sandysan
Registered User
- Dec 7, 2011
- 24,834
- 6,388
What never worked out? NHL growth from Olympics? That's completely unmeasurable which is the main problem. A lot easier to look at Seth jones and Austin Mathews and say oh sun belt expansion was a major success. But there's no metric to judge Olympic participation short of twenty years from now some new country becomes a hockey power and and the next Kopitar says oh I really loved basketball but saw the Olympics and decided to play hockey.
Its been 5 olympics, choose whatever metric you like and the data says that NHL participation has not helpedthe league. The league ALSO says this and this was essentially the impetus for the world cup.
There was a posibility that immediately after the games the NHL could have blasted highlights of the games out the wazoo, things like " you saw TJ oshie in Sochi, now come watch him with the caps" kind of thing but the NHL's " partner" in this expressedly forbids it.
And taking the extremely RARE superrstars from non traditional markets as evidence that hockey can grow there is just silly. Both of those people are copmplete outliers because unless those areas invest in the infrastructure to allow the complete lottery winners in terms of chance and circumstance, the flow wont increase.
There are huge HUGE swaths of the US where even if you wanted to play the game, you cannot. Relying on expats or people born in one area who are willing to move to say moose jaw to develop into nhl level players is no way to grow the game.
Chew on this, Canada which ( i'm guessing) has the most rinks per capita is already having problem with access due to cost. Its a supply and demand thing, in hockey rink deserts ( and this has nothing to go with geography) the supply is less do the demand goes up and further prices more people who COULD grow the game out. Hockey is on its way to becomming the winter version of polo, if its not there already where the only people who can afford to play are the VERY upper middle class or 1%'ers.