The players, ages 6-12, began their visit by attending the morning skate at Kettler Capitals Iceplex on Jan. 23 and capped it with a scrimmage at Verizon Center on Wednesday afternoon. In between, they participated in multiple clinics with youth hockey teams from Washington, D.C. and the surrounding area.
Through a translator, Zhou said having the Capitals-Bruins game televised in China "will attract more people to notice the NHL, especially the youth hockey player, because there are many Chinese kids that have started learning hockey there, and there is a good population of people that will develop hockey in China."
Zhou also believes this is just the start for his country.
"Fifteen years ago, Chinese TV only broadcast one NBA game a month in China," he said. "Now they are broadcasting four or five games in China every week."
The next step will be bringing the NHL to China. NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly visited the country last month and has said the League is hoping to play preseason games there as early as next season.
For the NHL, China is a mostly untapped market. According to the IIHF's website, the country has 1,101 registered hockey players, including 585 junior players, 222 adult male players and 294 adult female players from a population of more than 1.3 billion.