Five players who Canada may lose from its Olympics roster if the KHL boycotts
Russia’s ban from the upcoming 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics could force Hockey Canada to drastically alter its course in assembling a men’s national team.
After the NHL pulled out of participating in the Winter Olympics on April 3, Hockey Canada decided to use top-level players from other professional leagues, mainly based in Europe. However, the Kontinental Hockey League, Russia’s top professional league, announced on Nov. 4 that it might withdraw its players from the Olympics if Russia was sanctioned for its doping program at the 2014 Sochi Games.
Hockey Canada’s proposed Olympic roster has included up to 19 players currently in the KHL. Here are five key players who could be affected by a potential boycott:
BEN SCRIVENS (goaltender – Salavat Yulaev Ufa) — The former Toronto Maple Leafs goalie started in all three of Canada’s games at the Karjala Cup, a tune-up tournament for the Olympics held in Helsinki, and appeared in two other exhibition games. In those five appearances, he has a 1.34 goals-against average and a .911 save percentage. Barry Brust (Switzerland’s National League) and Justin Peters (Germany’s Elite League) have served as his backups and would be unaffected by a KHL boycott.