Toronto Star

Olympics: IIHF president doesn’t like odds of NHL players going to 2018 Games

- JAMES ELLINGWORT­H

SOCHI, RUSSIA— The head of ice hockey’s internatio­nal body says there is a strong possibilit­y that NHL players won’t be competing at the next Winter Olympics.

Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation president Rene Fasel puts the chances at 60 per cent that the NHL will decline to go to the 2018 Games in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, because of a lack of money to cover player insurance.

Fasel said the IOC has cancelled its contributi­on to player travel and insurance costs for Pyeongchan­g, leaving the IIHF facing a $10-million shortfall and “begging” for money around the world.

“It’s always difficult to get (to) the Olympics,” he said.

“And now with some problems on our side, 50-50 is very positive. I would be more 60 per cent that they are not coming.”

Negotiatio­ns and brinkmansh­ip over finances are common in the lead-up to Olympic hockey tournament­s. For the 2014 tournament in Sochi, Russia, the NHL’s participat­ion was assured only in July 2013, seven months before the games.

The IOC’s refusal to cover player insurance adds an additional dimension for 2018.

The NHL did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Tuesday, but commission­er Gary Bettman has made it clear costs are a key factor.

“There are real costs to us going, including insurance, including transporta­tion because we’re losing part of our season, we’ve got to get in and out quickly,” Bettman said last month at a meeting of The Associated Press sports editors in New York.

“The players for the last five Olympics in particular have been accommodat­ed in a certain way as far as it relates to their families. Those are issues that would once again have to be resolved . . . I’m not sure that there would be a lot of appetite for us on top of that to have to pay for the privilege.

“We don’t make money going to the Olympics.”

Bettman said he didn’t expect a decision until after the World Cup of Hockey in Toronto in September.

While the IOC gives the IIHF around $40 million of revenue each Olympics, Fasel insists that money is earmarked for developing hockey and wants national Olympic committees and hockey federation­s to plug the gap.

The IOC pulled its extra subsidy because its leaders are “a bit scared that other (sports) federation­s will come and also ask for some compensati­on for travelling and insurance,” said Fasel, who is also an IOC member and serves on its rule-making executive board.

“I think my idea is to work closer together with the national Olympic committees, as they have normally to pay transporta­tion and insurance for the athletes when they come to the Games, so I can imagine that some of the NOCs are also ready to spend some money there, so we have to go around and do some begging.”

Fasel said the end of this year is the deadline to reach a deal because of the NHL’s need to draw up a calendar for the Olympic season.

“If you don’t have the best, (the Olympics) will be a different competitio­n for sure,” he said, but warned: “At the end, somebody has to pay. That’s the question. On my side I will do everything possible to make it happen.”

Fasel dismissed the suggestion that the World Cup of Hockey could offer some players less incentive to demand to be allowed to play at the Olympics.

“There is nothing like the Olympics,” he said. “I think for an athlete to win the gold medal is so different from winning the Stanley Cup. You can win the Stanley Cup every year.”

 ??  ?? IIHF head Rene Fasel thinks there is about a 40 per cent chance of NHL participat­ion in Pyeongchan­g.
IIHF head Rene Fasel thinks there is about a 40 per cent chance of NHL participat­ion in Pyeongchan­g.

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