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Coronavirus: Hockey equipment manufacturer CCM and its players donate half a million masks

File photo of Montreal Canadiens goaltender Carey Price. Montreal company CCM and its player endorsee roster will donate 500,000 surgical masks to front-line healthcare workers. Wednesday, April 8, 2020. AP Photo/Kathy Willens

CCM has joined the list of hockey equipment manufacturers contributing supplies to front-line health care workers in the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Montreal company and its player endorsee roster that includes Connor McDavid and Sidney Crosby will donate 500,000 surgical masks, the company said Wednesday in a statement.

CCM “is in the process of procuring this protective equipment from its established network of partners that normally collaborate in the production of CCM hockey gear,” the company said.

“CCM will arrange for transport and is co-ordinating with government authorities to ensure the protective medical gear is distributed to Canadian healthcare workers as early as the week of April 27th.”

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READ MORE: Coronavirus: McGill University students design 3D-printable masks for health-care workers

Players are contributing to CCM’s donation, according to the statement.

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CCM’s player roster also includes Alex Ovechkin, Melodie Daoust, Kendall Coyne Schofield, Carey Price, Marc-Andre Fleury, Nathan MacKinnon and John Tavares.

“We focused on the best use of our network and our resources to have the quickest impact,” CEO Rick Blackshaw said.

“Sourcing greatly needed equipment through our established supply chain partners in Asia is the most efficient way for us to support and keep our real heroes safe.”

READ MORE:  Bauer Hockey making face shields for coronavirus fight

Bauer Hockey is producing facial shields at its Blainville, Que., plant and at its subsidiary Cascade Lacrosse in upstate New York.

Bauer published its design for facial shields to social media and its website so other manufacturers could start producing their own facial shields as quickly as possible.

Goaltending equipment producer Brian’s Custom Sports in Kingsville, Ont., is manufacturing medical gowns.

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