His comments created a potentially embarrassing situation for hockey, Beijing 2022 organizers and, perhaps most important, the Chinese government. China’s president, Xi Jinping, views the Beijing Games as an opportunity for the country to showcase its relative success in taming the coronavirus and to demonstrate its emergence as a global power.
Still, the risk of Chinese humiliation rose this fall when the International Olympic Committee announced that it had reached an agreement with the National Hockey League over the release of players for the Games, ensuring that China’s first-round opponents — the United States, Canada and Germany — would be stocked with some of the game’s best talent.
Concerns about China’s performances are linked to a Chinese team that competes in Russia’s Kontinental Hockey League. The team, Kunlun Red Star, is usually based in Beijing but relocated to a city close to Moscow during the coronavirus pandemic in order to play in the league’s eastern division. It currently has the worst record in the 24-team league.
Yet even as Tardif said China would remain in the Olympic tournament, the international federation said it was working with the Chinese Ice Hockey Association to schedule two games featuring players eligible to represent the national team “in a joint effort to evaluate the status of the team’s preparations for Beijing 2022.”