Vancouver – While the country regains its composure after the Team Canada quarter final loss to Finland in the World Junior Hockey Finals in Vancouver/Victoria, there has been a social media backlash to the haters who dumped on the young all stars.
In particular, Team Canada and Vancouver Canucks prospect goaltender Michael DiPietro and Captain Maxime Comtois.
The broken stick incident, that penalty shot, the late goal by Finland and the overtime winner were tough to take.
But taking it out on a team full of kids — remember they are all still teenagers– was uncalled for.
Fortunately many people in hockey have to come their defence.
Hockey Canada CEO Tom Renney called for senior levels of government to consider legislation dealing with cyber bullying in light of the online harassment suffered by @TeamCanada Captain Maxime Comtois.
From the Captain via his agent:
This will be the only official statement regarding Max Comtois. Thank you. pic.twitter.com/EgNWrODqMC
— RSG Hockey (@rsghockey) January 3, 2019
From the goaltender:
"Not one of those kids had to apologize for anything…" @Sid_Seixeiro on the pressure we put on Team Canada players at the World Jr.'s 🇨🇦🔥 #TimandSid
— Tim and Friends (@timandfriends) January 3, 2019
Also, full segment here: https://t.co/yBmZS3Q17X pic.twitter.com/nLUHlwZknH
Édifiant. Du racisme anti-francophones. https://t.co/cNcVO7l4Cx
— Pascal BĂ©rubĂ© (@PascalBerube) January 3, 2019
Parti Quebecois interim leader Pascal Berube, said the remarks were “anti-francophone racism” on Twitter following Canada’s loss.
Sidney Crosby Came to the defence.
Sidney Crosby on Max Comtois: "He’s a great player. He’s going to have a great career. That’s not going to define who he is — that penalty shot.”https://t.co/3KyOqTCcTZ
— Sportsnet (@Sportsnet) January 4, 2019
What do YOU think? Is the on line bullying worth trashing a bunch of kids, who played their hearts out for their country?
Feel free to leave your comments. Keep it clean.