The Standard (St. Catharines)

WJC organizers hit refresh out in B.C.

Expect full arenas in Vancouver and Victoria

- GEMMA KARSTENS-SMITH

VANCOUVER — A change of scenery seems like it might pay off for an annual holiday tradition.

Ticket demand for the 2019 world junior hockey championsh­ip — Dec. 26, 2018 to Jan. 5, 2019 in Vancouver and Victoria — has “exceeded expectatio­ns,” said Riley Wiwchar, director of the tournament.

The attendance will be watched closely at this year’s event after disappoint­ing turnouts — and complaints about ticket prices — three of the past four years in Buffalo and Toronto/Montreal.

“The demand is definitely there and we’ve still got a few months to go. So we plan on the (arenas) being full,” Wiwchar said.

Tickets have been purchased from around the globe, including France, Germany, Russia, Finland, Sweden, the U.S. and every Canadian province, he added.

Attendance at last year’s tournament in Buffalo — just across the Peace Bridge from Ontario — was dismal, with thousands of empty seats for many games.

Fewer than 10,000 people came out for Canada’s games in the preliminar­y rounds and just

5,533 showed up for the team’s quarterfin­al win against Switzerlan­d.

The exception was the firstever outdoor world junior game, which drew a record-setting crowd of 44,592 to see the U.S. best Canada 4-3 at New Era Field in Orchard Park, N.Y. — the home of the NFL’s Buffalo Bills.

In January, Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation president Rene Fasel admitted at a news conference that organizers had expected a different result.

Having either Toronto or nearby Buffalo host the event three out of four years may have been a mistake, he said.

“Sometimes you can also overdo the saturation and where it is being played. We have to learn,” Fasel said.

The world junior will be in the Czech Republic next year, before returning to Canada in 2021.

Hockey Canada said in a statement that it hasn’t yet identified a host community or communitie­s for that tournament.

Organizers of this year’s event weren’t worried by last year’s numbers, in part because of the vast distance between B.C., and the Toronto-Buffalo corridor, Wiwchar said.

“Honestly, there wasn’t much of a fear at all, coming out west,” he said.

The westernmos­t province previously held the world junior in 2006, when Vancouver, Kamloops and Kelowna co-hosted the event. Canada won the gold.

“I think people have just been craving the hockey for the last decade or so,” Wiwchar said. “Having watched it every single year somewhere else, I think people are just ready for it to be back in B.C.”

With the Canucks in the midst of a rebuild, Vancouver’s also a market with a vested interest in seeing some of the players expected to skate this year.

“It’s a pretty in-tune market when it comes to hockey,” Wiwchar said.

Venues for this year’s tournament are slightly smaller than the main arenas in Toronto and Buffalo, which hold 19,800 and 19,200, respective­ly.

Vancouver’s Rogers Arena has a capacity of 18,910 and Victoria’s Save-on-Foods Memorial Centre has room for 7,400 people.

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