Thank you for that big question. I'm sorry; the back-flow right away is putting me off a bit.
Again, our study is grounded in hockey culture. That's not to take away from the experiences that other folks have shared, but what we see in our work is exactly what you're talking about. It's how these players are commodified for the winning aspect and how that then empowers them to treat others.
It doesn't. Men in our study talked about wanting to speak up and speak out; however, nobody in the dressing room was, so therefore you just go along with what the coach says. When the coach is telling you to win at all costs, those costs, unfortunately, come at the expense of women and girls, as we have learned this summer.
I think it's also important here to mention, and then I'll turn it over to Shannon so she can add, that researchers have been doing this work for decades. These stories are not new for researchers and victims. People have not been listening, so Hockey Canada, while it is certainly a tragic event, also offers us an opportunity, as others have said, to really shift the culture of sport.
I'll turn it over to Shannon.