TORONTO (AP) - Jack Gurevitch is a Montreal Canadiens superfan and a proud Canadian who says he is upset by President Donald Trump's tariff plans and threats to annex Canada. Still, he says he won't let the political situation influence whether he travels to U.S. cities to support his team in the playoffs.
Canadian hockey fans conflicted over traveling to U.S. to see their teams in NHL playoffs
TORONTO (AP) - Jack Gurevitch is a Montreal Canadiens superfan and a proud Canadian who says he is upset by President Donald Trump's tariff plans and threats to annex Canada. Still, he says he won't let the political situation influence whether he travels to U.S. cities to support his team in the playoffs.
Not everyone in his family agrees.
"In anticipation of this call, I shared with my sister my opinion, and she went, 'Absolutely not. Do not go. Do not go into the United States during this time. It's not being patriotic. It's not being a good Canadian,'" Gurevitch told the Canadian Press. "I just kind of disagree with her."
The latter half of the NHL season saw scattered booing during "The Star-Spangled Banner" at games in Canada amid Trump’s threat of tariffs and his comments about turning its northern neighbor into a 51st state. It has led to resentment and anger, even clouding Wayne Gretzky’s legacy for some fans given his ties to Trump.