Significance of unexpected Olympic opportunity not lost on Canada's men's hockey team
CBC
Landon Ferraro originally intended on following the path blazed by his father Ray and enjoying a long, successful career in the National Hockey League just like his old man.
Like for so many of us, the game plan in Landon's head failed to pan out. A rash of lower-body injuries limited the 2009 second-round (32nd overall) draft pick to just 77 career NHL appearances with Detroit, Boston and Minnesota.
Now playing in Cologne, Germany, Landon had given up on his childhood dream of playing for Canada at the Olympics. But at age 30, he's on the verge of doing just that as a member of Team Canada at the 2022 Winter Games in Beijing.
One door closes, another opens.
Life carries on.
"I didn't think this was even an opportunity that was going to be there," said Ferraro, who was born in Trail, B.C., but got his start playing hockey in Atlanta where his dad suited up for the Thrashers. "It's going to mean so much.
"I've had a ton of injuries, and I didn't know if I'd be able to keep playing anymore. I kind of put in all the work and saw all the doctors and got everything figured out to where the body feels pretty good."
WATCH | Getting to know Canada's Olympic men's ice hockey team:
Canadian hockey fans expected to see a best-on-best tournament at these Olympics featuring Connor McDavid, Sidney Crosby, Alex Pietrangelo and Nathan MacKinnon. With the NHL pulling out due to game cancellations caused by COVID-19, the 25 players named to the Canadian men's Olympic team are savouring every moment of what many consider "Plan B."
This group lacks star power — outside of captain Eric Staal — but they are elite hockey players in their own right and pledge to do their country proud when the puck drops Thursday in preliminary-round action between Canada and Germany.
"Representing Canada, I mean, it's every kid's dream," said right winger Josh Ho-Sang, who plays for the Toronto Marlies of the American Hockey League. "They think about it when they're playing in the driveway and think about scoring the game-winning goal.
At age 20, goalie Devon Levi can't quite believe he's in Beijing as a member of Team Canada.
"Just this whole thing, this whole experience, is crazy," said Levi, a top goaltending prospect of the Buffalo Sabres who plays for Boston's Northeastern University. "I'm super grateful to be here. And it's been a dream just watching the Olympics every year. I looked up to these guys and watched some of the guys on the team now when I was a kid.
"Being able to play with them now is unbelievable."