The Welland Tribune

Attendance woes hit world junior tourney

- MICHAEL TRAIKOS

BUFFALO — Who needs tickets?

Apparently, everyone does at this year’s world junior hockey championsh­ip. The tournament, which struggled to fill NHL- size venues in Toronto and Montreal last year, is not off to a great start in Buffalo.

KeyBank Center, which has a capacity of more than 19,000, was maybe half full during Canada’s 4- 2 win against Finland on Boxing Day. Later that night, the lack of attendance was so dismal that organizers decided to close off the 300 level for the U. S.- Denmark game and crammed fans together in the lower bowels to give the illusion of a sold- out arena.

“I didn’t know really what to expect,” said Team Canada head coach Dominique Ducharme, who was focused on the support from the Canadian fans. “There was a lot of red jerseys. I think that the further the tournament moves on we’ll get more and more and more. We’re always happy to have Canadians behind us.”

Critics will say this is what happens when you don’t have the tournament in Canada, but that’s not necessaril­y true.

Toronto and Montreal, which split hosting duties last year, had difficulty filling the buildings. The Air Canada Centre was pock- mocked with empty seats throughout the preliminar­y round and the Bell Centre was not even close to anything resembling a sell- out during a semi- final featuring Canada and Sweden.

Part of the problem is pricing. Just because you are holding an event in an NHL rink does not mean you can charge NHL prices for it. Tickets for Wednesday night’s game between Canada and Slovakia began at $ 30 and went as high as $ 110, while Friday’s outdoor game between Canada and the United States at New Era Field — the home of the NFL’s Buffalo Bills — started at $ 55 and reached $ 137.

As of Wednesday evening, there were thousands of seats still available.

While making the tournament more affordable might help, the bigger issue is exhaustion. After Toronto and Montreal split hosting duties in 2015 and 2017, this is basically the third time in the last four years that the same segment of fans are being asked to pay NHL prices for a junior- level product that lacks a Connor McDavid or a Jack Eichel to make it worthwhile. Heck, Canada doesn’t even have a draft- eligible prospect — or someone from the nearby Maple Leafs — on the roster.

Maybe attendance will improve when the tournament moves to Vancouver and Victoria next year. If not, this could become a strictly made- for- TV event.

 ?? MARK BLINCH/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Belraussia­n players celebrates a goal against against Switzerlan­d in front of a sparse crowd Wednesday at the world junior hockey championsh­ip in Buffalo.
MARK BLINCH/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Belraussia­n players celebrates a goal against against Switzerlan­d in front of a sparse crowd Wednesday at the world junior hockey championsh­ip in Buffalo.

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