Carey Price’s B.C. hometown rallying behind Montreal star goaltender
MONTREAL — On the first night of the Stanley Cup final, a convoy of trucks waving Canadiens flags arrived outside the arena in Anahim Lake, B.C., where Carey Price played hockey as a kid.
The convoy wound its way for about 60 kilometres, honking horns and stopping in different Indigenous communities in the region inhabited by the Ulkatcho First Nation.
Lynda Price, Carey’s mother, is chief of the First Nation. And while the Vancouver Canucks are the closest NHL team at some 12 hours drive away, it’s the Canadiens and its star goaltender that are celebrated in the community of about 1,500 people.
The convoy was the idea of Graham West, who has known Price since he was young. He said the rolling parade will be repeated at each game, and he expects it to grow bigger each time.