Friday, December 12, 2025
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

‘You feel at home’: Playoff hockey helps newcomers feel more Canadian

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 May, 2025 01:45 PM
  • ‘You feel at home’: Playoff hockey helps newcomers feel more Canadian

Mykhailo Ivanov never thought he'd become a diehard hockey fan.

The 42-year-old had immigrated to Winnipeg a little over two years ago to escape the war in Ukraine. He didn’t know much about hockey, he said, but after he was given tickets to a Jets game he fell in love with the sport – and the community that comes with it.  

“I like that kind of emotion and support from other fans, from the people nearby you,” he said in a phone interview. “It's an important part of my life now.” 

"It decreases or even erases those boundaries, those limits newcomers normally face.” 

As three Canadian teams fight their way through the NHL playoffs, fans across the country are cheering from the sidelines, including those who newly call Canada home

Some immigrants say that just as hockey is a part of Canadian identity, celebrating the sport during playoff season helps them become part of it, too.

Christine Munsch said when she and her husband first moved to Toronto from France about 18 months ago, they tried watching football and basketball to help them adjust to Canadian life. But it was hockey that had them hooked, she said.

"We knew it was a big part of Canadian culture," she said in a phone interview. "I was really amazed by the quality of skating and this balance between well-done choreography and a sometimes violent game." 

Munsch added that she was surprised by the hockey fans' sportsmanship. In Europe, rival soccer fans are strictly separated in the stands, she said, but at hockey games the fans all sit together in good spirits, even amid playoff tensions. There's friendship in the sport, she said.

"When people learned that we were hockey fans, they really paid more attention to us, and we got integrated a lot easier," said Munsch, adding that she and her husband often watch playoff hockey games with friends and neighbours.

Now, Munsch said they never miss a match and they closely follow all the teams. They really like the Edmonton Oilers, she said, but the Toronto Maple Leafs are their favourite.

She even has her own little Carlton bear, the Leafs' mascot.

"Sometimes when I watch a game, I take him with me," she said.

Meanwhile, as the Jets make their own bid for the Stanley Cup, the atmosphere in Winnipeg feels “like a permanent holiday,” Ivanov said, as fans cheer on the streets and Jets flags wave all over the city. 

Ivanov now has a collection of several Jets jerseys, and he also has friends from a fan club to talk all things hockey. They even make posters before playoff games that say, “Go Jets go!” 

The sport has helped him become part of Winnipeg’s community, he said, and it "completely changed" his life.

You feel more integrated into Canadian society, you feel at homeYou don’t feel like an immigrant,” said Ivanov. “You feel more Canadianmore local. It helps a lot.” 

For Munsch, as soon as the Leafs clinched home advantage, she and her husband quickly bought tickets for the first round showdown against the Ottawa Senators. They sat in the upper level of Scotiabank Arena, she said, because "that's where I was told the real fans are."

But Munsch isn't just a fan. On game days, when she tells people she has to rush home to catch the puck drop on TV, they tell her the same thing every time.  

“They say, ‘You’re a real Canadian.’”  

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Mykhailo Ivanov 

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Asanas for Thyroid Imbalances

Asanas for Thyroid Imbalances
Vishuddhi Chakra (located in the Adam's apple area in the throat region).

Asanas for Thyroid Imbalances

Be acne-free organically

Be acne-free organically
Drinking warm water with honey and lemon juice regularly in the morning flushes the system of pollutants and are effective in removing excess fat/medas internally and from the skin as well.

Be acne-free organically

Countering Obesity through yoga

Countering Obesity through yoga
The human body is a combination of cells, they combine in various permutations and form different systems responsible for all positive and negative effects which ultimately influence the whole body.

Countering Obesity through yoga

Are you wearing the right shoe?

Are you wearing the right shoe?
Usually, low back problems are a result of sporting high heels. It is believed that 55 per cent of women experience spine conditions, particularly low back, more frequently than men. 

Are you wearing the right shoe?

Reducing the Risks of Breast Cancer

Reducing the Risks of Breast Cancer
October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. As the most common cancer among Canadian women, it’s hard not to know someone who hasn’t been affected by breast cancer.

Reducing the Risks of Breast Cancer

Stay fit come rain or shine

Stay fit come rain or shine

It’s always sad to see it go, but the season of sun is on its way out and fall and winter a...

Stay fit come rain or shine