Canada–United States sports rivalries

Canada–United States relations

Canada

United States

Because of their proximity and similar sporting cultures, Canada and United States are frequent rivals in a wide variety of international sports. The United States' domination of Canada in most sports, like football, baseball, basketball, volleyball, soccer, lacrosse, tennis, golf, track and field, swimming,, boxing, water polo, gymnastics and fencing coupled with the fact that Canada can barely beat the United States in ice hockey has contributed to the historical inferiority complex Canadians have regarding Americans.

Overall rivalry and the Olympic Games

For both countries, the Soviet Union was often the most hated rival in most international competeitions before 1991. However, since the fall of the Soviet Union, the two neighbouring countries have been heated rivals, especially in winter sports where the talent pools of the two countries are more evenly matched, although all time the United States is considerably ahead of Canada in gold, silver, bronze, and total medals won. In summer sports the United State's closest rival at the Summer Olympics is now China. All time, the United States is the number one ranked country in gold, silver, bronze, and total medals won, nearly doubling the total of the number two ranked country.

In the run-up to the 1998 Winter Olympics, Los Angeles Times columnist Mike Penner named Canada the United States' most important rival, especially in hockey.[1] and USA Today ran the headline "Cold War now means Canada", with Canadian columnist Terry Jones reporting that the Canadian Olympic team approved of the comments and shared the news clippings around the athlete's village in Nagano.[2] Ice hockey is the only sport that Canada is better than the United States in and is the most competitive sport between the 2 countries. The United States is better than Canada in football, baseball, basketball, soccer, lacrosse, tennis, golf, volleyball, track and field, swimming, rowing, gymnastics, wrestling, boxing, fencing and water polo.

Baseball

The talent pool of professional and amateur ball players in the United States is much larger than in Canada. Therefore, it was considered a major upset when Canada defeated the United States in the 2006 World Baseball Classic, which some commentators called a "Miracle on Dirt", reference to the Miracle on Ice when the US national hockey team beat the USSR in 1980. The United States beat Canada in the 2013 world baseball classic. Although there is only 1 Canadian in the baseball hall of fame, 3 different Canadian players have won the league's most valuable player award since 1997. Canada is the 9th best country all time in baseball and the United States is the number 1 country all time in baseball.

Cricket

While cricket is not among the most popular sports in either country, they have the distinction of having played against each other in the first ever international match of any sport in 1844.[3]

See also: K.A. Auty Cup

Ice hockey

For both genders and at all ages groups, Canada - US games are among the most important in international hockey. Since the decline of the Soviet Union in 1991, this rivalry has certainly been one of the most emotional.

Men's

Ice hockey is the only major team sport in which the United States is not better than Canada, and is by far the most competitive sport between the two countries. The two teams have been close rivals since the early days of international hockey, facing each other for the gold medal at the first Olympic hockey tournament in 1920. The Americans were able to beat Canada at the 1960 Winter Olympics. However, during the 1991 Canada Cup, American defense man Gary Suter cross-checked and injured Canadian superstar Wayne Gretzky, creating a feeling of animosity towards the US team among Canadian fans and furthering the Canadian inferiority complex. In 1996, the United States won a best-on-best men's tournament by defeating Canada at the 1996 World Cup of Hockey on Canadian soil in Montreal. Canada had revenge by beating the US for the Gold at the 2002 Olympics on American soil in Salt Lake City.[4] After the United States beat Canada in the pool stage, to the embarrassment of all of Canada, Canada defeated the US in the gold medal game at the 2010 Olympics on Canadian soil in Vancouver. Most recently, the two teams faced off against each other in the 2014 Olympics in Sochi semi-final for the right to go to the gold medal game which Canada won. Both the 2010 and 2014 games between the two nations were controversially reffed by Canadians.

Junior

The two countries are perennial rivals at the World Junior Hockey Championships for players under 21 years of age.[5]

Women's

Canada and the U.S. have faced each other in the championship game of nearly every Olympics and World Championships since the beginning of international play. Few of Canada's and the U.S.'s losses have been to teams outside their rivalry.

Lacrosse

Field

Men's

No team other than Canada or the US has ever won the World Lacrosse Championship. The US has nine championships, and Canada three.

Rugby

Union

Men's

Both countries are middle-of-pack internationally in rugby union, and therefore closely matched. Canada's first win in an international "test match" was against the USA in 1977. The teams formerly faced each other in the regional PARA Pan American Championship and Churchill Cup, and still do in the Pan American Games.

Wheelchair

Men's

The rivalry between the two teams was the subject of an Oscar-nominated 2005 documentary film Murderball.

Soccer

Men's

The two clubs frequently face each other in the Gold Cup, however the United States has historically been the stronger side. The overall record As of 2011 is 14-0 in favor of the United States, and American soccer fans generally look to Mexico as the main rival, and not Canada.[6] The United States has qualified for 10 world cups and has made it to the semifinals in 1930, the quarterfinals in 2002, and has made it to the round of 16 on numerous occasions, while the only time Canada qualified for the World Cup, they lost all their games and failed to score a goal. Canada is not considered a rival as they have not beaten the United States since the 1980s..[6]

A Canadian club, Galt F.C., did beat an American club, Christian Brothers College, for the Gold at the 1904 Summer Olympics in St. Louis, however.

The US under-23 team defeated Canada to take the bronze medal at the 1999 Pan-Am Games on Canadian soil in Winnipeg. On the other hand, Canada's under-20 team defeated the US to win their group of the 2003 CONCACAF U-20 Tournament in Charleston, South Carolina.

Women's

The two teams are more closely matched than in the men's game, providing for more close finishes. Notably the two nations faced each other in the final of the 2002 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship on Canadian soil in Edmonton, with the United States winning. The two nations' senior sides met in the third place match of the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup on American soil in Carson, California. Also, Canada's senior team beat the US under-20 team in the final of the 2008 Cyprus Cup. At the 2012 CONCACAF Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Vancouver, the US defeated Canada 4-0 in the final.

By 2012 the US clearly had the edge, winning every match since 2001, 26 in a row. There was a memorable match between the two teams during 2012 London Olympics semi-finals, which a concacaf.com columnist had described as the most important of their 26-year-long rivalry on the international scene.[7] The Canadians led the match at three different points, but were ultimately defeated in overtime, allowing the Americans to advance to the Gold Medal Match. The United States most recently won the Women's World Cup on Canadian soil and increased their record to 3 World Cup wins and 4 Olympic gold medals, to Canada's 0 World Cup wins and 0 gold medals. The overall series is 46 wins for the United States, 3 wins for Canada and 6 draws.

References

  1. "Going Toe To Toe - latimes". Articles.latimes.com. 1998-02-01. Retrieved 2015-07-29.
  2. "U.S. sees Canada as the new red menace". Canoe.ca. 1998-02-19. Retrieved 2015-07-29.
  3. Archived September 29, 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  4. "USA, Canada rivalry has evolved over time - NHL.com - All-Access Vancouver". NHL.com. 2010-02-20. Retrieved 2015-07-29.
  5. Mike Zeisberger (2011-01-04). "Canada, U.S. rivalry still strong | Hockey | Sports". Toronto Sun. Retrieved 2015-07-29.
  6. 1 2 Archived June 12, 2011 at the Wayback Machine
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