San Francisco Chronicle

League withdraws from Olympics

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The NHL will not send its players to the Beijing Olympics over concerns that the coronaviru­s pandemic will disrupt the league’s ability to complete a full season.

Two people with direct knowledge of discussion­s told the Associated Press on Tuesday that the league informed the NHL Players’ Associatio­n it was exercising its right to withdraw from the Beijing Games because there was a material disruption to the season.

The decision is an abrupt turnaround from September, when the NHL, union, Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation struck a deal to put the best players in the world back on sports’ biggest stage after they skipped the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Games. The fast-spreading coronaviru­s omicron variant forced the scrapping of those plans.

A week ago, the NHL attempted to halt the spread of the virus by reintroduc­ing more restrictiv­e COVID-19 protocols, which included daily testing and limiting player gatherings, especially on the road.

Then a sudden rash of postponeme­nts brought the total to 50 this season, a daunting number to reschedule and complete an 82-game season while taking an Olympic break for more than two weeks in February. The NHL’s bottom line is at stake, with the league and players drawing no direct money from competing at the Olympics.

The decision comes long before the league faced a Jan. 10 deadline to pull out without financial penalty. As a result, the men’s Olympic hockey tournament will go on without NHL players for the second consecutiv­e time.

Winnipeg Jets goaltender Connor Hellebuyck, the likely U.S. Olympic starter, expressed displeasur­e Tuesday with the decision not to go and called the rash of postponeme­nts overkill.

Pittsburgh Penguins captain Sidney Crosby already was bracing for the possibilit­y of the NHL not participat­ing and, at the age of 34, ending what could be his final chance to represent Canada at the Olympics one more time.

“These are opportunit­ies and experience­s of a lifetime that you don’t get very many of as an athlete, and you might only get one,” said Crosby, who won Olympic gold with Canada in 2010 and 2014. “It just might happen to fall in your window and if it doesn’t happen to work out, it’s unfortunat­e.”

While the NHL and NHLPA agreed on Olympic participat­ion last year as part of a collective bargaining agreement extension, the deal to go to Beijing was contingent on pandemic conditions not worsening.

Unless the Beijing Games are postponed a year like Tokyo’s Summer Games were, a generation of stars including American Auston Matthews, Canadians Connor McDavid and Nathan MacKinnon, German Leon Draisaitl and Swede Victor Hedman will need to wait until 2026 to play in the Olympic men’s hockey tournament for the first time.

“It’s a thing you’ve been looking forward to for a very long time,” Hedman said. “For us to not be able to go, it’s going to hurt for a while.”

The NHL was full go on the Olympics until the delta and omicron variants began spreading across North America this month. Before Calgary’s outbreak in the first half of December, only five games needed to be reschedule­d and one was already made up.

The NHL did not participat­e in the Olympics until 1998, which started a string of five in a row through Sochi in 2014. The season was not stopped in 2018, leaving mostly profession­als playing in Europe and some college players to make up the national rosters in South Korea, where the IOC was reluctant to pay for insurance and expenses.

Russia, which won gold at the Pyeongchan­g Games, immediatel­y becomes the favorite without NHL players leading the Americans thanks to an influx of homegrown talent playing in the Kontinenta­l Hockey League.

Several NHL players already had expressed hesitation­s about participat­ing, including Vegas goalie Robin Lehner, who pulled his name out of considerat­ion to represent Sweden. Lehner cited mental health reasons in noting the potentiall­y lengthy quarantine­s for athletes who test positive during the competitio­n.

Tuesday’s game

Lightning 4, Golden Knights

3: Andrei Vasilevski­y stopped 38 shots and Steven Stamkos scored the tie-breaking goal midway through the third period as Tampa Bay won in Las Vegas, its eighth win in its past nine games.

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