Ottawa Senators captain Brady Tkachuk pushed back on criticism surrounding a viral moment involving Team USA and President Donald Trump, saying the players were caught up in the emotion of winning Olympic gold.
According to Fox News, the controversy stems from a phone call Trump held with the menâs and womenâs U.S. hockey teams after both defeated Canada in Milan.Â
During the call, Trump joked he would âhaveâ to invite the womenâs team to the State of the Union or he would âprobably be impeached,â a remark that drew laughter from some of the menâs players.
Boston Bruins goaltender Jeremy Swayman later said the team âshould have reacted differently,â but Tkachuk declined to second-guess the moment.
âYeah, I get it,â Tkachuk said when asked if he understood the womenâs teamâs displeasure. âI have no other comments other than for the things we can control. We supported them. They supported US. Canât control what other people say.â
He emphasized the bond between the two squads during the Olympics.
âIt was fun seeing them play, fun to see the excellence they brought every single game and how theyâre, by far, the best team in that tournament,â he said. âIt was just fun seeing them after picking their brains. They were picking our brains, and it was just fun being around them.â
Pressed again about laughing at Trumpâs joke, Tkachuk pointed to the surreal nature of the moment.
âIt was a whirlwind of a moment. You canât really control what somebody says, and I guess it caught off guard a little bit,â he said. âI mean, when youâre talking to the president 10 minutes after you just achieved your dream, itâs just the fact that youâre talking to him,â
âYou canât really believe where your life is at where youâre talking to the president of the United States after you just won a gold medal.â
Tkachuk and several teammates attended Trumpâs State of the Union address, where the chamber gave the menâs team a standing ovation as they displayed their gold medals.
The womenâs team did not attend, citing âpreviously scheduled academic and professional commitments.â USA Hockey said any White House visit would depend on playersâ schedules once their seasons end.
Off the ice, those close to the program downplayed the controversy.
Ellen Hughes, a player development staff member with the womenâs team and mother of Jack and Quinn Hughes, said the focus inside the program remains on unity.
âThese players, both the men and women, can bring so much unity to a group and to a country,â she said. âPeople that cheered on that donât watch hockey, people that have politics on one side or on the other side, and thatâs all both the menâs team and the womenâs team care about.â
âIf you could see what we see from the inside, and the men and women sharing, you know, dorm rooms and halls and flex floors and the camaraderie and the synergy and the way the women cheered on the men and the way the men cheered on the women â thatâs what itâs all about,â she added.
âAnd the other things they cannot control. They care about humanity. They care about unity, and they care about the country.â
