Vancouver Sun

Bettman glad to be the grizzled vet

But NHL head says being the oldest commission­er in pro sports doesn’t sit as well

- IRA PODELL

We have to make sure that it’s all working both on and off the ice, making sure that all our business initiative­s are moving forward. GARY BETTMAN NHL COMMISSION­ER

NHL commission­er Gary Bettman is fully comfortabl­e with being the dean of those in charge of major North American sports. Being the oldest — well, that is a different story. A few days into his 22nd season as hockey’s head man, Bettman is on the verge of being the longest tenured commission­er, although he feels he has held that distinctio­n for several years. Once Bud Selig steps down as baseball commission­er, Bettman will have more time in his job than the leaders in MLB, the NFL and the NBA, where Bettman got his start under longtime commission­er David Stern.

Selig’s tenure began as acting commission­er in September 1992 five months before Bettman took over as the NHL’s first commission­er. Selig held the interim title until he fully took the job in July 1998.

“I already am the longest,” Bettman said. “But I will be the oldest.”

Ah, yes. No dispute there. Selig is 80, Bettman is 62 and in his estimation still spry for his age.

“That is a little bit harder to get your arms around,” he said of being the oldest commission­er. “I still consider myself a young man.”

Bettman has a long list of accomplish­ments in the NHL, presiding over extraordin­ary growth and expansion not just in the number of teams ( 30), but into new markets like the American South. He insists there are no current plans to add more teams.

His two decades in the job have been filled with plenty of problems, too — most notably three lockouts, including one that forced the cancellati­on of the entire 2004- 05 season. That wasn’t a proud moment, but he says with certainty that it was a necessary price to pay to get salaries in line so every team could compete and survive. The NHL now has a hard salary cap.

Bettman bristled when asked if he feels the NHL has recovered from the damage caused by the lost season.

“We were fully recovered the first season,” he said. “We had record attendance and record revenues, and the game on the ice was better when we came back. The reason we recovered as well as we did is our fans, thankfully, understood what we were doing and were supportive. The game and the stability of our franchises had severe problems and we addressed them. We didn’t do it with a Band- Aid. Unfortunat­ely it took a year to persuade the players’ associatio­n what needed to be done.”

The NHL hasn’t experience­d any sort of crisis with domestic violence among its players, a problem the NFL is grappling with. Bettman chalks that up to his league’s dedication to education and counsellin­g.

“We’re always self- reviewing,” said Bettman, who added that he hasn’t spoken to NFL commission­er Roger Goodell in a few months. “We’ve been engaged on issues such as domestic violence for more than a decade, in terms of having our security department and our behavioura­l health counsellor­s working with the players team by team in presentati­ons every season to make sure there is an understand­ing of these important issues. Overwhelmi­ngly, if you look at the conduct of our players, it is something that we can all be proud of.”

A more pressing issue are concussion­s: how to prevent them and how to make sure players who sustain them receive proper medical attention and take necessary time to recover before returning to the ice. According to data from STATS, there were 53 concussion­s during 2013- 14 regular season, a sharp decline from the 78 reported during the league’s last full season two years ago. A protocol is in place to diagnose concussion­s and treat them. Failure to comply leaves teams subject to league fines.

“We’re constantly monitoring and self- evaluating everything that is going on,” Bettman said. “If we don’t think the concussion protocols are working to our satisfacti­on, then we will make adjustment­s.”

Getting players to report their injuries also goes a long way to tackling the issue. Being the first league to implement baseline testing has helped greatly.

“We have spent a lot of time changing the culture and engaging in education with the players’ associatio­n in order to get players comfortabl­e that they need to self- report because it’s better for their recovery if they’ve had a concussion and they stop playing,” Bettman said.

The commission­er is comfortabl­e with the safety of the game, and he has a grandson who has played mite hockey for three years. He expressed no real complaints as the new season begins.

“We are coming off a series of successive seasons where each one was better and more successful than the one before,” Bettman said. “Last season may have been the best in the history of the league.”

That culminated in the Los Angeles Kings winning their second Stanley Cup title in three seasons, and they did it in a big- market matchup with the Eastern Conference champion New York Rangers, who hadn’t been to the finals since ending their 54- year championsh­ip drought in 1994. Bettman was in Los Angeles on Wednesday to see the Kings raise their championsh­ip banner.

Although Bettman never picks favourites, getting big city clubs to the championsh­ip round certainly does bring more eyes to the games.

“It’s more about what takes place on the ice,” he said. “Having L. A. and New York as the two markets competing in the Stanley Cup Final got a lot of attention, but we happen to have markets that are even stronger hockey markets, whether it’s some of the Canadian markets, or it’s Detroit, or Boston or Chicago. None of that matters if what you see on the ice isn’t interestin­g, exciting, entertaini­ng and compelling.”

So what keeps him up at night after all these years?

“There is never any one thing,” Bettman said. “We have to make sure that it’s all working both on and off the ice, making sure that all our business initiative­s are moving forward both at the national level and at the club level.”

He said he never thought once about going back to the NBA, where Adam Silver has taken over as commission­er.

“Never. This is where I wanted to be. This is where I want to be,” Bettman said. “I haven’t thought about the NBA in 22 years that I have been here.”

 ?? RICHARD DREW/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? National Hockey League commission­er Gary Bettman says the NHL’s most recent season — which ended with the Los Angeles Kings hoisting the Stanley Cup — ‘ may have been the best in the history of the league.’
RICHARD DREW/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS National Hockey League commission­er Gary Bettman says the NHL’s most recent season — which ended with the Los Angeles Kings hoisting the Stanley Cup — ‘ may have been the best in the history of the league.’

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