Rather than expansion, I would be happy seeing Kunlun back in China as a first step.
At this point why don't they just rebrand them as Red Star Moscow?
Rather than expansion, I would be happy seeing Kunlun back in China as a first step.
But how is there an Interational brand when they don't play in China It does not seem that hard for them to just go back to BeijingNow that the Beijing Hockey Association has taken over the program in China there's little desire for Kunlun to ever return, but for the KHL its current brand still provides a semblance of international presence so why change anything as long as the Chinese side is willing to play along, for reasons that have nothing to do with hockey.
The easiest, though, is just to rent facilities in Moscow and hire a bunch of legionnaires to play there. The team is not even supposed to be successful on or off the ice, just to exist for the sake of existing.But how is there an Interational brand when they don't play in China It does not seem that hard for them to just go back to Beijing
Yeah, but it just feels so hollow. Zero actual Chinese talent on a club that will never be good enough for the playoffs.Now that the Beijing Hockey Association has taken over the program in China there's little desire for Kunlun to ever return, but for the KHL its current brand still provides a semblance of international presence so why change anything as long as the Chinese side is willing to play along, for reasons that have nothing to do with hockey.
Um, the only options are countries favorable to Russia and could reasonably support hockey, so that would be:After the Olympics in 2026 I can see Milano getting a team to compete in KHL with another team coming out of Japan
Um, the only options are countries favorable to Russia and could reasonably support hockey, so that would be:
1. Moving Kunlun back to China (ain't ever happening again)
2. Getting another club in Kazakhstan or Belarus (I don't know if either country has the infrastructure or the population for a second club)
3. Looking at Kyrgyzstan, where bandy is more popular.
4. Out there choices like Iran.
5. Well, promoting teams from the Super league.
North Koreans play in D3B, that's basically a "participation medal" level.What about Pyongyang potentially? Russia and North Korea are friendly countries so maybe it would make sense one day. Correct me if Im wrong, but their national team is active on international scene so why not build a proper team with Russian help. I think that would make KHL more interesting