This is a classic case of good intentions turn bad. Currently, NHL is understandably a more attractive destination for a good hockey player financially and developmentally. KHL is clearly inferior to NHL on most counts - it has inferior coaching and management to NHL, inferior travel conditions, inferior entertainment and living options for players. So, young and promising talent will naturally seek to go to NHL. Plus, even if they don't work out in NHL, their KHL contracts tend to get better after they return from NHL.
Fetisov knows that he cannot change the core reasons why NHL is better then KHL: multimillion dollar star contracts are just the cherry on top. The difference starts with federal support of early child hockey development on all levels, community support and volunteer participation, equipment access etc. In Canada, Sweden, US and Finland - most children since age of 3-4 are given relatively equal access to the game until they start showing natural talents and abilities, at which point the system offers those kids even more opportunities to develop their skills further. This is a cultural phenomenon in developed hockey-loving nations and it is supported firmly by all ruling governments in those countries.
Russia is decades behind on federal support of ALL children's access to hockey. Hockey has always been somewhat accessible in metro areas only and mostly to promising kids that could eventually bring glory to CSKA. Communal approach to hockey in rural areas is practically non-existent (i.e. no such thing as the whole village in Saskatchewan getting together and working on Sunday on building/improving a local hockey arena). Equipment is simply not available in rural areas, where kids, traditionally, have more time to practice and, theoretically, better chances of becoming hockey superstars. So, throwing federal money at the problem would help only so much. Developing hockey culture and communal approach to hockey development takes a long time and requires cultural shifts.
So, Fetisov, who undoubtedly understands all of the above well, chooses the easiest approach to fixing a leak - he offers to plug a sink by calling prohibition of player movement. But it's the faucet that needs to be fixed.
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"An idea is always a generalization, and generalization is a property of thinking. To generalize means to think." Georg Hegel
“To generalize is to be an idiot.” William Blake
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