Manimal wrote:I agree with you Nino that the championship would be more entertaining that way but the lower teams need to have the opportunity to be included.
For their hockey to improve they need to match up with better nations. That way they will see what they need to work on to get better.
IMO they don't need to learn how they match up in the actual few elite tournaments (they can get beat in exhibitions just as easily! and win their "gold medal" with an upset that is ultimately meaningless that way...like the recent victory by the Danes)
They can still add a single "lower team" to Canada, Finland, Sweden, Russia and the US and have a real round robin.....the problem (for me) is how
nowadays adding more than one requires "group games" and teams no longer play against every other team (never used to be that way, as I note below);
the issue to me is not "entertainment" but the validity of a tournament actually being a "best on best" elite tournament
I don't think there's any more teams in the top tier of hockey now than there was 40-50 years ago (there may actually be fewer!)
The start of "best on best" international hockey was the 1976 Canada Cup & it seems to me the top tier teams is still essentially the same now; Finland and the US are a little better, the Czechs/Slovaks not as good and probably joined by the Swiss (which is why I don't see the Swiss beating the Czechs recently as much of an upset)
I'd really like to see the Olympics/World Cup, the World Championships, and the World Junior Championships all ensure that the initial stage is a round robin where every team plays every other team; that was what it was like for the Olympics/World Championships back in the 70s and you got HUGE upsets like Poland beating Russia in the 1976 Worlds (but now they play fewer games, making "luck" a much bigger factor)