One of the many consequences would be more teams never hosting international tournaments anymore, while in the countries that do host interest in these new teams would generally be very limited.
Agree 100%.You're overestimating the parity in international hockey; it's not even close to the parity of international soccer. You think Canada beating up on, say, Great Britain at the WC is bad? That's nothing. As you get into lower levels, there's even less parity. Often you'll see things like the 28th ranked international team beating the 34th ranked team 12-0. The teams in Division II would get destroyed by most teams in Division IB, who in turn generally get creamed by teams in Division !A, and those teams are significantly worse than even the worse teams in the Elite division (the teams that get beaten up on by the big nations's B-teams every year at the World Championships).
Well it might help the egos of a couple of posters around here right?32 teams is a non-starter. Do we really need to see, say, Finland against the United Arab Emirates?
Realistically after the top 16-20 teams, you could make teams from HF boards posters from Sweden, canada, USA, Finland ect who would beat the national teams of teams ranked 20th and lower that how bad this idea is.24 teams
4 team by group - 3 games
Round 16 - ranking game for losers
7 games for everyone. Small nations play a single match out of reach and are exposed in the biggest international event every year.
Same format for teams 25 to 48.
Creation of a 3rd division until reaching 72.
Just 1 promotion/relegation.
Please, the nerds on here couldn't defeat Luxembourg, let alone a team full of Italian pros and Canadian fromer-ECHL mercenaries.Realistically after the top 16-20 teams, you could make teams from HF boards posters from Sweden, canada, USA, Finland ect who would beat the national teams of teams ranked 20th and lower that how bad this idea is.
How about the 32nd ranked team I bet they could.Please, the nerds on here couldn't defeat Luxembourg, let alone a team full of Italian pros and Canadian fromer-ECHL mercenaries.
The level gap between 10 and 24 is not huge.Realistically after the top 16-20 teams, you could make teams from HF boards posters from Sweden, canada, USA, Finland ect who would beat the national teams of teams ranked 20th and lower that how bad this idea is.
Perhaps not as most of these "national teams" can get better by using hired guns but the gap between them and the top 8 is huge and really in any best on best tournament there is a big 3 or 4 and then a couple of teams that could pull and upset and then the rest who have zero chance.The level gap between 10 and 24 is not huge.
those games would still be a complete joke though right?And with my system, the top 6 would only play one match against teams ranked between 19 and 24.
Those teams have been around the WC's and Olympics for a while and you can't manufacture interest.If hockey wants to have the most visibility possible, we must integrate China, Japan, Corea, Italy, France, Great Britain, Poland...
Not sure if there's a ton of money to be made in Poland, but hockey taking off in one of those other 6 large economies you named would be a pretty big deal for the game and for the NHL.The level gap between 10 and 24 is not huge.
And with my system, the top 6 would only play one match against teams ranked between 19 and 24.
If hockey wants to have the most visibility possible, we must integrate China, Japan, Corea, Italy, France, Great Britain, Poland...
Yes but we are not going to have an 8-a-side world championship.Perhaps not as most of these "national teams" can get better by using hired guns but the gap between them and the top 8 is huge and really in any best on best tournament there is a big 3 or 4 and then a couple of teams that could pull and upset and then the rest who have zero chance.
those games would still be a complete joke though right?
Those teams have been around the WC's and Olympics for a while and you can't manufacture interest.
There is either organic growth or there isn't.
I mean France is producing a few NHLers now and is competing pretty much every year World Championships. Progress obviously won't come overnight but it IS happening.Perhaps not as most of these "national teams" can get better by using hired guns but the gap between them and the top 8 is huge and really in any best on best tournament there is a big 3 or 4 and then a couple of teams that could pull and upset and then the rest who have zero chance.
those games would still be a complete joke though right?
Those teams have been around the WC's and Olympics for a while and you can't manufacture interest.
There is either organic growth or there isn't.
How many tip quality players would be even interested in this type of tournament?Yes but we are not going to have an 8-a-side world championship.
I've seen jokes go wrong before. With games won very laboriously, even defeats.
What you can't understand is that with my system, we would very quickly reach the 1/4 Finals and that there would be ranking matches. Canada would play 3 matches against nations usually in the world championship (12th, 13th and a top 16), 1 match against a non-top 16 nation and 3 matches against top 8 nations.
So your excuse doesn't work. It's not just for 1 match that the competition would be less interesting. Especially since I'm eliminating this long group phase.
10-1 is just one game. The small nations would have 6 accessible matches afterwards.Not sure if there's a ton of money to be made in Poland, but hockey taking off in one of those other 6 large economies you named would be a pretty big deal for the game and for the NHL.
And while a 20 or 24 team best-on-best World Cup isn't ideal, and might lead to some 10-1 games on opening day, it could lead to some serious growth for hockey within 10-20 years. Especially if we include countries like China, Japan, France & the UK in such a high profile tournament.
Sure it's happening just like that new 3 on 3 league eh?I mean France is producing a few NHLers now and is competing pretty much every year World Championships. Progress obviously won't come overnight but it IS happening.
The way the game is picking up steam in Scotland & Northern Ireland also can't be ignored. The EIHL is doing good work up there.
China has (had?) a KHL team. It's happening man.
The NHL is a problem for the development of hockey but that's another debate. This private league should not have as much power and the federations which train the players must have access to the players as in all sports which are not crushed by a North American private league. With this format, it's just 2 weeks of competition.How many tip quality players would be even interested in this type of tournament?
The NHL season is long and is by far the best league in the world and that's where most of hockey interest lies.
Who was in the finals at the World Championships again this year?Sure it's happening just like that new 3 on 3 league eh?
There is a resin that the WC has 4 or 5 different level and even the 8-16 teams in the top group aren't really that good compared to the top 4 in a real tournament with actual preparation ect... By all teams.
If you submitted an HFBoard All Star Team of regular posters that played at moderately high levels and stay active in competitive Men's Leagues, you'd get a pretty good team at the level of those teams or better, but if you just picked random HFBoard users then you wouldn't.Please, the nerds on here couldn't defeat Luxembourg, let alone a team full of Italian pros and Canadian fromer-ECHL mercenaries.
The way the WC's is set up coinciding with the NHL playoffs simply reinforces the point that it's not a best on best tournament and the idea of a 32 team WC would be best on best right?Who was in the finals at the World Championships again this year?
I don't think anyone would place Switzerland or Czechia in the top 4 right now.
Upsets happen, especially in single-elimination game tournaments. Canada's best lost to Kazakhstan on the world's biggest stage. Sweden's best was eliminated by Belarus. At one point I believe Poland defeated the best the Soviets had to offer. These things happen and they most certainly would again, were such a tournament to take place.
While I'm not a big fan of Bettman the IIHF or Olympic committees aren't exactly the type of people that should have power either.The NHL is a problem for the development of hockey but that's another debate. This private league should not have as much power and the federations which train the players must have access to the players as in all sports which are not crushed by a North American private league. With this format, it's just 2 weeks of competition.
Ah yes, the HF Boards Selects. I could get behind that.If you submitted an HFBoard All Star Team of regular posters that played at moderately high levels and stay active in competitive Men's Leagues, you'd get a pretty good team at the level of those teams or better, but if you just picked random HFBoard users then you wouldn't.
The examples I provided with Canada & Sweden are from best-on-best Olympic tournaments. As for the Soviets, they pretty much always brought their best team to the World Championships.The way the WC's is set up coinciding with the NHL playoffs simply reinforces the point that it's not a best on best tournament and the idea of a 32 team WC would be best on best right?
Obviously we're talking about an ideal world where the NHL frees players to compete.The way the WC's is set up coinciding with the NHL playoffs simply reinforces the point that it's not a best on best tournament and the idea of a 32 team WC would be best on best right?
While I'm not a big fan of Bettman the IIHF or Olympic committees aren't exactly the type of people that should have power either.
The NHL is the organic place where the best players go plain and simple.
Sure Canada lost a junior game 6-3 and that probably is the exception that proves the rule and at the adult level how have the results been?Ah yes, the HF Boards Selects. I could get behind that.
Good team on paper, but can you imagine the intense debates they'd have over starting line-ups and special teams? Buddy, it'd be chaos.
The examples I provided with Canada & Sweden are from best-on-best Olympic tournaments. As for the Soviets, they pretty much always brought their best team to the World Championships.
The economy has very little to do with anything here, china and India will in a couple of decades have among the largest economies in the world hockey success isn't going to follow.Obviously we're talking about an ideal world where the NHL frees players to compete.
I stayed at 24.
The presence of the best in the NHL is the result of a historical sporting logic (40 years ago, Canada concentrated the overwhelming majority of talents) and a cyclical financial logic (the North American economy).
So are you predicting that Canada and or the USA will drop out of the top 4 nations in the world?In the hockey of tomorrow, North American players will be in the minority and non-Western capital will be able to mobilize a lot of money.
Not sure what you mean by visibility and what that has to do with the topic.Currently, IIHF hockey has more visibility in Europe than the NHL. If I hadn't been able to see the international competitions in France, I would never have seen hockey in my life.
So?For a kid to want to play hockey, he has to see hockey on television, for free on the public service.
Oh right. That WAS at the World Juniors and not the 1998 Olympics. Damn, my mistake, I guess I misremembered that one. Nontheless, the best Canadian players still lost to Switzerland in 2006. It isn't quite as bad as losing to Kazakhstan, but it goes to show that these types of upsets do happen.Sure Canada lost a junior game 6-3 and that probably is the exception that proves the rule and at the adult level how have the results been?
The economy has very little to do with anything here, china and India will in a couple of decades have among the largest economies in the world hockey success isn't going to follow.
Canada has had and will continue to have a strong pipeline of talent.
For this example after naming the Canadian National team they could select a dozen+ teams that would still beat the bottom section of 20-24 teams in your model.
So are you predicting that Canada and or the USA will drop out of the top 4 nations in the world?
Not likely in anyone's lifetime reading this right now.
Not sure what you mean by visibility and what that has to do with the topic.
Sure the time zones means more live games but that's always been the case.
France has something like 76 pro, semi pro teams and sure are visible but any kid wanting to be a hockey player in their dreams wants to play in the NHL.
So?