
Opinion: We can still save U.S.-Canada relations — and hockey — from the goons
When is a hockey game more than a hockey game? When a president places a pregame call to pump up the players, a prime minister offers postgame commentary, and monuments such as the Empire State Building and Toronto's CN Tower are lit up in national colors for the contest.
The NHL's 4 Nations Face-Off final in Boston on Thursday night, between Team Canada and Team USA, was a brilliant hockey game that the Canadians won 3-2 in sudden-death overtime. But beyond the great hockey, the game served as an alarming testament to the state of Canadian-American relations.
We've hit an icy low. Canada's hurt, and make no mistake, Canada's hurt will eventually be America's and California's.
No on-ice moment exemplified off-ice sentiment more than the preliminary-round game between the same two teams in Montreal the week before. The angry Canadian crowd jeered the American Olympic figure skating medalist Michelle Kwan and booed 'The Star-Spangled Banner.' Then three American players gooned it up by picking three fights in the game's first nine seconds because they 'had to send a message.'
The bad blood is over a looming trade war between the two countries and Canadians' broader fears of the new American administration.
Goons fight with words as well as fists. On the day of the final, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said she looked forward to Team USA 'beating our soon-to-be 51st state, Canada.' Canadian columnists, meanwhile, are 'frightened' of the United States; one, Pete McMartin of the Vancouver Sun, recently wrote, 'Goodbye America. … I've reached that point in our relationship where any admiration I have had for you has been replaced by a new, angry resolve, which is: I won't consort with the enemy.'
Not since Wayne Gretzky's hat trick put the Kings in the 1993 Stanley Cup Finals has a hockey game had such implications for California. Canada and California, which have roughly equal populations, exchanged nearly $30 billion in two-way trade in 2020, when the Canadian Consulate in L.A. reported that 774 Canadian-owned businesses employed more than 76,000 Californians. Millions of Canadian travelers spend billions of dollars in California every year.
But Canada and California don't just share commerce; Hollywood has a great creative partner in our northern neighbor. Hits such as 'Titanic,' 'The Revenant,' 'Deadpool' and 'My Big Fat Greek Wedding' were filmed in Canada. And television's Golden Age wouldn't be so golden without Canada: Shows including 'The Handmaid's Tale' (based on the book by Canadian author Margaret Atwood), 'Schitt's Creek' (starring Canadians Eugene and Daniel Levy) and even the 'Property Brothers' are Canadian.
It's fitting that a sport that once echoed America's Cold War with the Soviet Union now reflects a nascent trade war with Canada. Granted, we're talking about economic rather than nuclear devastation. And yet the phrase 'mutually assured destruction' still applies. A trade war — this one with a longtime ally rather than an adversary — is like a hockey fight in that everyone loses. The only question is how badly.
Take the goons who fought in Montreal. Instead of playing their hearts out for their country, they deliberately put themselves in the penalty box. All pain, no gain. But that's what goons do. They choose the performative over performance, spectacle over contribution, me over we — the exact opposite of what the legendary gold-medal-winning 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team was all about.
Goons never really win because they're all about pulling others down. Of the six who fought in Montreal, not one scored.
This is what happens when we give our games and governments over to the goons. Canada and California have far too much to lose to let this stand, not least at the intersection of the economy and sports. The 2026 World Cup — a joint venture of the United States, Canada and Mexico — features seven games at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood. We can't allow the world's longest friendly boundary to turn hostile — to militarize a border longer than 34 Korean DMZs.
So how can we get the puck from where it is to where we want it to be?
We need the good guys and gals to drown out the goons and refuse the ridiculous in favor of the rational. Canada will never become the 51st state because Canadians don't want it, and it would give the Democratic Party a Cali-sized electoral haul. And remember the 2018 steel tariffs the first Trump administration levied against Canada (among others)? You might not, because they were gone in under a year. Rationality won out.
The good guys and gals in the National Hockey League and other cross-border sports events can help out here too. If they can't guarantee mutual respect for our national anthems, let's find other areas of common ground.
Try a moment of silence for our emergency personnel. Both nations have sent firefighters to respond to each other's devastating fires over the past couple of years. 'Good neighbors are always there for each other,' Alberta's forestry minister said as he sent firefighters to Los Angeles last month, returning the favor for 2023, when 'California firefighters bravely supported Alberta in a time of great need.'
No matter how bad things look, no matter what angry words are spoken, no matter how many fists are thrown, we are neighbors and friends, and the good guys and gals of Canada and California will win. We just need them to speak up.
Now would be a good time.
ML Cavanaugh is a co-founder of the Modern War Institute at West Point and author of the forthcoming book 'Best Scar Wins: How You Can Be More Than You Were Before.' @MLCavanaugh
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Utah Rep. Maloy pushes against amendment to reinstate military reimbursements for abortion travel
WASHINGTON — Utah Rep. Celeste Maloy is pushing back against efforts to reinstate Biden-era policies directing the Defense Department to reimburse costs for service members who travel across state lines to obtain an abortion. During an appropriations hearing on Thursday, Maloy rejected an amendment seeking to implement a 2022 policy allowing for reimbursements for abortion-related travel and attach it to legislation funding the Defense Department for the 2026 fiscal year. Maloy argued the proposal runs afoul of the Hyde Amendment, a federal statute passed in 1976 prohibiting federal funds from going toward abortion costs, with few exceptions. 'The Hyde Amendment is a clear federal ban on abortion funding, except in the cases of rape, incest and life of the mother,' Maloy said in her remarks. 'It's been in place every appropriation cycle for 40 years. And I've been here, I've heard a lot of talk about partisanship and how this should not be a partisan bill, but this is a completely partisan amendment, whereas the Hyde Amendment has been a bipartisan consensus for four decades.' The amendment, proposed by a Democrat during the appropriations hearing, was ultimately rejected. The DOD issued a policy shortly after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022 that would allow military members to receive travel reimbursements and approved leave for abortion-related reasons. That policy was largely approved to allow service members in states where abortion was banned locally to travel across state lines if needed. That provision was criticized by Republicans and was rescinded shortly after Donald Trump took office in January and signed an executive order enforcing the Hyde Amendment and restricting taxpayer dollars from being used for any abortion-related reasons. Maloy pushed against reinstating that policy, arguing it forces taxpayers to fund travel and lodging costs for a procedure they may disagree with. 'The federal government must exercise restraint and respect diverse moral values of American people,' Maloy said. 'This amendment is not in the spirit of that neutrality, not in the spirit of the Dobbs decision or the Hyde Amendment.' 'This would allow the DOD to make federal abortion policy that isn't in keeping with what Congress has done through the Hyde Amendment, and that's a path that I don't think we should start to go down,' she added. 'Federal abortion policy should be uniform like it has been for 40 years through bipartisan consensus in the Hyde Amendment. Abortions, including abortion travel or enhanced leave policies designed to facilitate abortions, have no place in this bill.' Republicans overwhelmingly rejected the amendment and the House Appropriations Committee advanced the larger bill, the Fiscal Year 2026 Defense Appropriations Act. The legislation seeks to provide more than $830 billion to the Defense Department and includes policies to increase pay for military personnel, modernize weapons systems, codify some DOGE suggestions to cut 'waste, fraud and abuse' within the department, and more.
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
J Day back in business with fine US Open fightback
Jason Day has battled back into the picture at the US Open with a fine second round while American Sam Burns shot the lowest score of the week to leap into contention at fearsome Oakmont. Former PGA champ Day was way off the pace after his opening round of 76 but demonstrated his enduring class with a battling three-under 67 on Friday to get back to three over for the tournament - hovering around the top-20 and well inside a cut mark projected to be at seven over. Day's round was the second best among the early day-two starters but he was still eclipsed by Burns, who shot a five-under 65, which featured six birdies, one bogey and a key par save at his final hole - the ninth - to record the best round of the tournament. Spoiler: he made the 🐥 Day is 3 under today and well inside the cut line. — U.S. Open (@usopengolf) June 13, 2025 It left him heading to the clubhouse on three under, just one off the overnight lead held by fellow American who was among the later starters after his opening, bogey-free round of 66 on Thursday. Day's round, which began at the 10th hole, was ignited by a terrific eagle at his third hole - the gigantic par-five 12th that measures 647 yards. He struck his approach from 323 yards to 20 foot from the hole and sank the eagle putt. Two birdies quickly followed in the next five holes. His biggest disappointment as he looked set to finish with a 66 after two more birdies on the homeward nine was his wayward drive at the ninth that led to an anti-climactic final bogey. WHAT A ROUND! 🔥Sam Burns posts a spectacular Friday 65, the best we've seen this week. — U.S. Open (@usopengolf) June 13, 2025 Burns, who shot a final-round 62 Sunday at the Canadian Open before losing in a play-off, also started his second round on the back nine and birdied 11, 13, 17 and 18. He responded to his lone bogey at the first hole by putting his approach at the next hole to about six feet. World No.1 Scottie Scheffler had five bogeys and four birdies in his 71, to be left at four over, but fellow luminaries Dustin Johnson (10 over) and Justin Thomas (12 over) will both miss the weekend. Australian Marc Leishman, who had begun promisingly with a 71, suffered in his second round, shooting a 75, including a double-bogey six at the ninth hole, to sit at six over. Five-time major winner Brooks Koepka, one of 14 LIV Golf players in the field, started his day two shots off the pace but dropped back after a 74 that featured eight bogeys. 🚨 ACE ALERT 🚨Victor Perez 🇫🇷 with a great shot and an even better celebration! — U.S. Open (@usopengolf) June 13, 2025 A day after Patrick Reed recorded the fourth albatross in US Open annals, Frenchman Victor Perez made a hole-in-one at the par-three sixth, the second ever ace during a US Open at Oakmont. But the demanding course was clearly getting to some of the players, with former champion Jon Rahm another left grumbling as he tumbled down the leaderboard after a 75 to sit on four over. "Honestly, I'm too annoyed and too mad right now to think about any perspective," the Spaniard said. "Very few rounds of golf I played in my life where I think I hit good putts and they didn't sniff the hole, so it's frustrating." With agencies
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Tucker Carlson splits from Trump, advocates ‘dropping Israel'
Talk show host Tucker Carlson broke with President Donald Trump on Iran on Friday, writing in a scathing commentary in his daily newsletter that the United States should 'drop Israel' and 'let them fight their own wars.' 'If Israel wants to wage this war, it has every right to do so. It is a sovereign country, and it can do as it pleases,' Carlson wrote of Israel's preemptive strike on Iran's nuclear facilities. 'But not with America's backing.' Trump, for his part, has endorsed Israel's attacks, which he called 'very successful,' and underscored in an interview with Fox News on Thursday night that the U.S. would defend Israel if Iran retaliates. He also warned that the situation 'will only get worse' if Iran does not agree to a nuclear deal 'before there is nothing left.' TRUMPS TAKE Trump to Fox News: U.S. will defend Israel if Iran retaliates Read more In recent days, Carlson has argued that fears of Iran obtaining a nuclear weapon in the near future are unfounded and said that a war with the Islamic Republic would not only result in 'thousands' of American casualties in the Middle East but 'amount to a profound betrayal of' Trump's base and effectively 'end his presidency.' Carlson reiterated that claim in his newsletter, accusing Trump of 'being complicit in the act of war' through 'years of funding and sending weapons to Israel.' Direct U.S. involvement in a war with Iran, he said, 'would be a middle finger in the faces of the millions of voters who cast their ballots in hopes of creating a government that would finally put the United States first.' 'What happens next will define Donald Trump's presidency,' he concluded.