Soviets ‘never short of reasons’ for losing at hockey, diplomats found in 1976
OTTAWA — Canadian diplomats wryly noted the Soviets were “never short of reasons” as to why their hockey team stumbled against the world’s best four decades ago, newly declassified documents reveal.
Millions of Canadians watched with delight in 1976 as the home side captured the inaugural Canada Cup — a forerunner of this month’s World Cup of Hockey tournament in Toronto.
Behind the scenes, Canadian foreign service officers in Moscow keenly observed the reaction to the games, widely televised in the Soviet Union, through the lens of the then-simmering Cold War.
The Canadian Embassy reported to Ottawa in a post-tourney memo that interest in hockey remained “intense and pervasive” in the Soviet Union.


