ZURICH – Collected and put forward by the 2012 Hockey Forum Observer & Recommendations Group, discussed and accepted by a wide majority of the participants.
Hockey in Europe has reached a tipping point. In a fragmented landscape, clubs want more games; national teams want to protect their dates, and players are being asked to extend their abilities to the limit. We must consider quality over quantity, and we must consider taking a little bit away from all stakeholders to produce a stronger game at all levels and in all forms.
EUROPEAN CLUB COMPETITION
- Parallel structure is the favoured format. i.e., European Club competition is added to the existing national leagues program and played alongside the domestic league.
- Sportive quality ensures overall quality over quantity
- Teams must qualify for events and are not merely invited (open system, not closed)
- It ensures the existence of strong national leagues, which are the backbone of national programs and development
- European club competition has the greatest potential for growth
- There is a need for a long-term schedule to (a) make sense of the various hockey events and (b) avoid conflict with important events in other sports (i.e., World Cup)
- Long-term commitment from all stakeholders to ensure stability in all ways (membership, marketing, etc.)
- Clubs must decide on their common goals and the IIHF will oversee governance of their ambitions
- There can be only ONE unifying group that oversees international club competition
INTERNATIONAL BREAKS
- National leagues and federations must cooperate to produce a meaningful and balanced program for both national leagues and national teams
- Games must serve the best interests of all stakeholders – players, national federations, national leagues, fans, and media – but also take into account the players’ well-being
- Need to determine the players’ limits (i.e. number of total games played per season)
GOVERNANCE STRUCTURE
- Centralized governance is essential
- Led by the IIHF, this group will consist of representatives from all stakeholders – clubs, leagues, and federations
- The members of this group will be named by the various entities, not the IIHF
- The representatives must have the mandate to implement change
- It must be ensured that every voice is heard, so the successes and failures are shared and that all opinions are shared together
- This group should then work directly with the IIHF to implement change
- Once ideas are formalized, this group could then become a permanent entity
- This governance decides on the balance between club concerns and national team concerns
- Action is needed sooner rather than later – the worldwide sports calendar is filling up quickly
HOCKEY FORUM OBSERVER & RECOMMENDATIONS GROUP
Barcelona, June 12-14, 20121. Petr Briza, Chairman HC Sparta Prague/European Trophy Board
2. Hannes Ederer, IIHF Event Director
3. Christian Hofstetter, IIHF Marketing Director
4. Rob van Rijswijk, IIHF Club Competitions Director
5. Andrew Podnieks, IIHF.com Staff & Committee Secretary