In my previous article, I outlined the significance of the Government of Canada’s generational investment into sport and why Field Hockey Canada (FHC) is well positioned to respond.
The natural next question is: how will we deliver?
At FHC, the answer is grounded in our 2026 Reset Strategy, a clear, focused framework built around three identified priorities to:
The 2026 Reset Strategy looks to build on the foundational changes made over the last quadrennial to move FHC from rebuilding to accelerated growth. With improved organizational capacity and aligned programming across the country, we are now positioned to build on our strengths, scale what is working, and deliver improved performance across the system.
That timing matters. The Government of Canada’s five funding pillars (Build, Protect, Play, Perform, and Host) provide a clear framework for where sport investment can have the greatest impact.
For FHC, the alignment is clear. Our priorities are not being reshaped to fit this moment but instead reflect years of transformational change and work already underway. With the 2026 Reset Strategy, FHC is positioned to convert this new investment into meaningful, lasting impact across the entire field hockey .
The following sections show how each funding pillar aligns with work FHC already has underway, and how targeted investment can help accelerate that work into broader system impact.
The Build pillar is about infrastructure, creating the physical and system capacity to support participation and performance. At FHC, this is already in motion.
A strong example is the work underway in Ottawa, where a fully aligned system of local club, provincial body, and national federation has unlocked international support from the Fédération Internationale de Hockey (FIH) and the Pan American Hockey Federation (PAHF). The result will be a dedicated national Hockey5s facility within the year, which is a significant step forward for the sport in Canada.
Across the country, we are also focused on:
To accelerate this work, FHC will be establishing a Facilities and Infrastructure Working Group, tasked with mapping national development across all formats of the game — 11-a-side, Hockey5s, indoor, and beach hockey — from coast to coast to coast.
We invite clubs, universities, and provincial partners to join us in this effort. Infrastructure is not built in isolation rather it is built through collaboration.
The Protect pillar is foundational. A strong sport system must protect its people and operate with transparency and integrity.
FHC has already made meaningful progress in strengthening accountability and participant protection across the system. This includes:
Our next steps will build on that progress by:
Protecting the system is not a one-time action, it’s an ongoing commitment.
The Play pillar speaks directly to participation and the removal of barriers that prevent Canadians from engaging in sport.
FHC’s previous strategic cycle laid the foundation for this work. We are now focused on scaling it. This includes:
Our objective is simple: make field hockey accessible to more Canadians, in more communities, in more ways.
Performance remains a central pillar of our mandate.
A key component of this is the Athlete Assistance Program (AAP), which provides direct financial support to athletes. For FHC-nominated athletes, this currently represents approximately $830,000 annually, paid directly to athletes, with FHC responsible for nomination and oversight in accordance with Government of Canada policy.
This funding is critical. In recent years — particularly post-pandemic — athletes have faced increasing financial pressures. The renewed investment in athlete support included in the announced funding provides an opportunity to:
Equally important is the anticipated increase in direct funding to National Sport Organizations, the first significant injection in over 25 years. This will enable FHC to better support national teams with:
Hosting is both an economic and performance driver, and FHC has begun to establish momentum through events and partnerships that strengthen visibility, engage community and create new athlete development opportunities, including:
Looking ahead, we will continue to:
The federal government has described its investment in Canada’s sport system as a nation-building priority and has identified areas for improvement that closely align with our own 2026 Reset Strategy. Built around Govern, Grow, Perform, our strategy is designed to deliver the following outcomes:
This generational investment in sport offers us a five-year window of opportunity. With the foundational work FHC put in place during the previous strategic cycle, Field Hockey Canada is ready not only to participate, but to lead.
We have:
Now, with the right alignment of investment and strategy, we will accelerate. This is not about maintaining the status quo; it is about building the future of field hockey in Canada.
Susan Ahrens
Chief Executive Officer