The EIHA have clarified funding arrangements following claims theyâve been allocated the £4 million originally allocated to the Elite League.
It comes after interviews with EIHL chairman Tony Smith, who owns Sheffield Steelers and Nottingham Panthers owner Neil Black following the news the top flight wouldnât be receiving the government money, where they suggested the cash had been funnelled to the EIHA and NIHL instead.
They had spoken of their surprise that they wouldnât be receiving the funding, but that EIHA would be, allowing them to implement their phased return, which is due to start later this month.
Smith believed the government was playing fast and loose with the term âEliteâ, perhaps in confusion over âElite Leagueâ and âelite sports,â which teams have been bestowed with by the government to allow them to play.
While Black was more direct in his criticism, accusing DCMS of ignoring professional sportspeople in favour of what he called âamateurs.â
âIt was there in black and white that Elite League was destined for that money, but Iâve been told itâs been slightly diluted from âElite Leagueâ to âelite sportsâ and thereâs been a variation on what constitutes Elite ice hockey now,â Smith told BBC Sheffield.
âWe asked the question about where the money was going and they said no, that £4 million was solely for the Elite League.
âThe other was a slush fund that was being made available for other levels of ice hockey. Weâve been at this a long time and it was made clear all the way through the money was for the Elite League.â
Black told BBC Nottingham: âWe had a plan in place for our teams to play in a secure bubble and give them the safest environment to play in we could do for them.
âThen I find out weâre getting nothing, our plans canât go ahead then, unbelievably I find this, given the guidelines and what we should and shouldnât do in public, I hear theyâre giving money to amateur sport where ice hockey is not their main job.
âItâs their second job which I find astonishing. Weâre very angry and we hope the situation can be made with a different outcome.
âI have no idea why a process weâve gone through as outlined in the governmentâs release in November and what we thought what the package is all about, the process seems to have changed and money that was to be allocated to the Elite League has magically gone somewhere else.â
But a spokesman for the EIHA insists this isnât the case at all, stating they were involved in their own negotiation with the Department of Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) and Sport England.
They said: âThe EIHL was allocated £4m in the initial round of funding published by DCMS and as indicated at the time, this was an indicative amount that would be confirmed through an application process to follow.
âThe EIHA was, throughout the same period as the EIHL, working with DCMS to provide information on the impact on spectator restrictions and were supporting the EIHL in ensuring that their application was made to DCMS.
âConfirmation was received in December that a further £1.2m of funding was to be made available to the NIHL and this would take the total funding to ice hockey as a sport through the survival funding to £5.2m.
âWe also share the frustrations of the EIHL as their support of our GB athletes in particular would have been critical in the on-ice performance and conditioning prior to the World Championships in May.
âTalks between the EIHA, NIHL and DCMS are ongoing however our aim is to support our athletes back to the ice safely as soon as possible.
âWe have confirmed with our NIHL National teams a schedule and operation of the league from mid-February in what is a critical part of the performance pathway for ice hockey where semi-professional athletesâ transition from amateur to professional.â