Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Kamloops, B.C., Named Host Of The 2016 Women's World Hockey Championship

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 09 Sep, 2014 12:31 PM
    Kamloops, B.C., will host the 2016 IIHF women's world hockey championship, bringing the tournament to British Columbia for the first time in its 26-year history.
     
    The 22 games will be split between the Interior Savings Centre and McArthur Island Sports and Event Centre in April of 2016.
     
    Kamloops had bid to host the 2013 event, which was awarded to Ottawa.
     
    "I have had the honour of coaching in Kamloops, I know the passion the city has for hockey, and I am sure it will be a first-class event on and off the ice that will grow the sport and provide young aspiring female hockey players with a chance to watch the best in the world," Tom Renney, the president and CEO of Hockey Canada, said in a release.
     
    The world championship will be the second major international women's hockey event in Kamloops in a span of 18 months. Canada, Finland, Sweden and the U.S. will play in the Four Nations Cup there this November.
     
    The 2016 tournament will mark the seventh time Canada has hosted the world championship — the previous tournaments were 1990 and 2013 in Ottawa, Ont., 1997 in Kitchener, Ont., 2000 in Mississauga, Ont., 2004 in Halifax, and 2007 in Winnipeg.
     
    Canada has played in every gold-medal game in the tournament's history, winning 10 gold medals and five silver.  

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Privacy Watchdog Probes If Government Had Duty To Warn Over Tailings Breach

    B.C. Privacy Watchdog Probes If Government Had Duty To Warn Over Tailings Breach
    VICTORIA - B.C.'s information and privacy commissioner plans to investigate whether the provincial government should have notified the public about potential risk connected to the Mount Polley tailings pond.

    B.C. Privacy Watchdog Probes If Government Had Duty To Warn Over Tailings Breach

    Bountiful: Wife Of B.C. Polygamous Leader Says Charges Violate Her Religious Freedom

    Bountiful: Wife Of B.C. Polygamous Leader Says Charges Violate Her Religious Freedom
    LISTER, B.C. - A wife of a polygamous leader of a small religious commune in B.C. says polygamy charges laid this week against the leaders of Bountiful violate her religious freedom.

    Bountiful: Wife Of B.C. Polygamous Leader Says Charges Violate Her Religious Freedom

    Douglas Garland In Court: Family 'Shattered' By Disappearance Of Grandparents And Boy

    Douglas Garland In Court: Family 'Shattered' By Disappearance Of Grandparents And Boy
    CALGARY - A friend says relatives of a missing five-year-old boy and his grandparents are "shattered" weeks after the three disappeared and are presumed to have been murdered.

    Douglas Garland In Court: Family 'Shattered' By Disappearance Of Grandparents And Boy

    Fires Heat Up In Parts Of B.C. As Fire Costs Near Triple What Was Forecast

    Fires Heat Up In Parts Of B.C. As Fire Costs Near Triple What Was Forecast
    VANCOUVER - A fast-moving forest fire near Houston, B.C., that forced residents in 19 homes to evacuate had almost doubled in size within 24 hours.

    Fires Heat Up In Parts Of B.C. As Fire Costs Near Triple What Was Forecast

    Medical Marijuana Spread On Toast, Inside Cookies And Teas Backed By B.C. Court

    Medical Marijuana Spread On Toast, Inside Cookies And Teas Backed By B.C. Court
    VANCOUVER - The B.C. Appeal Court has ruled the federal government's restriction on allowing only dried marijuana to be used under its medical access regulations is unconstitutional.

    Medical Marijuana Spread On Toast, Inside Cookies And Teas Backed By B.C. Court

    Alberta gov't not doing enough about high oilsands emissions: Critics

    Alberta gov't not doing enough about high oilsands emissions: Critics
    EDMONTON - Critics aren't happy with the Alberta government's response to monitoring data that shows two air pollutants have exceeded trigger levels in the oilsands area.

    Alberta gov't not doing enough about high oilsands emissions: Critics