The Phnom Penh Post

Hockey’s stars could miss 2018 Olympics as NHL owners fume

- Jim Slater

THE world’s best ice hockey players may be missing from the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Winter Olympics thanks to a money dispute that has National Hockey League team owners rethinking their usual mid-season shutdown.

Since the 1998 Nagano Winter Olympics, the NHL has halted its campaign so top talent can compete for gold with national teams, producing some of the sport’s most electric moments.

But millionair­e superstars such as Sidney Crosby, who sparked Canada’s 2010 and 2014 Olympic titles plus a 2016 World Cup of Hockey crown, and Russia’s Alex Ovechkin, so hungry for gold he has vowed to play in Pyeongchan­g even if the NHL keeps going, might not be able to skate in South Korea.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee triggered the impasse by refusing to keep paying for NHL player insurance and travel costs, which added up to about $14 million for the 2014 Sochi Games.

“When the IOC said they didn’t think it was worth it, it opened a whole can of worms,” NHL commission­er Gary Bettman said at the NHL All-Star Game last month. “We said from the outset that if they are not going pay the expenses then we don’t even have to think about this.”

Many NHL team owners were already unhappy at sending away star players to risk injury while congesting the regular season to fit a full campaign and playoffs into the normal time frame.

“The biggest hurdle is the concern about the disruption to the season, the compressed schedule and a whole host of other things we have to talk about,” Bettman said.

IOC president Thomas Bach met with NHL and players union officials last week but left with no promise of playing in Pyeongchan­g, with a year to go until the start of the Olympics.

Caught in the middle

“Of course, we a ll want to see the best players at the Oly mpic Winter Games PyeongChan­g 2018 and we know t hat t he players feel t he same,” Bach said after the meeting.

“Therefore, we hope even more that the Internatio­nal Federation and the NHL will reach a solution to make the Olympic dreams of the players come true.”

Caught in the middle has been Rene Fasel, president of the Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation, who on Tuesday said that his group will pick up costs no longer footed by the IOC.

“We were able to devise a financial framework that will cover these payments without drawing funds away from the IIHF’s developmen­t programs or those of our [national associatio­ns],” Fasel said.

But the NHL still has not agreed to shut down next February, going so far as to devise two schedule plans, one with an Olympic break and one without.

“The Olympic Games . . . offers a massive and hugely influentia­l platform for our sport,” Fasel said. “Such a pre-eminent event . . . deserves to feature the world’s top players competing against each other. So yes, I absolutely do feel an obligation to ensure that we continue to have best-on-best.”

A Monday conference call with IIHF leaders and teams qualified for Pyeongchan­g ended with no deadline threat for the NHL on when a decision is needed for Pyeongchan­g.

“The majority of this group felt that the NHL will likely need to decide during March because of their scheduling needs for next season,” Fasel said. “We do not feel at this time it would be constructi­ve to set a hard deadline.”

Exciting history

While Fasel said Bach wants NHL players in the Olympics, they have discussed a “plan B,” using lesser talent with the same rules, schedule and format, rejecting the idea of an under-23 event as used for Olympic football.

“That said, Olympic ice hockey has a wonderful and exciting history that goes further back than just Nagano,” Fasel said. “If we do not have the NHL in Pyeongchan­g, I have zero doubt that the Olympic men’s tournament will still be as thrilling and competitiv­e as any we have seen.”

Alan Ashley, US 2018 Olympic mission chief, has faith in USA Hockey’s backup plan if the NHL says no, likely assembling a team of top collegians such as the group that upset the Soviet Union and won the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics.

“If we have to go to plan B, they have already thought about what players would be on their roster,” he said. “They have a good idea of where they want to go if there’s no NHL.”

But Ashley admits a quick answer is needed.

“The sooner we get a good resolution, the better,” he said.

 ?? AFP ?? NHL superstars Sidney Crosby (left) and Alex Ovechkin are among those that could miss the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Winter Olympics because of a dispute over expenses.
AFP NHL superstars Sidney Crosby (left) and Alex Ovechkin are among those that could miss the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Winter Olympics because of a dispute over expenses.

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