The Golden Game is the name of an event held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on February 28, 2010 in order to "Cheer for Charity" and witness the championship Gold Medal men's Olympic hockey game. The media exposure of The Golden Game reached 11 million Canadians. Team Canada won the gold medal against Team USA in an over-time victory that finished with a story-book ending, with the winning goal by Sidney Crosby. Furthermore, commentators have noted that there was perfect symmetry between the 2002 winter games and 2010 winter games (in all four cases, the Canadian Women's and Canadian Men's hockey teams beat their American counterparts for a gold medal). [1]
The Golden Path is a charity concept developed in order to provide children with funding for organized sports.
The two official charities for The Golden Game are Right to Play Canada and Canadian Athlete's Now Fund. [2]
The Golden Game event staff contacted 100 sports bars and venue locations across the Greater Toronto Area, from Oakville and Brampton to North York and Oshawa in order to include them in the event. These satellite locations agreed to broadcast the gold medal hockey game and to donate some portion of their additional revenue to The Golden Path charities (Right to Play + Canadian Athletes Now Fund). [5]
Five key political contacts contributed to this event to make it possible. First, Toronto city councillor for Ward 6 (Etobicoke-Lakeshore) Mark Grimes connected the event organizers to Hockey Canada, Hockey Toronto and Hockey Hall of Fame. In addition, four mayoral candidates submitted or read their answers on stage at The Golden Game, to the following two questions: "How will you make sports more accessible to Torontonians?" And, "what three words best describe the new Toronto under your leadership?"
The mayoral candidates who participated (in order of placement in which they appeared): George Smitherman, Giorgio Mammoliti, Sarah Thomson and Rocco Rossi. [5]
The Golden Cup provided a search function to locate the nearest venue to your postal code, an open-source country page for each country competing in the tournament as well as video journal that searched and interviewed Torontonians to discover the soul of our city. [6] The final event was held at School Bakery and Cafe and hosted over 3,000 attendees as well as all five front runner mayoral candidates on stage at the half time show raffling away prizes to raise money for The Right to Play.
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The Golden Game is the name of an event held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on February 28, 2010 in order to "Cheer for Charity" and witness the championship Gold Medal men's Olympic hockey game. The media exposure of The Golden Game reached 11 million Canadians. Team Canada won the gold medal against Team USA in an over-time victory that finished with a story-book ending, with the winning goal by Sidney Crosby. Furthermore, commentators have noted that there was perfect symmetry between the 2002 winter games and 2010 winter games (in all four cases, the Canadian Women's and Canadian Men's hockey teams beat their American counterparts for a gold medal). [1]
The Golden Path is a charity concept developed in order to provide children with funding for organized sports.
The two official charities for The Golden Game are Right to Play Canada and Canadian Athlete's Now Fund. [2]
The Golden Game event staff contacted 100 sports bars and venue locations across the Greater Toronto Area, from Oakville and Brampton to North York and Oshawa in order to include them in the event. These satellite locations agreed to broadcast the gold medal hockey game and to donate some portion of their additional revenue to The Golden Path charities (Right to Play + Canadian Athletes Now Fund). [5]
Five key political contacts contributed to this event to make it possible. First, Toronto city councillor for Ward 6 (Etobicoke-Lakeshore) Mark Grimes connected the event organizers to Hockey Canada, Hockey Toronto and Hockey Hall of Fame. In addition, four mayoral candidates submitted or read their answers on stage at The Golden Game, to the following two questions: "How will you make sports more accessible to Torontonians?" And, "what three words best describe the new Toronto under your leadership?"
The mayoral candidates who participated (in order of placement in which they appeared): George Smitherman, Giorgio Mammoliti, Sarah Thomson and Rocco Rossi. [5]
The Golden Cup provided a search function to locate the nearest venue to your postal code, an open-source country page for each country competing in the tournament as well as video journal that searched and interviewed Torontonians to discover the soul of our city. [6] The final event was held at School Bakery and Cafe and hosted over 3,000 attendees as well as all five front runner mayoral candidates on stage at the half time show raffling away prizes to raise money for The Right to Play.
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
link)