Barclay Donaldson
Registered User
Still, you do not get my point.
Of course, when a team decides to join the KHL, there must be financing. That is fine. But, why to make barriers for clubs if they wish to join the KHL? That is a problem that European hockey federations "invent" barriers for clubs who are interested in joining the KHL. That is a key reason why the expansion is so slow. And politics is another reason.
The same federations who are not able to agree on a simple deal with the NHL on transfers. Why should I believe them that their decision on hindering the KHL´s expansion is beneficial for European club development?
Your main issue is financing. I do not see it as the most crucial issue. I named much more important issues above.
If a Finnish citizen thinks that Jokerit´s financing is illegal, it is his duty to report it to the police.
I get your point. Certain associations are blocking a transcontinental league. They're preventing a league from standing up to the big bad NHL you dislike so much. No league will ever be able to compete with the NHL. The KHL will never have the stability or quality the NHL has and will have. There's too many problems with ownership, player development, and TV revenue that will never be solved. A transcontinental league won't be able to compete with the NHL either. Any attempt to do so is futile. When the US economy tanked in 08, the league didn't get turned upside down. The KHL was hurt so bad by the ruble that Gazprom had to step in. And they're supposedly the NHL's closest competition.
And I'm not saying Jokerit's financing is illegal. I'm saying they're one of the most valuable clubs in the league and are still losing a ton of money and it's unsustainable. That's not a good sign and the reason why no other people will join. There's been interest in KHL Europe expansion for years, but once ownership groups crunch the numbers they're out.
They should put up barriers, it will prevent stupid people from losing a ton of money and not benefiting the country at all. Jokerit isn't helping keep Finnish talent like it was designed to, like your argument presumes. Eeli Tolvanen, Vesalainen, Rasanen just left for the AHL a few days ago, Korpisalo left before Jokerit joined the KHL but my point remains. Crowns won't be able to keep top Swedish talent. A German team wouldn't either. Bratislava certainly hasn't kept the top Slovak talent. Russian teams certainly haven't kept the best Russian players. Heck, even Radulov, who left under a clout, still came back. Put the resources into improving the domestic leagues and accept that you'll lose your best players to the NHL. That's what happens when there's so much money in a stable league that everyone wants to play in so much more than everywhere else. No one will ever catch up, or even come close.