It's pretty widely agreed that Canada didn't have the Winter Olympics it wanted in Milano-Cortina 2026.
Canada ended up with 21 medals in total, substantially less than the 26 it earned in Beijing 2022 and, at eighth place, the first time the country has finished outside the top five since 1994. Listed according to gold medals won, we are even further down the table. The 29 medals of 2018 and the 14 golds in 2014 seem like a distant memory.
Predictably, the outcry is that Canadian sports is underfunded. The boss of the Canadian Olympic Committee was of course one of the loudest whiney voices: "Canadians deserve a sports system that is properly funded. National sports organizations are stretched unbearably thin." It happens every time. (Actually, it happens even if the country does well!)
But it's hard to blame it on funding. Nathan MacKinnon didn't miss an open goal becuase of underfunding. Funding issues didn't cause Cassie Sharpe to crash and injure herself in the freeski halfpipe, or Mark McMorriss to miss the whole Olympics due to injury. And you can't blame underfunding for all the times Canada came fourth not third. These things happen. And even if they seem to happen disproportionately, you still can't blame it on funding.
Adam van Koeverden, an Olympic multi-medalist himself and now the Liberals' minister for sports, denies that Canadian sports are underfunded, pointing to a 45% increase in the athletes' assistance program since 2018, and a more than doubling of the government's sports budget over the last 20 years. Like everything else, sports are competing for scarce government funds.
Sure, Canada is no Norway, a winter sports powerhouse despite its tiny population. Neither is it the USA, the richest country in the world with one of the largest populations. But we really don't do too badly. Yes, we should have won the men's hockey gold, outplaying the Americans for almost 60 minutes. But we didn't and that's OK.