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NHL lockout cancels all Sept. preseason games

Written By Emdua on Rabu, 19 September 2012 | 14.38

Due tio the lockout, NHL nets will remain in storage until October.

Danny Moloshok/Icon SMI

NEW YORK (AP) -- The NHL canceled its entire September preseason game schedule, the first on-ice casualty of the four-day lockout of the players' association.

The league is wiping out all games through Sept. 30, a move it deems "necessary because of the absence of a collective bargaining agreement."

The regular season is scheduled to begin on Oct. 11.

Also, a person familiar with the plan says NHL employees at the league offices will switch to a four-day work week Oct. 1 because of the lockout.

The move will effectively cut salaries by 20 percent. The person spoke on condition of anonymity Wednesday because the NHL hadn't made the plan public.

The news was first reported by The Canadian Press.

The Florida Panthers and Ottawa Senators have let staff go because of the lockout.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

20 Sep, 2012


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KHL's Dynamo Moscow says it signed Ovechkin

Alex Ovechkin, who played for Russia at the 2012 World Championships, has vowed to not return to the NHL if player salaries are cut.

Martin Rose/Bongarts/Getty Images

MOSCOW (AP) -- Alexander Ovechkin is returning to his former Russian team Dynamo Moscow during the NHL lockout.

The KHL team said in a statement Wednesday that it has signed the Washington Capitals star to a contract that lasts until the lockout ends. It said Ovechkin has undergone medical exams and has already participated in training. It did not disclose the financial terms of his contract.

Ovechkin joined the Capitals in 2005 and was the NHL's MVP in 2008 and 2009.

He is the latest Russian star to return home during the lockout. Evgeny Malkin of the Pittsburgh Penguins has signed a deal with his former team, Metallurg Magnitogorsk. He was joined by fellow Penguin Sergei Gonchar, and Nikolai Kulemin of the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

20 Sep, 2012


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Collateral Damage

Florida Panthers mascot Stanley C. Panther was laid off due to the NHL lockout

Caught in the crossfire: the ongoing collective bargaining dispute between NHL and NHLPA is not only angering fans, it's starting to hurt everyone from players, officials and league and team staff to mascots. (Photo by Wilfredo Lee/AP)

Now in Day 4, the lockout of NHL players by the owners has produced news on a number of fronts. Here's a round-up of some noteworthy items:

– The two sides did speak briefly on Tuesday and will have more informal discussions on Wednesday to see if they can restart formal talks. There is a sense in some quarters (as expressed by TSN and ESPN's Pierre LeBrun, The Ottawa Sun's Chris Stevenson and TSN's Bob McKenzie over Montreal's TSN 690 radio) that we're at a crucial moment, and a small window exists during the next week or two for the parties to start making progress. If regular season games start getting canceled, we should get set for a long stalemate. "If nothing happens," McKenzie said Wednesday morning, "we're going back to the dynamic of 2004″ when there was virtually no discussion between the sides for three months after the league declared the lockout.

The NHL's Bill Daly, who made a few media appearances in Toronto earlier this week, said over Toronto's TSN radio 1250, "It's been a totally different negotiation than it was in 2004-05. I think it's safe to say that occasionally we got together during the summer of 2004, (but) there wasn't much bargaining or exploring issues. I think we've plowed a lot of ground this summer. As I said, we haven't made much progress on the critical issues, but certainly we have a better framework to move forward if we can ever start making progress."

But Daly, like everyone, is frustrated that the sides have not found much to agree on with respect to what the league calls the "core economics," that is, the percentage of Hockey Related Revenue devoted to player salaries, which the league's opening proposal would reduce by 24 percent to 43 percent from the current 57. That number was revised to 47 percent last week but, presumably, that is now off the table, as Gary Bettman said it would be if the players did not accept it by Saturday night.

"A lot of the noise around this lockout is how it is not like 2004, when there was a disagreement over the fundamental financial structure of the game," writes Stevenson. "If both sides are entrenched in their philosophies, or one refuses to budge, the potential for a repeat of 2004-05 is just as real. That's the thought starting to creep into a few people's minds as this impasse lingers."

Collateral Damage:
The first casualties of the lockout emerged this week when Ottawa Senators laid off employees and cut the hours of some others on Monday and the Florida Panthers followed suit on Tuesday, and among the casualties was the guy who dresses as the team mascot. On Wednesday, employees at the NHL offices were told they'd also be reduced to four-day work weeks, and a get a 20 percent pay cut starting Oct. 1 with future layoffs possible.

While attention has focused on non-players whose livelihoods will be adversely affected by the lockout, not enough has gone to the on-ice officials who won't work and get paid by the league if there are no games.

Jim Matheson of The Edmonton Journal reports that most of the officials won't work minor pro games and they aren't being asked to do their jobs in Europe. "Veteran NHL referees can earn up to $340,000 a year and linesmen earn about two-thirds of that during a typical season," he writes. "But they don't get paid when there's a lockout, although they can take out $5,000 in interest-free loans against their wages every month.

"The officials' current contract specifies they start getting paid on Sept. 1, but that was only for just two weeks, with the lockout starting on Sept. 15. During the last lockout, the on-ice staff lost an entire season's salary — just like the players."

"If this lockout is protracted, the guys have to start thinking of other options to provide family income," retired NHL ref Kerry Fraser told Matheson. "Some of the guys struggled last time. Nobody thought it was going to be the entire season. And when it was cancelled, guys were saying, 'God, now what do I do?'"

Paying the cost: We mentioned in a Red Light post on Tuesday how significant the matter of player insurance is to NHLers who will play professionally in Europe during the lockout. But what about the insurance for the vast majority of NHLers, who won't be plying their trade on those big 200 x 100 sheets of ice?

Kevin Allen of USA Today reports that the NHL cancelled the coverage of all the players  and their families, including medical and dental, and disability, life (including spouses), and accidental death and dismemberment. The NHLPA notified the players in a memo on Tuesday that they have made arrangements for the continuation of the coverage. However, the disability coverage does not cover the value of their NHL contracts. And any player who signs with a European club is not eligible for the PA's disability coverage which, as we noted in our post, has to be purchased by the club or the player himself.

Caravan on Skates: Those players not skating in Europe are looking for alternatives in North America. During the 2004-05 lockout, a group of NHLers tried forming the Original Stars Hockey League, which played four-on-four games with no body checking and it turned into a very short-lived rag-tag operation that only lasted two games (SI's Michael Farber described that disorganized organization here). Another four-on-four league was more successful, the McDonald's Caravan.  Organized by defenseman Joel Bouchard, it featured three teams of Francophone players that toured Quebec and donated their proceeds to charity. (Here's the press release announcing the Caravan.) That group played to full arenas and had their weekend games televised.

There's talk that the Caravan might be revived in Quebec, according to Tim Panaccio of CNS Phily.com with teams from both Montreal and Quebec and perhaps others.

Crunching Numbers: Does the NHL have a "lockout addiction?" That's what Wayne Scanlan of The Ottawa Citizen wonders in his profile of one alienated fan. Scanlan  did the math that reveals, "No professional sport shuts down more frequently than the NHL, now starting it's fourth work stoppage since 1992.

"In that time span, the NHL has missed 1,698 games due to labor issues, compared to 938 for Major League Baseball, 788 for the NBA and a big fat zero for the most popular league in North America, the NFL. The meter is about to run again, adding to hockey's 1,698 total as the NHL prepares to interrupt a schedule that is supposed to begin on Oct. 11. Considering that the two sides remain deeply entrenched, with players wanting the NHL to adopt revenue sharing while the league advocates clawing back player salaries, this could take a while to resolve."

20 Sep, 2012


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AEG, owner of Cup champion Kings, up for sale

The sale of AEG would throw uncertainty into Los Angeles' attempt to obtain an NFL franchise.

Reuters

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Anschutz Entertainment Group, the owner of the Staples Center arena and the NHL's Los Angeles Kings, and the top contender to build a stadium and bring the NFL back to Los Angeles, is up for sale, its parent company said Tuesday.

The Denver-based Anschutz Co. said in a statement that it is "commencing a process" to sell the subsidiary known as AEG and had hired Blackstone Advisory Partners as an adviser.

It wasn't immediately clear how far along the company is in the sale process, or whether it has entertained any offers, but the price for AEG could be well into the billions.

The sale would mean a major ground shift in sports and entertainment in Los Angeles and around the world.

AEG's holdings also include pro soccer's Los Angeles Galaxy, part-ownership of the NBA's Los Angeles Lakers, and major entertainment and real estate holdings in downtown Los Angeles. Outside of L.A., AEG owns Major League Soccer's Houston Dynamo and New York's Barclay's Center, the new home of the NBA's Brooklyn Nets. It also owns arenas in Sweden, China and Australia.

The sale would also throw uncertainty into LA's nearly two-decade attempt to bring the NFL back to the city. The City Council is considering the approval of plans for Farmers Field, a downtown stadium proposed by AEG.

Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said he has long known of the possibility of a sale, and both Denver billionaire Phillip Anschutz and AEG President Tim Leiweke have assured him the city's NFL hopes will remain the same.

"I have worked with both Phil Anschutz and Tim Leiweke for years to bring a football team to Los Angeles. I speak to both of them on a regular basis and I have known about this potential sale for some time," the mayor said in a statement Tuesday night. "I have the commitment from both of them that this won't affect plans for an NFL team to return to Los Angeles in the near future and so will not affect my support for moving ahead with Farmers Field."

Councilwoman Jan Perry, whose district includes the proposed stadium site, said she did not know about a pending sale but agreed that it wouldn't have adverse effects on courting an NFL team.

"The city has done a good job of protecting the taxpayer's interest in negotiating an agreement," Perry told The Associated Press, "so whoever steps into the shoes of Mr. Anschutz will have the same obligations."

Perry said the move "arguably is very positive" because she suspected it could lead to an enthusiastic new partner anxious to get in on the city's NFL prospects.

The potential sale was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

AEG transformed the Los Angeles landscape with the building of Staples Center and the later addition of the LA Live entertainment complex, helping to revitalize the city's long-neglected downtown and bring new energy and several championships to its sports teams.

Opening in 1999, the Staples Center is among the world's busiest arenas. It hosted six playoff games in four days for its main tenants - the NBA's Lakers and Clippers, and the NHL's Kings, who won their first Stanley Cup in June.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

19 Sep, 2012


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NHLPA will restore players' insurance in lockout

Written By Emdua on Selasa, 18 September 2012 | 14.45

The NHLPA plans to pay for players insurance during lockout. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

The NHL Players' Association alerted players Tuesday that the union will pay for the costs of restoring players ans family insurance coverage eliminated by the NHL this weekend as part of the lockout.

According to the NHLPA memo:

"NHL has instructed the insurers to cancel all insurance coverage, effective September 16, 2012. This includes Medical and Dental coverage for Players and their families, Disability insurance, Life and Accidental Death and Dismemberment insurance, and Spousal Life insurance."

The memo cited players who have not signed as a free agent in another league or have not retired will be eligible by meeting one more of this criteria:

  • 70 or more NHL regular-season days on the active roster in the 2011-12 season
  • 160 or more NHL regular season games played (including games dressed as backup for goalies)
  • Have an NHL standard players contract (SPC) for the 2012-13 season, are locked out by his NHL team and not playing in another professional league in the 2012-13 season.

The memo cautions NHL players playing in Europe during the lockout that the NHLPA disability coverage does not cover their NHL contract. Players also found themselves facing an IIHF transfer card snag today.

19 Sep, 2012


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Road Hazards

The insurance on Alex Ovechkin for this year's World Championships came to $400,000 and he played in only three games. The price for a KHL season will be much higher. (Photo by Yuri Kadobnov/AFP/GettyImages)

They're packing up and getting ready to go: Locked out NHL players have begun their inevitable migration to Europe in search of work.

Evgeni Malkin and Sergei Gonchar are headed to Magnitogorsk to play for Metallurg of the KHL. Jaromir Jagr heads home to Kladno in the Czech Republic to play for his hometown team, which he owns with his father, and it seems that Tomas Plekanec will go with him. Joe Thornton, who met his wife while playing for Davos in the Swiss league during the last lockout, will go back there and could be joined by Rick Nash, his linemate in Davos that season. Ilya Kovalchuk, Ruslan Fedotenko, Lubomir Visnovsky, Jiri Tlusty, Mark Streit, Yannick Weber, Jiri Hudler, Jussi Jokinen and goalies Michal Neuvirth and Semyon Varlamov are also part of the first wave of signings across the Atlantic. There are indications that Alex Ovechkin, Logan Couture, Niklas Backstrom and Anze Kopitar could be right behind while Pavel Datsyuk, who had reportedly been signed actually remains undecided.   (You can follow the post-lockout transactions on SI.com here.)

These signings occasionally get murky, confirmed then unconfirmed. The player and the team must agree on the money, the player has to be formally transferred by the IIHF (Nail Yakopov is having that problem) and there is also the matter of insurance and we'll get into that below.

What's not murky is that while players wait for negotiators to reach an agreement, staying in shape is a priority. That's why some choose to play in Europe. They can rent ice in North America and scrimmage with each other all they want, or practice with established clubs in their areas on a daily basis, but nothing takes the place of real games. For some, especially those who have families in North America, it's not always an easy decision to pick up and go, so they may delay a Euro decision in hope that the sides reach an agreement sooner rather than later. But the longer this CBA stalemate goes on, the more those who remain here will consider going over.

The consequences of their departures spark some interesting comments. My old friend Howard Berger in Toronto posted an item on his blog that took the position that these European vacations undermine the union's efforts to keep the players united. He believes that their scattering overseas "decries unanimity. Hanging together as a group – physically and philosophically – through the tenuous early days of the lockout would present a more consolidated front and, perhaps, urge owners back to the table. In any form of waiting game, the 2012-13 season will dissolve before the players' eyes, fracturing – once again – their conviction."

Berger quoted someone he identified as an anonymous senior NHL executive as saying, "Let 'em go. The players think they are threatening the owners by signing contracts in Europe. In fact, what they're showing is they don't have a lot of stomach to remain together in this fight. And that's what we expected.

"Deep down, the players know that if it comes to a stand-off, they cannot outlast the owners," said the NHL executive. "Taking off to other leagues in Europe and the Nordic countries might make them feel better for awhile. But, it comes across to others as abandoning their position rather quickly."

That's a rather extreme and cynical view of things. Compare that exec's sentiment to that of Devils President and GM Lou Lamoriello, who told Mark Everson of The New York Post, "That's their choice. I don't question it. It happened before, and it happens with players during the regular season when they're [unsigned]."

How guys seeking work elsewhere would subvert the players' unity is unexplained. The fact is, that line of thinking is counter-intuitive. The owners are hoping the players fold because they're not going to be getting paychecks — that's the point of a lockout. But the players who find work in Europe will be getting paid and whatever economic pressures the lockout is intended to apply will be less relevant to those who are employed.

Similarly, how does an NHLer playing in Europe show a lack of conviction? Whatever that exec takes the optics of their sojourn to be, the players aren't being asked to stick around to walk picket lines or to boycott hockey everywhere. Allegedly fleeing to Europe doesn't constitute breaking ranks with the NHLPA leadership or asking Don Fehr to negotiate differently than he has so far. That's the sort of thing that would undermine player solidarity. Playing in Europe isn't remotely akin to that.

In any case, the NHLPA doesn't seem to consider locked out NHLers signing overseas damaging to their efforts in the slightest. The union has provided players with all sorts of information about signing in Europe, assisting them in finding work and with their insurance. From all reports, the PA did a competent job of communicating with its members in Europe and North America during the offseason and there's no reason to believe that effort won't continue now.

And I don't think the NHL is — or has to be — worried that these temporary arrangements that the players are making will strengthen other leagues to the point where its supremacy will be threatened — unless, that is, the next CBA contains a new salary structure so low that the KHL and other leagues become equally attractive alternatives for NHL players.

The real benefit to the European leagues is the influx of some stars and improved talent that improves quality of play and brings more fans to games.

"Mainly I think it's going to be a lot of additional marketing potential for the league and hockey itself as a game," KHL vice-president Ilya Kochevrin said recently (quoted by Chris Johnson of Canadian Press). "The stars bring additional attention … to a lot of people who probably don't consider hockey the sport of choice. I think as a marketing tool it's a great opportunity."

Some leagues don't want to have much to do with locked out NHLers. Sweden's Elitserien, for example, won't sign any unless they are prepared to commit for the entire season. According to Petteri Ala-Kivimäki writing in The Helsingin Sanomat, Finland's SM-Liiga teams are very concerned about the high insurance costs for NHL players and may not be able to afford to sign many of them — even though a number of NHLers have ownership stakes in various SM-Liiga clubs. Niklas Backstrom for example, owns a piece of HIFK Helsinki, but he's thinking of playing for the KHL's Dinamo Minsk.

This is where we get into that murky area we discussed earlier in which players are announced as being signed by Euro clubs but really are not. The securing of insurance can be so costly for these teams that the deals can't be finalized even if the team and player agree on his pay. Star players with very long-term contracts become costly to insure and insurance costs can vary based on the length and value of his NHL contract, the player's age, and his history of injuries. "To take just one example," Ala-Kivimäki writes, "the Finnish Ice Hockey Association paid out a five-figure sum in insurance premiums for the services of Mikko Koivu at the last IIHF World Championships in Helsinki and Stockholm. The Finns' Russian counterparts reportedly paid USD 400,000 to cover the insurance on Alexander Ovechkin for the same tournament." That's just for a short tournament, not for a deal that could, potentially, go all season.

Chris Johnson notes how difficult it will be to insure Sidney Crosby, considering his concussion history and his NHL deal which pays him nearly $112 million over the next 13 seasons. "European teams will pick up the tab for a player's insurance premium, which one agent estimated will range between $2,500 and $20,000 per month," Johnson writes.

And sometimes the players have to pay their own insurance. Depending on the situation, that can scuttle a player's European plans, too.

The KHL may not be as restrictive as the Elitserien or as financially strapped as the SM-Liiga, but it is still cost-conscious. Each club can sign up to three NHLers for a salary worth no more than 65 per cent of what they were to earn with their North American club this season. But there are some different rules beyond that for the 20 teams based in Russia and the six other KHL clubs. For the Russian teams, only one of three spots can be used on a non-Russian player and he must have played at least 150 NHL games over the past three seasons, suited up recently for his national team or won the Stanley Cup or a major individual award. The six KHL teams in Belarus, Kazakstan, Latvia, Ukraine, Slovakia and the Czech Republic can sign players who don't meet any of those criteria.

There's some thought that the European league that may see the biggest influx of NHLers is Switzerland's NLA. But wherever this exodus takes NHLers, they're hoping they won't be there long and they can pack up and return to North America as soon as possible.

19 Sep, 2012


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Panthers next team to announce lockout layoffs

Both jobs and fan enthusiasm after the Panthers' first playoff appearance since 2000 are likely casualties of the lockout.

JC Salas/Icon SMI

SUNRISE, Fla. (AP) -- The Florida Panthers announced the layoffs of an unknown number of staff members Tuesday, only the third full day of the NHL's lockout.

The Panthers are believed to be the NHL's second team to publicly announce layoffs since the league's collective bargaining agreement with its players expired at 11:59 p.m. on Saturday and ushered in the league's fourth work stoppage in the last 20 years.

The Ottawa Senators have already had layoffs and full-time employees have been placed on a reduced work week.

"Due primarily to the NHL work stoppage, but also due to changes and efficiencies in our normal business operations, SSE and the Florida Panthers instituted a number of staff adjustments today including staff reductions," Panthers President and Chief Operating Officer Michael Yormark wrote in a statement distributed Tuesday afternoon.

SSE refers to Sunrise Sports and Entertainment, the company that owns and operates the Panthers.

As of Tuesday, the team listed 149 employees on its staff directory across all platforms, including hockey operations, business operations, arena operations and at the team's training facility.

Jobs were reduced in multiple departments.

"We thank all of those former staff members for their efforts," Yormark wrote, adding that the team's human resource department would try to help the former employees with placement into other jobs.

The team declined further comment.

The league could announce the cancellation of preseason games as early as this week, and it would appear that training camps are almost certainly not going to open on time.

Some teams, such as Minnesota and Pittsburgh, have said they are not planning lockout-related layoffs. And while no games have yet been cancelled, things like preseason rookie camps -- Florida was to be involved in one of those -- were taken off schedules long ago.

"There's smart enough people involved in this thing that I don't think it'll take too long," Panthers center Stephen Weiss said Friday, at the team's last informal preseason workout before the lockout opened. "We just have to make sure whatever deal they do agree on, it makes sense for both sides and it will be lasting."

And despite the layoff news, it's business as usual on some levels for the Panthers. The team was still selling season- and single-game ticket packages on Tuesday, including ones for the team's planned opener against the Tampa Bay Lightning on Oct. 13.

"As a most passionate Florida Panthers fan, I understand how difficult a time this is for all Cats fans and other hockey fans around the NHL," Panthers owner Cliff Viner wrote in a blog entry on Sunday. "While we remain optimistic that our Panthers will open the 2012-13 season as planned on Oct. 13, I also want to assure you that the work stoppage will not deter our organization from fulfilling its responsibilities to our fans and our community."

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

19 Sep, 2012


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Sabres' blueliner Ehrhoff set to play in Germany

Defenseman Christian Ehrhoff has played for Germany in three Winter Olympics and four World Cup tournaments.

Bill Wippert/NHLI via Getty Images

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -- Sabres defenseman Christian Ehrhoff will be spending the NHL lockout playing in his native Germany.

Ehrhoff reached an agreement on Tuesday to play for his hometown team, the Krefeld Penguins, and was then introduced during a news conference. The deal was reached after the German Ice Hockey League team agreed to pay about $26,000 a month to insure the player in the event of injury.

"I really wanted to come to Krefeld because I was here during the summer and I felt at home," Ehrhoff said in German and translated into English. "The club is in my heart."

He spent part of the summer working out with Krefeld before returning to Buffalo in the event a looming labor dispute wouldn't disrupt the start of training camp, which was scheduled to open this week. Ehrhoff then traveled back to Germany after the NHL locked out its players on Sunday.

"It's the ideal situation for the team and me," Ehrhoff said. "The guys know me, I know the guys."

Ehrhoff was traded twice in the span of two days in June 2011 before he elected to forgo testing free agency by signing a $10-year, $40 million contract with the Sabres. Buffalo had acquired him in a trade with the Islanders, a day after New York landed Ehrhoff in a trade with Vancouver in hopes to sign the defenseman.

Ehrhoff was the Sabres' most dependable defenseman last season. He led Buffalo blueliners with 32 points (five goals) in 66 games, and led the entire team in averaging 23:03 ice-time per game.

The player's agent, Richard Curran, said his client elected to play in Germany as an opportunity to stay in shape. Ehrhoff isn't under contract with Krefeld, and will be eligible to return to play for the Sabres once the labor dispute is resolved.

The only condition to play in Germany was for the club to pay for Ehrhoff's insurance, Curran said.

"He's hoping to turn a negative into a positive," Curran said.

Ehrhoff is expected to make his debut with Krefeld on Friday, when the Penguins play Hamburg.

"We always hoped that he would come back to Krefeld someday," the team's chairman Wolfgang Schulz said. "We didn't think it would happen so quickly. He could have played in Russia, Sweden or Finland. It makes us proud that he chose us."

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

19 Sep, 2012


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19 Sep, 2012


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Isles' Streit, Habs' Weber heading for Switzerland

Islanders captain Mark Streit played 10 seasons in his native Switzerland before making his NHL debut in 2005.

Jeanine Leech/Icon SMI

GENEVA (AP) -- New York Islanders captain Mark Streit and Montreal Canadiens defenseman Yannick Weber are returning home to play in Switzerland during the NHL lockout.

Bern says it has signed Streit and Geneva-Servette says it recruited Weber.

Geneva-Servette coach Chris McSorley says the club expects to announce another signing on Wednesday.

San Jose Sharks captain Joe Thornton also expected in Switzerland this week after saying he would rejoin Davos.

Thornton played with the Alpine town team during the 2004-05 NHL lockout season, alongside New York Rangers winger Rick Nash. Nash is also being pursued by Davos.

The NHL formally locked out its players on Sunday after the collective bargaining agreement expired.

The 12-team Swiss top division began its season last week.

18 Sep, 2012


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