Los Angeles Times

Bettman closes Olympics door

NHL will not take a break for the 2018 Games, commission­er strongly reiterates.

- By Helene Elliott helene.elliott@latimes.com Twitter: @helenenoth­elen

PITTSBURGH — Using his most emphatic language to date, NHL commission­er Gary Bettman said Monday that the league will not take a break next season to allow players to participat­e in the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea.

In addition, he said the 2018 NHL All-Star game has been awarded to Tampa, which reinforces his resolve because the league has not held its All-Star festivitie­s during recent Olympic seasons.

NHL players have represente­d their homelands in each Winter Olympics starting with 1998. Bettman has often indicated that owners’ appetite for interrupti­ng the season had waned and that the league didn’t gain sufficient benefits from temporaril­y shutting its doors. However, executives of the Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation have said they’d be willing to pay insurance and transporta­tion costs and they believed the matter was still negotiable.

“Six weeks ago we were very clear and definitive that the teams had no interest in going to the Olympics in Pyeongchan­g,” Bettman said during his annual pre-Stanley Cup Final news conference. “And I know there have been a variety of comments either from Rene Fasel of the Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation or from representa­tives of the Players’ Assn. suggesting that this was still an open issue. It is not, and it has not been . ... We’re not anti-Olympics. We’re anti-disruption to the season.”

He also said the NHL will focus on growing its business in China and will send the Kings and Vancouver Canucks to play exhibition­s in Shanghai and Beijing in September. However, the NHL hasn’t committed to allowing players to compete in the 2022 Winter Games in Beijing.

Deputy commission­er Bill Daly, asked about rumors the Kings were interested in bringing back defenseman Slava Voynov, who spent two months in jail in 2015 after entering a no-contest plea to a misdemeano­r domestic violence charge and was suspended by the NHL, said the league would have to approve any such effort. Voynov returned to Russia to play in the KHL but the Kings retain his rights. The NHL wouldn’t approve his inclusion on Russia’s roster in last year’s World Cup of Hockey.

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