On February 25, we recognize Pink Shirt Day, a reminder that preventing bullying and building respectful environments is everyone’s responsibility.
In hockey, that message matters.
Hockey should be a place where players feel safe to try, to fail, to grow, and to belong. The tone we set in locker rooms, on benches, in the stands, and online shapes that experience. Small actions, positive or negative, add up quickly.
Pink Shirt Day is not just about wearing pink. It’s about choosing the kind of culture we want in our game.
At Hockey Alberta, we believe hockey should be grounded in respect, built on challenge and support, a place where every player feels they belong. That belief comes to life through everyday behaviour: how we speak to officials, how teammates treat one another, how coaches lead, and how families model respect in the stands.
Pink Shirt Day gives us a visible moment to pause and ask:
- Are our teams safe spaces?
- Do our players feel respected and included?
- Are we modeling the behaviour we expect from others?
While Pink Shirt Day shines a spotlight on anti-bullying efforts, the work itself is ongoing. Across Alberta, we see that commitment every day, in the coaches who lead by example, in teammates who choose support over negativity, and in players who understand that respect matters.
Many of those players have chosen to make that commitment visible by signing the Hockey Alberta Player Pledge, putting words to the culture they want to build.
As one U9 player shared after signing the Player Pledge, “I want to be the best teammate to my teams and a role model to others.”
That simple statement captures what safe sport is really about.
Another U18 player explained their decision this way: “I believe it’s important to create a community where everyone feels welcome and comfortable to be themselves.”
And for some athletes, the pledge carries even deeper meaning. One player noted, “The player pledge means so much more to me as a hockey player of Asian descent… having the pledge helps create that atmosphere of respect and solidarity.”
These voices remind us that inclusion isn’t just a concept. It is personal.
A Simple Way to Take Action: The Player Pledge
The Hockey Alberta Player Pledge is a personal commitment to compete with integrity, treat others with respect, and help make hockey a safe space for everyone.
Players and coaches can sign on individually. Those who do receive a personalized certificate recognizing their commitment, a visible way to say, this is the standard I stand for.
As one U18 coach put it, “What we do and say on and off the ice matters more than the score.” That mindset is what builds strong teams and stronger communities.
If you’re ready to make that commitment, we encourage you to sign on to the Player Pledge and invite others to do the same. Individuals who complete the sign-on form will receive their own personalized certificate, something players can be proud to share and display as a reflection of the culture they want to build.
Sign the Player Pledge here:
https://www.hockeyalberta.ca/individual-player-pledge-submission/
As we celebrate Pink Shirt Day, we encourage everyone in our hockey community to carry this commitment forward:
- Keep the conversation going about respect and inclusion within your team.
- Be intentional about the example you set at the arena, on the ice, behind the bench, and in the stands.
- Commit to the Player Pledge and invite others to stand alongside you.
Culture in hockey isn’t built in one big moment. It’s built in everyday choices, in what we say, what we tolerate, and what we model.
Today is a reminder. Tomorrow is the opportunity.
Let’s keep choosing respect.
Let’s keep choosing accountability.
Let’s continue building a game where every player feels they belong.














