Kuwait Times

NHL’s internatio­nal plan includes China but not Olympics

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The NHL is heading to Asia next season. Just not the Olympics.

Commission­er Gary Bettman emphatical­ly reasserted the league will not take a break next February to participat­e in the 2018 Winter Games in South Korea next February. The league previously announced it would skip going to Pyeongchan­g earlier this spring, a point Bettman bluntly reiterated on Monday just hours before Pittsburgh and Nashville met in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final.

“(We’ve seen) a number of comments from the (Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation) and player reps suggesting it was still an open issue, it is not and has not been,” Bettman said. IIHF President Rene Fasel said the governing body was touching base with the NHL Players’ Associatio­n two or three times per week, hoping to work out a solution. Lee Hee-beom, head of the Pyeongchan­g Organizing committee, said in London earlier this month he was “ready to cooperate” with the NHL to make sure the best players in the world could participat­e in the games as they’ve done in every Winter Olympics since 1998. Nope. While saying the NHL is not “anti-Olympics,” Bettman said league owners are no longer interested in having their arenas go dark in the middle of winter while some of their best employees traveled to the other side of the world, particular­ly if the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee wants no part of picking up the insurance cost.

Bettman said the league “never negotiated” with the IOC, saying the league didn’t have “the appetite to continue participat­ion.”

Some players, like Washington star Alexander Ovechkin, have indicated they will play for their home countries regardless of whether the league takes a break or not. Bettman doesn’t see that happening.

“We have an expectatio­n that none of our players are going,” he said. “But I don’t want to get into the gymnastics involved in what that means. There’s no reason to pick that fight right now.”

The league is hardly abandoning efforts to expand its global footprint. The league will host events on three continents during the 2017-18 season. The Vancouver Canucks and Los Angeles Kings will play a pair of exhibition games in China in September. Ottawa and Colorado will meet in a regular season game in Stockholm in November and Tampa will host to the All-Star game for the second time next January.

The Canucks and Kings will play in Shanghai on Sept. 21 and in Beijing on Sept. 23. Beijing will welcome the world for the 2022 Winter Olympics, yet Bettman said the topic of NHL players tagging along never came up.

“I think the focus is more about long-term developing the sport, not what happens for two weeks in 2022,” Bettman said. Other takeaways from Bettman’s annual state-of-the-league address:

VEGAS BABY

The expansion Las Vegas Knights will have 72 hours - and not the initially announced 48 to review each team’s protected list. Deputy Commission­er Bill Daly said the league is “very pleased” with the city’s response to the arrival of its first major profession­al sports franchise.

UNDER REVIEW

There are no plans to expand what is covered by the newly introduced coach’s challenge but Bettman said the league is thinking about using a clock to limit the window on when coaches can alert officials they want a play reviewed.—AP

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