Calgary Herald

Sportsnet boss supports league move

- BILL BRIOUX

While fans and players have expressed disappoint­ment and anger over the NHL’s decision to skip the 2018 Winter Olympics, Sportsnet hockey boss Scott Moore has no problem with the move.

The president of Sportsnet and NHL properties said in an interview Tuesday that as a fan, he’d love to see the best-on-best at the Olympics. As a broadcaste­r, however, he said he’d have made “the exact same decision” as the NHL.

The league announced Monday that it would not halt its schedule to accommodat­e the 2018 Games in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea. It will mark the first time since 1994 that NHL players haven’t participat­ed in the Olympics.

Reaction from players and fans has been mostly negative, with superstar Alex Ovechkin even saying he plans to represent Russia in 2018 with or without the NHL’s blessing.

Moore, whose company purchased the NHL broadcast rights in 2013 for $5.2 billion, pointed out that the “horrible” time difference between Pyeongchan­g and Canada will mean most Olympic hockey games will be shown on a delayed basis, diluting their ratings impact for his sports channels.

With the league sticking to an uninterrup­ted schedule, Moore said he has the option of running NHL games opposite the Olympics.

“Frankly, I think this is good news for us,” he said. “Live hockey in prime time will be up against taped events from the Olympics.”

CBC, which holds the Olympic TV rights in Canada, said in a statement it was disappoint­ed by Monday’s news but “we know Canadians are passionate about hockey at all levels of the game. We see it every year with the world junior championsh­ip and Spengler Cup and are confident Canadians will rally behind whoever represents Canada in Pyeongchan­g.” Moore also feels the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee’s aggressive negotiatin­g stance “was a slap in the face to league officials.

“This is the only league in the world that is asked to shut down for 2 ½ weeks at a key time in their schedule to supply players for free to drive somebody else’s business,” he said.

Money has been just one of the stumbling blocks in the negotiatio­ns between the NHL, the NHL Players’ Associatio­n and the IOC.

NHL owners also didn’t like the idea of disrupting the season, citing compressed schedule concerns, and don’t see enough benefits in bringing their product to South Korea.

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