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Sports Illustrated's Frank Deford is wrong: NHL belongs at Olympics

6
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by Laykroyd

(Originally published on HockeyAdventure.com)

I can only imagine that after Frank Deford completed his latest piece for Sports Illustrated’s web site, he lit a big cigar, leaped into his Hummer, fired up an American Idol CD, and zoomed off to his favorite steakhouse for a 64-ounce prime rib.

The veteran columnist’s argument that the NHL and NBA should both withdraw from the Olympics (after 2010 and 2008 respectively) is both patronizing and parochial, and speaks to an overblown sense of navel-gazing North American entitlement.

This is not about asking “major-league team sports to kowtow to the Olympics.” We’re talking, in hockey’s case, about taking a two-week break once every four years. If SI only granted Mr. Deford two weeks off every four years–for professional development time!–I suspect he’d be mailing resumés to The Sporting News and ESPN The Magazine right now.

Yes, many people have a short attention span nowadays. But only in the very weakest NHL markets will casual fans potentially forget about their local franchise after not seeing the Phoenix Coyotes or Columbus Blue Jackets come through town for 16 days.

Yes, NHL players could get hurt at the Olympics. But they’re more likely to get hurt while battling Atlanta on Tuesday night than in international hockey.

Yes, there’s a brief loss of NHL revenue over that two-week period. But you won’t get any better exposure for the sport of hockey than putting it on the biggest stage in the world, which is the Olympics.

That’s true regardless of whether you buy into the ideals of the Olympic movement or dismiss “all the sappy ceremonies,” as Mr. Deford does.

Even if you believe everything in sports should be done for the benefit of US network television and their sponsors en route to the Almighty Dollar, you definitely won’t get a better bang for your buck by pulling out of the Olympics and, as an alternative, organizing hockey and basketball World Championships every four years starting in 2011 and putting them both in the same cities.

Mr. Deford, that concept is as wrong-headed as the goal that bounced in off Swedish goalie Tommy Salo’s mask versus Belarus in 2002.

Sure, there are fans who love both basketball and hockey. But for the majority, it would dilute their enjoyment of one or the other to stage the two World Championships side by side, and (especially for hockey) it would undercut the level of media attention. Oh, you could argue that the same dilution occurs when hockey takes place alongside ski jumping and speed skating at the Olympics. But the Games, despite all their problems, have built up a special aura that an isolationist hockey-and-hoops fiesta would never match.

Besides, when it comes to hockey, there are good reasons for staging the World Championships annually. The IIHF doesn’t just hold a tournament every four years, because without the funds that are generated under the current annual format, they wouldn’t be able to subsidize the lower-level tournaments (Division I, Division II, etc.) that keep hockey growing around the world. In addition, for countries outside the Big Seven (Canada, the Czech Republic, Finland, Russia, Slovakia, Sweden, and the USA), the annual tournament provides crucial exposure to top-level competition. Once every four years wouldn’t be enough.

Also, why restrict these hypothetical quadrennial tournaments to large cities such as New York, Los Angeles, Toronto, Montreal, Prague, or Milan, as Mr. Deford proposes? One of the great things about the IIHF World Championships is that they don’t just belong to Moscow and Stockholm. They also belong to smaller places such as Riga, Tampere, and Ostrava, and, in 2008, to Halifax and Quebec City (14th and seventh in population respectively among major Canadian urban centers). The success of an event is not determined solely by the size of arenas or the number of five-star restaurants and hotels in the area.

As far as I’m concerned, basketball can do what it wants–although based on overall international results since 2002, it doesn’t appear the US should be so convinced of its supremacy in that sport that it could afford to withdraw from the Olympics.

But NHL participation in the Olympics is good for both parties, and with a proper view of long-term benefits, it should continue beyond the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver. And as long as the league doesn’t insist on an absurdly short Olympic break, NHLers will almost universally be in favor of continuing.

Mr. Deford, think more globally, and step outside your comfort zone bubble.


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KelsdadAll-Star
755 days ago
Score 0+-
No, they don't belong at the Olympics.
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MetsJetsDevilsDraft Pick
755 days ago
Score 0+-
I liked it better when the olympics was amateur. I understand that in hockey we were playing a bunch of college kids, Canada was playing a bunch of Major Junior kids, and the Soviet Union was claiming its players, who were professional and among the best in the world, were amateurs. But 1) things are different now and 2) even then it created the greatest upset in sports history. I liked routing for a bunch of rag tag kids. I found it more enjoyable than watching professional all-star teams.
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Tyrone BriggsHall of Famer
755 days ago
Score 0+-
I don't believe for a moment that Herb Brooks and his 1980 Olympic team ever considered themselves "rag tag". Unless they didn't graduate from an Ivy League school...
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KelsdadAll-Star
755 days ago
Score 0+-
A few days before the Olympics, the Soviets beat the US something like 11-2. And the game wasn't that close. They were rag tags. The Soviet upset of the US in basketball in 1972 and the US over the Soviets in 1980 are two of the greatest sports upsets of all time and neither can happen again because of de-amateurising the Olympics.
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MetsJetsDevilsDraft Pick
755 days ago
Score 0+-
Hmm, I wonder what to make of all of these:

http://www.c...a/345-25.cfm

http://www.c.../miracle.php

Gosh, even Herb Brooks obit refers to them as ragtag:

http://espn....1594173.html

Here's a review for the movie miracle. Yup, calls them ragtag:

http://espn....1594173.html

Gosh, there are so many I don't know which ones to choose:

http://www.i...-hockey.html

Look under related items in this Washington Post contemporaneous article about the victory:

http://www.w.../80-hock.htm
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Tyrone BriggsHall of Famer
755 days ago
Score 0+-
What the hell does "rag tag" even imply?

Fack those commie bastards. Our guys won the game that mattered most.

USA!
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KelsdadAll-Star
755 days ago
Score 1+-
rag tag implies they sucked.
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Tyrone BriggsHall of Famer
755 days ago
Score 0+-
Well maybe Herb played rope a dope and faked out the Russians. Just like the Colts did last night?
Permalink
MetsJetsDevilsDraft Pick
755 days ago
Score 0+-
I don't think it suggest they sucked. I think it suggests that they were thrown together and told to do their best without much expectation of winning anything.
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KelsdadAll-Star
755 days ago
Score 0+-
Comparitively speaking, they sucked. How long were they together, six weeks? Playing against a team who had been together 10-12 years? You're right, rag tag means thrown together. Just like ten guys from the 'hood getting together for some touch football, pick two teams and play. Same concept.
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Tyrone BriggsHall of Famer
755 days ago
Score 0+-
It is basketball in my "hood".
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KelsdadAll-Star
755 days ago
Score 0+-
Yeah, true. Touch football on ashpalt sucks.
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Tyrone BriggsHall of Famer
755 days ago
Score 0+-
Hurts like a motherfacker. Oops, I'm bad. Again.
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ThecrookedcapAll-Star
755 days ago
Score 0+-
"Golf doesn't need the Olympics anymore than the National Football League or NASCAR does." Hello? Do you realize we're the only country that truly cares about pigskin or taxicab racing? Of course the NFL & NASCAR don't need the Olympics!
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ThecrookedcapAll-Star
755 days ago
Score 0+-
Another thing: does he realize basketball does have such an every-four-years sort of tournament [1]? He may have forgotten since we haven't won since 1994.
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FrankDDiv-I Stud
755 days ago
Score 0+-
Haha that was funny...getting hurt in a game against Atlanta.  ;-) Just kiddin'. This is how I see it. The NHL played in England in attempts to draw some international attention to the sport. Why, in attempts to do so, would you pull your top NHL players from competing on an Olympic level. Sure they don't make money, but you still play a condensed schedule (therefore STILL seating every game) and you have a free marketing tool at your disposal. Will players get hurt? It's always a possibility. But even Peter Forsberg was playing in Sweden as a form of 'rehab', just recently saying he's never been so close to retiring before. (Here's the article http://www.t...is-over.html)
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