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Today in Canada > News > Ontario allows early-morning alcohol sales for gold medal hockey game
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Ontario allows early-morning alcohol sales for gold medal hockey game

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Last updated: 2026/02/20 at 4:14 PM
Press Room Published February 20, 2026
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Ontario allows early-morning alcohol sales for gold medal hockey game
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Toronto·New

Ontario will allow bars and restaurants across the province to start selling alcohol as of 6 a.m. ET on Sunday as the Canadian men’s hockey team competes for a gold medal at the Olympics.

Bars and restaurants now permitted to start selling booze as of 6 a.m. ET on Sunday

CBC News · Posted: Feb 20, 2026 3:59 PM EST | Last Updated: 14 minutes ago

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Teammates celebrate on the ice during a hockey game.
Canada forward Nathan MacKinnon celebrates his game-winning goal at the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy, on Friday. Ontario has announced bars and restaurants will be allowed to sell alcohol as of 6 a.m. Sunday for the gold medal game. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

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Ontario will allow bars and restaurants across the province to start selling alcohol as of 6 a.m. ET on Sunday as the Canadian men’s hockey team competes for a gold medal at the Olympics.

Premier Doug Ford made the announcement in a social media post Friday, not long after Canada toppled Finland in a nail-biting semi-final matchup. The gold medal game starts at 8:10 a.m. ET on Sunday.

“Let’s all come together, support local businesses and cheer on Team Canada!” Ford said.

The provincewide edict mirrors a similar decision made by Toronto city council earlier this month, which allowed alcohol sales in the city to start at 6 a.m. for the duration of the Olympics.

Canada’s men’s hockey team remains undefeated at the Milano Cortina Winter Olympic Games, and will face the winner of the other semi-final game between the U.S. and Slovakia.

WATCH | MacKinnon talks huge Olympic win:

Canada’s Nathan MacKinnon says ‘we stuck with it and outplayed them’ following victory over Finland

Nathan MacKinnon’s goal with 36 seconds left in the game gave Canada a 3-2 victory over Finland, allowing them to reach the Olympic men’s hockey gold-medal game.

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