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Toronto Fans Boo Us National Hymn at WWE Match; Pat McAfee answers

Fans at WWE elimination chamber In Toronto, “The Star-Spangled Banner” turned out of the event on Saturday evening.

The American singer Elizabeth Irving carried out the US national anthem As a choir of Boos, rained down. Irving also sings the national anthem in front of Vancouver Canucks and Vancouver Whitecaps.

The Star Sports commentator Pat McAfee lambs the Canadian fans loudly and the country as a whole as a reaction during the Pfau program.

“It is shit that it is in the terrible country of Canada that our national anthem has boosted to start the whole thing,” said McAfee at the radio table.

Credit: @krisreports about storyful

Toronto's expansion of the hymn takes place one week after hockey fans from both countries have expanded the other's hymns.

During the NHL exhibition tournament of the NHL 4 nations from February 12th to 20th, the fans in Canada excelled the US national anthem in Canada, while fans in the United States are flushing the Canadian national anthem before several games.

It began on February 13th, when the Canadian fans in Montreal drilled the US national anthem, after President Donald Trump's recent threats to force Canada, Canada imposed and indicate that the country of America should become 51st state.

The blown out laid out a flood of fights between Canadian and US players at the first meeting of the tournament between the two teams on February 15. The United States won this game 3-1.

NHL star dishes in the American pride of Team USA player: “I haven't seen it from Americans in general”

The Canadian national anthem was then boosted before a game between Canada and Finland in the TD Garden in Boston.

The United States and Canada met in February 20, and American fans in Boston once again drilled the Canadian national anthem, albeit with a lighter tone. Canada won the game 3-2 in extra time.

Since then, enemy rhetoric has only escalated between the two countries, including in sports.

Canadian men's football coach Jesse Marsch blew Trump because of his “51st state” beans and described them “insulting” on Wednesday.

During the media day of Concacaf Nations League on Wednesday, Marsch did not hold his opinion on Trump's comments and said he was “ashamed”, as Canada was insulted by the president.

“When I have a message to our president, it is the ridiculous rhetoric that Canada is the 51st state,” said Marsch. “As an American, I am ashamed of the arrogance and disregard that we have shown one of our historically oldest, strongest and most loyal allies. But one thing is certain if I look forward to one month in one month.

NHL legend Wayne Gretzky was also criticized by Canadian colleagues for his obvious support from Trump.

Trump recently said he asked Gretzky to become the next “governor of Canada” after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced that he would step down.

But after Gretzky's support for “Canada that remains a separate country instead of becoming an estimated and beautiful 51st state,” she pressed. Trump explained Gretzky as “Free Agent”.

This prompted the hockey legend Bobby Orr, a Canadian fellow human beings, to write in the Toronto Sun That he was disappointed to read criticism of Gretzky, someone he sees as one of the “greatest Canadians ever”.

“How moody can people be when someone who has given so much time and effort for Canadian hockey is treated like this,” wrote Orr. “Listen, we all have our personal beliefs because they refer to things like religion and politics. Wayne respects their right to such beliefs – why can't they respect his?”

Janet Gretzky, Wayne's wife, Las Orrs Column and reacted on social media.

“Thank you Mr. Bobby Orr. Your words mean Wayne and his family, I have never met someone who is proud to be a Canadian, and his heart broke to read and see the common comments. He would do everything to do everything to do with his love for hockey and his country”, Janet ” wrote in an Instagram contribution in which she shared Orr's column.

Trump agreed on February 3 to pause the tariffs for 30 days, which means that they are expected to be imposed in early March. The tariffs raised by Trump in Canada are a reaction to drug trafficking on the US Canadian border.

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