But Tardif appeared to back off in November, releasing a statement that said, “To be clear, the I.I.H.F. is not going to remove the Chinese team from the Olympic Games.” At the time, Tardif said the federation would work alongside Chinese officials as “they work towards preparing their team.”
He also said that “a joint effort to evaluate the status of the team’s preparations” would take place during two games of Kunlun Red Star, a Chinese team in Russia’s Kontinental Hockey League stocked with many of the players who were expected to compete for China at the Games.
Kunlun Red Star lost the first game, 5-4, in overtime and then dropped the second, 4-1. By then, Tardif had started reviving worries about the Chinese team’s prospects.
The federation did not detail how, or why, it reached its conclusion this week that China would be allowed to compete, saying little more than that officials had “discussed the status of the Chinese men’s ice hockey team.”
Much of China’s trouble can be traced to its strict rules on dual nationality, which other countries use to bolster their teams in hockey and other sports. China’s refusal to recognize dual citizenship and its requirements for naturalized athletes born abroad to compete under its flag have long limited its ability to construct rosters.
China’s women’s hockey team also remains on course to compete in the Beijing Games. That team is ranked 20th in the world.