IIHF Announces WJC Resumption and Sanctions Against Russia, Belarus

Some news that I never really addressed back in February involving the International Ice Hockey Federation.

First off, it was announced back on February 28 that the 2022 IIHF World Junior Championship, postponed back in December amid concerns about COVID-19, will resume later this summer.

NHL.com released a statement back in late February from IIHF President Luc Tardif that – a statement originally made at the closing of the 2022 Olympic Winter Games in Beijing – that the 2022 WJC will resume “in the middle of August in Alberta (Canada). It will be a new competition, which means we forget the results (in December).”

The original 2022 WJC tournament, which began the day after Christmas in Edmonton and Red Deer, Alberta, needed to be postponed after just four days of games were completed. The United States, Czechia and Russia each forfeited prelim games after outbreaks of COVID-19 in their camps.

NHL.com quoted Tardif as saying that the new tournament “could consist of the same rosters each country had in December, regardless of whether those players turn 20 before the new tournament.” The World Juniors are an under-20 tournament.

Tardif continued that, since the 2022 Hlinka Gretzky Cup – a tournament for under-18 players – will be also scheduled for Edmonton and Red Deer in the first week of August, “We are talking with all participants and are negotiating on details. It will be after the Hlinka Gretzky Cup. It will be a hockey festival and the team are excited to do it.”

The USA was supposed to participate in Group B with Russia, Sweden, Slovakia and Switzerland. Group A would feature Canada, Finland, Czechia, Germany and Austria.

Belarus had been promoted to the top tournament after winning the 2022 World Junior Championship Division I, Group A tournament.

However, real world events in the weeks since have thrown a bit of a monkey wrench into the rebooting of this tournament, as well as the IIHF going forward for a while.

At the same meeting held by the IIHF on February 28 that decided the rescheduling of the 2022 WJC, the IIHF Council also addressed the issue of Russian aggression towards Ukraine and subsequent military force being used against the Ukrainians.

The IIHF decided that in light of actions taken by both Russia and their ally Belarus, both Russian and Belarusian National Teams and Clubs have been suspended “from participation in every age category and in all IIHF competitions or events until further notice” according to a press release put out by the IIHF.

In addition, the IIHF has withdrawn “the 2023 IIHF World Junior Championship hosting rights from Russia.”

This was done to “enable the IIHF to ensure the safety of IIHF Championships and all participating players, officials, and fans.”

Teams suspended include: Belarusian club team HK Gomel from the 2022 IIHF Continental Cup on March 4 to 6, Russian and Belarusian men’s U18 teams in the 2022 IIHF U18 World Championship (April 21-May 1), ROC and Belarus men’s national teams at the 2022 World Championship (May 13-29), the Russian U18 women’s national team at the 2022 IIHF U18 Women’s World Championship (with dates TBD), the Russian men’s U20 national team at the aforementioned 2022 World Junior Championship in August and the ROC women’s national team at the 2022 IIHF Women’s World Championship (August 26-September 4).

The statement put out by the IIHF mentioned that the “IIHF Council also took into account the Russian government’s breach of the Olympic Truce, which was adopted in December 2021 as a UN resolution by United Nations General Assembly. The breach of the Olympic Truce led to a condemnation by the International Olympic Committee’s Executive Board last week.”

Tardif said: “The IIHF is not a political entity and cannot influence the decisions being taken over the war in Ukraine. We nevertheless have a duty of care to all of our members and participants and must therefore do all we can to ensure that we are able to operate our events in a safe environment for all teams taking part in the IIHF World Championship program.

“We were incredibly shocked to see the images that have come out of Ukraine. I have been in close contact with members of the Ice Hockey Federation of Ukraine and we hope for all Ukrainians that this conflict can be resolved in a peaceful way and without the need for further violence.”

Closer to home on the same day, the National Hockey League also announced how they would be taking sanctions against Russia following the military attack on Ukraine.

According to a report by The Athletic Staff posted to The Athletic back on February 28, the NHL suspended “its relationships with ‘business partners in Russia’” effective immediately that day. It was also reported that the league paused “its ‘Russian language social and digital media sites.’”

Russia has also been taken out of consideration “as a location for any future competitions involving the NHL” as a condemnation of “Russia’s invasion of Ukraine” and it “urges a peaceful resolution as quickly as possible.”

The NHL did acknowledge that Russian players are being put in a tough position and noted that they “play in the NHL on behalf of their NHL Clubs, and not on behalf of Russia.” The league said that they “understand they and their families are being placed in an extremely difficult position.”

The Athletic report noted that “Dan Milstein, an agent or some of Russia’s top NHL players, told Pierre LeBrun that teams have been providing extra security” for his clients and that “[e]veryone has been very, very supportive. My clients are extremely appreciative of the support received.”

NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly confirmed that the NHL “has ‘reached out to all clubs who have Russian players to offer resources and coordinate responses as appropriate” according to The Athletic.

Some of the Russian partners affected by the sanctions include sports betting company Liga Stavok, who became the NHL’s “first league-wide exclusive Russian business partner … on a three-year deal in November” and Russian TV partner Yandex. The NHL and Yandex had just “signed a two-year contract extension in January. As part of the deal, the league launched a 24-hour NHL channel on their website.”

Devils Bring Bastian Back Via Waivers

New Jersey Devils fans have a lot to be thankful for this Thanksgiving Day. Everything from the team’s record as we hit the about-25-percent mark of the NHL season (especially considering the injuries the team has had) to the young guys like Dawson Mercer really hitting their stride.

But today, the Devils added another item to the list.

The Seattle Kraken placed forward Nathan Bastian on waivers this afternoon and he was claimed by the Devils. The Devils bring him back into the fold and he will join the team in Nashville, available to play against the Predators on Friday.

This fulfills a wish that many fans have had since July.

Bastian was selected by New Jersey 41st overall in the second round of the 2016 NHL Draft. He was exposed during the 2021 NHL Expansion Draft and selected by the Kraken as their pick from the Devils’ roster.

As Sam Kasan wrote on the “Inside the Devils Blog,” this move will reunite the fourth line from last season (when Miles Wood returns from injury) on which Bastian had three goals and seven assists for ten points in his NHL rookie season where he played in 41 games.

The line was nicknamed the “BMW Line” informally as it consisted of Bastian, Wood and Michael McLeod. It was, according to Kasan, “often used in defensive situations or in an attempt to change a game’s momentum. Bastian was also a key contributor to the Devils’ penalty-killing unit.”

Bastian will also be reunited with his “Super Buddy” McLeod. The two have been playing together since their days growing up in Mississauga, Ontario and were teammates with the Mississauga Steelheads of the OHL before being drafted together to New Jersey.

Bastian, according to Kasan, has a total of seven goals and eight assists for 15 points over 60 NHL games in his career. Kasan notes that Bastian “made his NHL debut with the Devils” on January 19, 2019 against the Anaheim Ducks.

This season, while with Seattle, he had a goal and an assist for two point and 31 penalty minutes over 12 games – including the loss at New Jersey earlier this October.

Kasan also reported that the Devils have placed Jesper Boqvist on the Injured Reserve retroactively to November 18 with an upper body injury.

In some other news, today was, of course, Thanksgiving Day here in the United States. With that came the Thanksgiving morning tradition of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade from New York City.

This morning featured something that was mentioned on the Devils broadcast on Wednesday that I completely neglected in my game recap last night.

The NHL had a float in the parade sponsored by MassMutual that celebrated diversity in the game of hockey and was a tribute to NHL pioneer Willie O’Ree – who became the first Black player in the history of the league when he suited up for the Bruins on January 18, 1958.

O’Ree is set to have his number 22 jersey retired by the Bruins on January 18, 2022 at the TD Garden prior to a game versus the Carolina Hurricanes.

Participating and riding on the float was none other than former Devils defenseman and captain and current MSG+ Devils analyst, Bryce Salvador.

He appeared with Anson Carter (NHL on TNT analyst and former NHL player) and Kevin Hodgson and Rico Phillips (winners of the Willie O’Ree Community Hero Award).

Both Carter and Salvador got mentions in the opening to the NBC broadcast of the parade.

Phillips, who according to William Douglas, a writer for NHL.com, is a retired firefighter. He won the O’Ree Award in 2019 for his founding of the Flint (Michigan) Inner-City Youth Hockey Program.

Hodgson is the executive director of HEROS which stands for Hockey Education Reaching Out Society) “which” Douglas says, “empowers at-risk youth in cities across Canada.”

Salvador was modeling the Devils’ new third jersey. It was complete with his captain’s “C” on the right side instead of the left, as the “Jersey” wordmark will come up too far on the left side, necessitating a move to the right for the letter. He joked on Wednesday’s MSG+ broadcast that he would be the first person seen wearing the jersey on television.

They were also joined by country musician Mickey Guyton – “who was the first Black female solo artist to earn a Grammy nomination in the country music category” according to Douglas.

The float traveled a two-and-a-half-mile route through Manhattan according to Douglas and had Guyton performing along the way.

It was officially themed “Winning Winter Together” and Douglas mentioned that it “featured a giant snowman goalie towering over a community pond made of skateable synthetic ice.”

Prior to the parade, Carter (who is also the co-chair of the NHL’s Player Inclusion Committee), Salvador, Phillips and Hodgson (who Douglas notes won the O’Ree Award in 2021), hosted a hockey “clinic for 50 members of Ice Hockey in Harlem and Hockey in New Jersey, Hockey Is For Everyone affiliates, at the Sharpe James/Kenneth A. Gibson Recreation & Aquatic Center in Newark on Saturday.”

Douglas said that the league “is donated $5,000 to each organization [Ice Hockey in Harlem and Hockey in New Jersey] on behalf of MassMutual to help them manage operational challenges due to COVID-19. MassMutual is matching the donation.”

We will see you right here tomorrow for coverage of the Devils game at Nashville at 6 PM. Again, a reminder that that game will be streamed on ESPN+.