More than two and a part years have handed since Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, a cataclysmic match that brought on Europe’s biggest warfare since World War II.
While the sports activities global has moved on to some extent from its preliminary condemnation of Russia’s movements, Hall of Fame goalie Dominik Hasek has remained an ardent critic of any associations with the rustic inside the hockey global. In an interview with Matthew Fairburn of The Athletic printed Thursday, Hasek elaborated upon an Oct. 3 tweet that insisted all Russian avid gamers must be barred from enjoying within the NHL.
“My motivation is huge,” Hasek—one of the vital Czech Republic’s maximum cherished athletes—stated. “I consider everything I do on this topic to be vitally important. What is happening now in Russia, that is, the Russian imperialist war in Ukraine and other crimes connected with it, is very similar to what Hitler did in the 1930s. And we all know how that turned out. This must not happen again.”
Hasek’s comments came amid scrutiny of the NHL in his home country during a season-opening series between the Buffalo Sabres and New Jersey Devils in Prague. Public opinion in the Czech Republic is staunchly anti-Russian, hardened by decades of Soviet domination in the 20th century.
“After the start of the Russian imperialist war, the NHL became an advertisement for this war, because Russian citizens continued to perform and play in it!” Hasek wrote in his lengthy tweet. “Every citizen, unless he is a dissident, is an advertisement for his country’s actions.”
Hasek played 16 seasons in the NHL for four teams from 1991 to 2008—most notably the Sabres. Disillusioned with the league’s handling of the Russian invasion, however, Hasek did not help promote Buffalo’s role in the opening series.
“Rules need to be set so that Russian players have an incentive to come out publicly,” he instructed Fairburn. “Some players could make the best peace ambassadors. Unfortunately, the NHL does not help the Russian hockey players one bit.”