Chicago Sun-Times

PERRY GRIEVANCE STILL A POSSIBILIT­Y

- Ben Pope

TORONTO — The deadline for the NHL Players Associatio­n to file a grievance against the Blackhawks over their terminatio­n of forward Corey Perry’s contract has been extended, NHLPA director Marty Walsh said Friday.

The deadline was originally in late January, 60 days after the terminatio­n.

NHL deputy commission­er Bill Daly said Friday a grievance had been “threatened.” Reading between the lines, the extension allows the NHLPA to keep that threat open while likely pushing for a settlement.

“[Perry’s] timeline ran out, so we want to make sure we have enough time to continue forward,” Walsh said.

NHL commission­er Gary Bettman said Perry believes the Hawks didn’t have proper grounds to oust him over an incident of workplace misconduct that took place Nov. 21 during a road trip to Columbus. Bettman added that he personally has no problem with how the Hawks handled the incident.

The situation could play out similarly to the way the Sharks’ terminatio­n of forward Evander Kane’s contract did. Kane was terminated in 2021 for inappropri­ate actions such as submitting a fake COVID-19 vaccinatio­n card but was ultimately found not to have violated his contract terms. The NHLPA filed a grievance on his behalf in January 2022 and reached a settlement with the Sharks that September.

Regardless of how things play out legally, Perry, 38, has moved on in his career. He made his Oilers debut last weekend.

NHL back to Olympics

The league announced Friday, during a news conference as part of All-Star Weekend, that it will allow its players to participat­e in the Winter Olympics in 2026 and 2030.

“Everybody felt on our ownership side that it was the right thing to do,” Bettman said. “This really came down to doing something because the players really wanted it.”

The 2026 Games will mark the first time NHL players have competed in the Olympics since 2014. The league didn’t allow participat­ion in 2018 and 2022 largely due to scheduling concerns — because a multiweek break in February seriously disrupts the regularsea­son schedule.

Improved collaborat­ion between the NHL and the Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation, the global governing body of hockey, paved the way for the change, along with adamant support within the NHLPA, especially from Oilers center Connor McDavid, the league’s biggest star and the winner of the $1 million All-Star Skills competitio­n Friday in Toronto.

“I’ve been vocal about this,” McDavid said. “I feel like it’s important for hockey as we continue to try to grow our game.”

Said IIHF president Luc Tardif: “It was not easy. That’s really important. [Over] two

years of work, and really intense [work] for the last six months, we learned to work together. We have a new process.”

In 2025, the NHL will host a smaller internatio­nal tournament featuring four countries — the U.S., Canada, Sweden and Finland — that will replace next season’s All-Star Game. Bettman said the league hopes to begin coordinati­ng a full World Cup of Hockey (an event last held in 2016) starting in 2028.

Hockey Canada update

Daly said NHL teams were not kept informed during the league’s two-year investigat­ion of the Hockey Canada sexual-assault scandal from the 2018 world junior championsh­ips.

That means the Hawks couldn’t have definitive­ly known whether Taylor Raddysh and Boris Katchouk would be implicated (beyond what Raddysh and Katchouk told them). Ultimately, however, neither Hawks forward was among the five players charged with sexual assault by police in London, Ontario, this past week.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/AP ?? The Oilers’ Connor McDavid, who won the All-Star skills competitio­n Friday, also won earlier in the day when the NHL gave its blessing to Olympic participat­ion.
NATHAN DENETTE/AP The Oilers’ Connor McDavid, who won the All-Star skills competitio­n Friday, also won earlier in the day when the NHL gave its blessing to Olympic participat­ion.
 ?? ?? Corey Perry
Corey Perry

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