The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Too much of a good thing

IIHF acknowledg­es oversatura­tion of world junior in Toronto-Buffalo corridor

- BY JOHN CHIDLEY-HILL

Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation president Rene Fasel admitted the Toronto-Buffalo corridor has probably had its fill of junior hockey.

It’s the third time in four years the world juniors have been held in Toronto or Buffalo and attendance has flagged at this year’s tournament.

“We really expected a different result,” Fasel said at a news conference Thursday ahead of the championsh­ip’s semifinals. “Sometimes you can also overdo the saturation and where it is being played. We have to learn.

“You get experience only when you make mistakes. So this is one experience.”

Going into Thursday’s semifinals in Buffalo, N.Y., about a 90-minute drive from Toronto, Canada led the tournament with an average attendance of 15,236 and the Americans drew an average of 14,822. But those numbers were buoyed by the record-setting crowd of 44,592 that came to see the U.S. and Canada play on Dec. 29 in the first-ever outdoor game at a world junior championsh­ip.

All of Canada’s other games drew less than 10,000. In the preliminar­y round the Canadians drew 9,552 against Finland, 7,834 versus Slovakia, 8,671 against Denamrk. Canada’s 8-2 quarter-final win over Switzerlan­d on Tuesday actually had the smallest house, with 5,533.

Toronto and Montreal cohosted the world juniors in 2015 and 2017, with Helsinki, Finland, in the middle. On top of that, Toronto hosted the NHL’s World Cup of Hockey in 2016. All of Toronto’s profession­al sports teams made playoff runs of various lengths between 2015-17, stretching the budgets of sports fans in southern Ontario.

As a result, each successive world juniors around Lake Ontario saw a steady drop in attendance.

“I think the experience we’ve had now with the almost backto-back tournament­s in Montreal and Toronto tells us we have to think differentl­y the city who hosts the world juniors,” said organizing committee chairman Luc Tardiff.

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