The Tricolore completed a four-game road trip in Winnipeg on Thursday night. Martin St-Louis' team won in Buffalo and St-Louis, then lost in Minnesota and Winnipeg in overtime. What gets our attention here is not the team's performance, which, let's be honest, has been above expectations. Rather, it's something that didn't happen in Winnipeg that should have. A lack of judgment by the organization. Indeed, Canada's national anthem was performed in French and English in two American cities (St. Louis, Missouri and St. Paul, Minnesota), while it was sung only in English in one Canadian city (Winnipeg). <div align='center'><blockquote class='twitter-tweet' data-lang='en'><a href='https://twitter.com/StuCowan1/status/1588322308455862273?t=6me3JVzQjhECbTzYXfG1_A&s=19'> </a></blockquote></div> Canada prides itself on being a bilingual country, but some places don't think it's important to sing the national anthem in both languages, whereas in the United States they do. That's pretty standard from the Jets organization.