Pittsburgh Penguins play ‘O Canada’ in show of solidarity after Ottawa shooting; acknowledged by Stephen Harper
National Post Staff | October 23, 2014 | Last Updated: Oct 23 2:23 PM ET
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Screen grab/YouTubeThe Penguins played 'O Canada' in addition to the 'Star-Spangled Banner' before Wednesday night's game..
The Pittsburgh Penguins were playing an American team in the U.S., but they made it clear their thoughts were with Canada.
The team played ‘O Canada’ in addition to the ‘Star-Spangled Banner’ before Wednesday night’s game against the Philadelphia Flyers as a tribute to those affected by the shootings in Ottawa that morning.
The crowd, too, showed its support, singing along loudly as Jeff Jimerson performed O Canada. Here’s Sean Gentille’s video from the press box at the Consol Energy Center:
Both teams include multiple Canadian players, but Canada’s national anthem is generally not played unless a Canadian team is playing.
“It was a really, really nice gesture,” Penguins captain Sidney Crosby told Sportsnet. “I was following the news all day and it was tough to see [what was happening]. It’s awful to think that people are capable of doing that to each other.
“But I think we all come together after different incidents … we saw it in Boston, [with] the World Trade Centers, all that stuff. I think that you see people rally behind one another.”
Hockey fans all across Canada showed their appreciation. Prime Minister Stephen Harper acknowledged the Penguins’ show of solidarity during his speech in Parliament on Thursday morning.
There were acknowledgments elsewhere in the NHL, including moments of silence in Anaheim and Edmonton.
It was a particularly emotional performance of O Canada for the Oilers — the only Canadian team in action on Wednesday. (The Toronto Maple Leafs were scheduled to take on the Senators in Ottawa but the game was postponed.) It’s difficult to hear the fans singing along on the broadcast, but this video shot from the stands captures some of it: