Head coach of Russia’s hockey team says no plans to resign

By: RIA Novosti – Russia

The head coach of Russia’s national hockey team said on Monday he had no plans to resign despite major defeats the team suffered this year.

The Russian team began the current season with a humiliating 7:3 defeat in a quarter-final clash with Canada at the Vancouver Winter Olympics in February.

The alarming trend continued as the team nearly lost the 2010 World Championship semifinals to Germany on Saturday, scoring the victorious goal (3:2) just under two minutes before the third period ended.

On Sunday, the defending double world champions lost 1:2 to the Czech Republic. The Czechs stopped Russia’s winning streak of 27 straight victories and took the title for the first time in five years.

Vyacheslav Bykov said he “did not even think” of submitting his resignation before his contract with the team expires in August 2010.
“Right now we just need to sit down and think it over. The decision is not up to me alone, it is also for the [Russian Hockey] Federation to decide,” he said.

Bykov said he saw no major mistakes made by the coaches during the entire tournament.

“Until the final, we did the right thing and made things happen,” the head coach said.

Among the main reasons for the defeat, Bykov named poor delivery of opportunities by the Russian team, injuries among Russian players and a flying start by the Czechs, who scored just 20 seconds into the match by firing on an unguarded post.

He also praised Czech goalie Tomas Vokoun, who stopped 35 shots out of 36 during the game. Vokoun was named as one of the Czech Republic’s three best players for the tournament.

“The game took a dramatic turn for us from the very beginning. After letting the first goal in, we had to break the opponent’s defense. But their goalie was brilliant. And, despite being a team of masters, we failed to deliver the opportunities that we had,” Bykov said.

The head coach criticized the board of the Continental Hockey League (KHL) for increasing the number of foreign players and coaches to the detriment of young home-grown athletes.

“If there is no understanding between the KHL leadership and the Hockey Federation, if we continue hogging the blanket, there will literally be no hockey in Russia… Without home-grown players, we’ll find ourselves in a dreadful hole very soon,” he said.

Both goals into the Russian net were made by Czech players, playing for Russian KHL teams.

Crosby ripped for not playing for Canada

By: Canada.com

COLOGNE, Germany — Team Canada responded on Wednesday to an attack by the International Ice Hockey Federation against North American and European players, including Canadian Olympic hero Sidney Crosby, who aren’t playing at the IIHF world hockey championship.

“I think it’s inappropriate,” said Hockey Canada official Scott Salmond, director of men’s national teams.

IIHF communications director Szymon Szemberg, in a commentary on the home page of the organization’s official website earlier Wednesday, ripped no-shows for turning their backs on their national teams, their fans and the hockey organizations that helped them develop.

He questioned excuses such as nagging injuries or, in Crosby’s case, a long stretch of hockey that includes the 2009 Stanley Cup playoffs, an 82-game regular season, the Vancouver Olympics, and two rounds of playoffs this year.

“Why is a 22-year-old Sidney Crosby tired when a 34-year-old Ryan Smyth is answering the bell for his country despite having represented Canada at the worlds already on eight occasions?” he wrote.

“Players who say no to representing their country at the world championship without a legitimate reason turn their backs not only on the team and its fans but also to the system which developed them and made them rich and famous.

“They should pay back, but they don’t.”

Salmond said he will raise Canada’s objections privately at the next Hockey Canada-IIHF meeting.

Team Canada captain Ray Whitney said the IIHF is being unfair to players like Crosby and is displaying ignorance about the grind of the NHL season.

“The IIHF doesn’t understand how hard the NHL is and how hard the schedule is,” said Whitney, who took over as captain after Smyth was knocked out of the tournament with an ankle injury.

“I don’t think it’s fair for him to say that. I think he should concentrate more on making (the tournament) more appealing for guys like him to want to come over here and play.”

Szemberg defended his commentary, telling Canwest News Service he’s received many positive comments from fans on Facebook and from journalists via e-mail.

Team Canada general manager Mark Messier has made it clear that he was putting no pressure on Olympians to participate this year.
The only member of the gold medal-winning Canadian team in February to participate is rugged Anaheim Ducks winger Corey Perry.

Szemberg praised high-profile participants like Russian superstar Alexander Ovechkin and Czech superstar Jaromir Jagr for attending this year’s tournament.

But he blasted the 25 other elite Czech players — as well as numerous top players from countries like Sweden and Switzerland — for rejecting invitations.

He estimated that 100 to 120 players who could have played in the 16-team tournament either turned down invitations or made clear in advance that they wouldn’t be available.

And many of them didn’t have the excuse of being tired or unavailable due to the NHL playoffs.

“This is by no means exclusively an NHL/Stanley Cup issue,” he wrote.

“Players who earn serious money in European professional leagues are also too tired or too unmotivated.”

He noted that many players beg off due to injuries or fatigue even though it was known that they’d have played with pain had their teams remained in the playoffs.

“How can a player who is 22 or 25 or 27, and who was just eliminated from the playoffs, be tired? Tired is a miner who works in a damp pit in Miktivka, in the Donetz Plateau in Ukraine, who never sees daylight and who provides living for a family of five in a modest two-room apartment. That is tired.

“Tired is a divorced mother with two young kids who double shifts as a nurse assistant and cleaning lady to make ends meet.”

The tournament is viewed as a major event for European hockey fans though it is an afterthought for NHL playoff-focused North Americans.