.
She is one of only three five-time Olympians on the Canadian Olympic Team for Milano Cortina 2026.
“I’m really proud, and I’m accepting this role really humbly because I know there are so many great athletes on this team. I think my Games were more than what I expected, and I celebrated every medal, every moment. I feel that I did this with all of Canada, the crowds and my family who were in the stands,” Maltais expressed.
The President of the Canadian Olympic Committee and also a four-time Olympian, Tricia Smith, said this will be a celebration of the unique and amazing journeys of all of the athletes.
“Steven and Valérie have been shining stars at these Games, both on and off the ice. Not only through their electrifying gold medal-winning races, but also their resilience and positivity throughout the Games,” Smith added.
Canada’s got two more short-track speed skating medals.
Steven Dubois won gold in the men’s 500 metre event at the Winter Olympics in Milan.
The women’s short-track relay team of Moncton, New Brunswick’s Courtney Sarault, along with Kim Boutin, Danae Blais and Florence Brunelle took third in the 3000 metres.
It’s Sarault’s fourth medal of the games, the most ever at a single Olympics for a short track speedskater.
Canada now has 14 medals in Milan, four gold, four silver and six bronze.
TEAM CANADA ON THE PODIUM 🤩 Women’s 3000m Short Track Relay claims 🥉 at Milano Cortina 2026! 🇨🇦✨ https://t.co/04a4TDI71e
Canada’s Meg Oldham has taken us to our second gold medal of the Olympic games in Milan.
She stood at the top of the podium on Monday for women’s big air ski.
She landed in second place after her first run with 91.75 points and pushed into the lead after her second got her 89 points. No one could touch her 180.75 total, so by the third run, it was a victory lap, according to the Team Canada Olympic page.
Oldham also won bronze in slopestyle skiing earlier in the games.
Speed skating
And Courtney Sarault has done it again, too.
The Moncton, N.B., speed skater took the silver medal in the 1000 metre short track speed skating competition Monday morning.
She also placed second in the mixed relay and bronze in women’s 500 metre, and becomes Canada’s first tiple medallist of the games, according to the Team Canada website.
Team Canada’s Courtney Sarault celebrates after winning a bronze medal in 500m finals at the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter competes in SPORT at the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games in Italy on Thursday, February 12, 2026. Photo by Leah Hennel/COC
Overall, Canada has 10 medals now. That is one gold, four silver, and five bronze.
We have one more shot at a medal Monday in figure skating.
Canada has earned their first gold medal of the 2026 Olympic games, courtesy of Mikaël Kingsbury in the men’s dual moguls.
In Milan on Sunday, Kingsbury beat one of his longtime rivals, Ikuma Horishima of Japan, in the final battle for the gold medal, according to the Team Canada Olympic website.
Kingsbury, hailing from Quebec, also has a silver medal in men’s moguls from Milan.
He has been a major force in the event for years, winning silver in Beijing in 2022, Gold in PyeongChang in 2018, and silver at the 2014 Sochi games.
Our new total is nine medals, with the one gold, three silver, and five bronze.
There are lots of medal chances Sunday with ski jumping, speed skating, skeleton, biathlon, snowboarding, and alpine skiing.
Team Canada has added another to their Olympic total.
Laurent Dubreuil took home the bronze medal in the men’s 500 metre speed skating competition.
That brings our medal total to eight so far, with three silver, and five bronze.
In the same bout, Canada’s Anders Johnson placed 16th and Cedrick Brunet came 23rd.
Dubreuil, from Quebec, broke the Olympic record with 34.26 seconds, before the silver medalist, Jenning de Boo from the Netherlands, clocked 33.88 seconds. And the American, Jordan Stolz, also beat that time for the gold medal, setting another Olympic record of 33.77 seconds, according to Team Canada’s Olympic web page.
Across the country, Canadians are still waiting for that first gold on the podium.
We have more chances to medal coming up Saturday, with the women’s skeleton, men’s large hill ski jumping, and men’s 1500 metre short track.
Canada has won their fourth medal of the Winter Olympics.
Figure skaters Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier took bronze in the mixed ice dance competition on Wednesday in Milan.
It’s the first ice dance medal for Canada since Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir in 2018.
That gives the country one silver and three bronze medals.
Canada ranks 13th overall in medal standings.
🥉 FOR PIPER AND PAUL! After two incredible performances in ice dance, they earn their place on the podium at Milano Cortina 2026! 👏✨ https://t.co/NiBBrzJEfY
Canada added to its medal total Monday with a bronze medal in women’s slopestyle skiing.
Megan Oldham of Parry Sound, Ontario finished third in the event, which challenges athletes to navigate a course of jumps, rails and aerial tricks judged on difficulty, execution and style.
Canada’s first medal came earlier in the competition when speed skater Valérie Maltais of La Baie, Quebec earned bronze in the women’s 3,000-metre long track event — her first individual Olympic medal and Canada’s opening medal of Milano-Cortina.
With the recent announcement of Canada’s Olympic ice hockey team for the upcoming Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy, northwestern Ontario can look back with fondness at the area players who have represented Canada in past competitions.
Most notable is in the 1936 games in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, where Canada, represented by the Port Arthur Bearcats, lost out on a gold medal because of a controversial decision regarding eligibility and the tournament’s format.
The Bearcats were granted the right to represent Canada after the Halifax Wolverines, winners of the 1935 Allan Cup over the Bearcats, disbanded prior to the 1935-36 season.
The Port Arthur club would eventually be supplemented with players from other clubs, but still had several members from the 1934-35 season, including Max Deacon of Schreiber, James Haggarty, Ray Milton, Jackie Nash, Alex Sinclair, and Bill Thompson.
Johnny Coward, who grew up in Fort Frances, was on the winning side of the 1936 Olympics, skating for Britain’s team.
Coward was playing in the English National League at the time of his selection.
Port Arthur-born Gerry Davey was also on Britain’s team.
Henry Akervall in Germany at the Olympics, 1964, Cairine Budner fonds at Lakehead University Archives, accessed January 6, 2026, https://digitalcollections.lakeheadu.ca/items/show/3194
Hank Akervall captained Canada’s entry at the 1964 games in Innsbruck, Austria, where the team lost its final two games to miss out on a medal for the first time.
Wayne Stephenson, who was born in Fort William but learned to play hockey in Winnipeg, played in the next winter Olympics held in Grenoble, France, where Canada won bronze.
Chris Lindbergh of Fort Frances skated for Canada at the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, France.
Lindbergh joined the national team the season before, and was among the team’s top scorers during the 1990-91 and 1991-92 seasons.
Canada finished in a three-way tie for first in their pool but earned the top seed over the Unified Team, recognizing nations of the former Soviet Union that broke up just before the games, and Czechoslovakia.
The Canadians edged Germany, then upset the Czechs to reach the gold-medal game against the Unified Team, but lost 3-1.
Lindberg scored Canada’s only goal.
The silver medal was Canada’s first Olympic medal in ice hockey in 32 years.
Two years later, Greg Johnson of Thunder Bay was the region’s representative on Team Canada in Lillehammer, Norway.
Canada earned silver after a shootout loss to Sweden in the final.
Northwestern Ontario’s representation continued when NHL players made up the Olympic teams in 1998.
Dryden’s Chris Pronger was part of the team that lost in the bronze medal game to Finland in Nagano, Japan.
Pronger would make four consecutive Olympic appearances, winning gold in 2002 and 2010.
Thunder Bay’s Eric Staal, Mike Richards of Kenora, and former Fort Frances resident Duncan Keith were also members of the 2010 team that won gold a dramatic overtime game over the United States in Vancouver.
Keith and Patrick Sharp of Thunder Bay were selected for the 2014 gold medal-winning team in Sochi, Russia.
Staal was back with Team Canada in 2022, selected as captain and helping to win bronze at Gangneung, South Korea.
There have been several players with ties to Fort Frances who have suited up for Team USA.
Robert Rompre of International Falls was selected to the 1952 team that earned a silver medal at the games in Oslo, Norway.
His college hockey career had been interrupted that year when he was drafted by the United States Marine Corps for the Korean War.
The Marine Corps allowed him to skate for the US when news of his selection was made.
Rompre scored eight goals in the tournament, including 4 in the team’s opener against Finland.
A 3-3 tie with Canada secured Rompre and his American teammates a silver medal.
Ed Sampson and Dick Dougherty were part of the 1956 USA team that won a silver medal at Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy.
Both were born in Fort Frances, but held US citizenship and lived in International Falls.
Sampson was a member of the Fort Frances Canadians at the time of his selection, while Dougherty was starring with the Warroad Lakers senior club.
Dan Dilworth was selected to the 1964 American team that finished 5th at the Winter Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria.
Dilworth, who had played hockey in Fort Frances, was coming off a strong season with the USHL Waterloo Black Hawks, where he led the team in scoring in the 1962-63 season.
The 1972 Olympic team saw three from International Falls make the squad.
Keith Christianson and Tim Sheehy, who were born in Fort Frances but played hockey in the Falls, were members of the US National team for three years leading up to the games.
Fellow International Falls resident Mike Curran joined them and helped the American squad to a silver medal at Sapporo, Japan.
Bob Mason and Gary Sampson were the last from International Falls to make an Olympic team, selected for the 1984 US team, which had a 7th-place finish.
Sampson was born in Atikokan but raised in the Falls.
Mason and Sampson were also teammates at the University of Minnesota-Duluth before joining the national team after their college careers.
Northwestern Ontario has also had representation on the rosters of other countries than Canada and the US.
Bob Deperio and Tom Milani of Thunder Bay played for Italy in the 1984 Olympics.
The first games in this year’s winter Olympics will begin on February 5th.
We use cookies and similar technologies to ensure that our website functions properly and to make your use of our website more convenient. We also use third party cookies and similar technologies that are managed by our business partners or service providers, to develop and improve our website, and to help you see ads on our website and other websites that are matched to your interests. You should be able to disable most cookies associated with our website via your browser settings but this may affect the functionality of the website. You can also opt out of third-party cookies used for targeted advertising by adjusting your cookie settings. To learn more about how we use cookies and how to manage them please see our Privacy Policy or contact us at privacy@ocil.ca.
FunctionalAlways active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes.The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.