Alpine
Registered User
Well Milan Lucic took the Stanley Cup to a Serbian social club in Vancouver that his family belongs to. So descent is important to some.
You wouldn't, because most of these foreign-born Croatians would be ineligible for Croatia's national hockey team.
Is Jagr Czech or German?
There are only 2 MedveÅ¡čak players that have gained eligibility, the new players are not eligible to play for Croatia and will not be until they have played two full seasons in the country.KHL MedveÅ¡čak will most likely enter the KHL next season and its front office is bringing in a lot of players of Croatia descent from all around the world ever since they've entered the Austrian EBEL, some of them already have Croatian passports and they are eligable to play for Croatia. When MedveÅ¡čak enters the KHL the influx of forgein born Croats could be even greater than it is today.
If Neal is counts as Irish because the name might actually be from Neil or O'Neill, then Jagr should count as German.Jäger would be German.
There are only 2 MedveÅ¡čak players that have gained eligibility, the new players are not eligible to play for Croatia and will not be until they have played two full seasons in the country.
There are only 2 Medveščak players that have gained eligibility, the new players are not eligible to play for Croatia and will not be until they have played two full seasons in the country.
The better Croatia will become, the less they will need to rely on foreigners. That's typically something that smaller teams do, and if anything it hinders their progression.
If Neal is counts as Irish because the name might actually be from Neil or O'Neill, then Jagr should count as German.
I'm well aware of the two year rule and there's more than two players who gained eligibility.
Sertich, Prpic, McAuley, that's three. Plus Kinasewich, but he has left Medveščak. Anybody else?
But by 2013 more players are going to be eligible: Naglich, Zanoski, Waugh, Ouzas. Others too if they get passports.
And I think there is no foreigner restriction for non-Russian teams in their first KHL year, so players who are new with Medveščak this season could become eligible by the time the KHL quota would kick in (2014).
It's as much of a German surname as Neal is an Irish surname.Jagr isn't a German surname.
Prpic is retired.Sertich, Prpic, McAuley, that's three. Plus Kinasewich, but he has left MedveÅ¡čak. Anybody else?
He has not gained eligibility then.Letang (he said that he'll applay for a passport and that he'll play in the future),
He has not gained eligibility then.
It's Jágr, it probably was a german name few centuries ago. However you can't say he's German, there is no pesonal connection whatsoever at this point.
what about Lee Stempniak and Kyle Brodziak? Their surnames seem to be slavic.
His passport application has been submited and he'll became a Croatian citizen in the near future.
Czech
His cousins surname is Konecny (Konečný), both Konecny and Horvat (Horvát) are typical Czech surnames, I'm 90% sureGuessing or you heard it ? Horvat is typical croatian surname, so I am asking...
His cousins surname is Konecny (Konečný), both Konecny and Horvat (Horvát) are typical Czech surnames, I'm 90% sure
Konečny is Czech surname for sure, but Horvat...as Ivan94 said...that literally means Hrvat (Croatian)