Call & Times

NHL asked to make decision on Olympics

- By LARRY LAGE Associated Press

The NHL may be nearing a deadline to decide whether to allow the world's best hockey players to participat­e in the Winter Olympics next year in South Korea.

“I hope we can find a compromise in the next two or three weeks,” Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation President Rene Fasel told The Associated Press on Thursday in a telephone interview from Russia. “We need to know by the end of April if they're coming, or not.”

Fasel said leaders of national teams, including those in Canada and Russia, have recently told him they need to know next month if it is time for them to assemble their Plan B rosters.

NHL Commission­er Gary Bettman has made it clear league owners don't want to stop their season for three weeks again and put their stars at risk of injury without what they would consider a tangible return. The reluctance has come up in the past and yet the NHL has participat­ed in every Winter Olympics since 1998.

This time, however, there seems to be an impasse.

“In the absence of any material change to the current status quo, NHL players will not be participat­ing in the 2018 Winter Olympics,” NHL Deputy Commission­er Bill Daly wrote in an email to AP.

Don Fehr, the head of the NHL Players Associatio­n, said all players in the league want to participat­e and believes the NHL should choose to take advantage of the chance to market the game in Asia, which will host the next two Winter Olympics.

“Playing in an Olympic games is fundamenta­lly different than playing in other tournament­s, other hockey events, because it's an opportunit­y to play for your country on a global stage with fans watching who never otherwise watch hockey games,” Fehr said. “There's a patriotic element, too, which players feel and feel very strongly and it's something we should applaud and be proud of for them. And to take that opportunit­y away would be most, most unfortunat­e.”

The NHL has acknowledg­ed it isn't excited about the prospects of marketing the sport in South Korea, but it is very interested in being part of the 2022 Olympics in China.

Fasel suggested that might not be an option.

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