Montreal Gazette

Toronto still needs to get down to business, even if Cup awarded in Edmonton

- LANCE HORNBY lhornby@postmedia.com

Toronto and the NHL had plenty of work when it came to choosing Hogtown as a hub city, but it doesn’t seem the Stanley Cup will be raised in Hogtown by the Maple Leafs or anyone else.

While Toronto and Edmonton are awaiting official designatio­n as the two hosts for the 24-team tournament, a tweet from TSN’S Bob Mckenzie on Thursday said the Alberta capital is the favourite to stage the best-of-seven conference finals and championsh­ip rounds.

Both burgs will get 12 respective Eastern and Western Conference teams in their towns, playing four best-of-five qualifying rounds while the top four teams get byes and go into a round-robin event to determine future seeding.

The surviving eight teams then go to first- and second-round series that are best-of-sevens. But if Edmonton is indeed to be the site of the final, the two Eastern survivors will head there.

It still means a few weeks of business in Toronto, with the Washington Capitals, Pittsburgh Penguins, Montreal Canadiens and Boston Bruins and others around, albeit in a bubble environmen­ts of hotels around Scotiabank Arena and alternate rinks such as Coca-cola Coliseum on the fairly remote Exhibition grounds.

Up to 50 staff members per team can travel to Toronto and all are designated a cohort quarantine, not subject to the federal government’s 14-day isolation rule for visitors.

Toronto’s medical officer of health, Dr. Eileen de Villa, said she was satisfied with the plan the NHL presented her to keep up its part of the COVID -19 prevention bargain.

“The issue was what would be the process by which to insure the players stayed within the context of a bubble, for their protection and the protection of the city,” she said, “insuring there were appropriat­e protocols and all good measures, both for the players and staff of those teams and that the residents are protected.”

Toronto Mayor John Tory expected to hear some criticism that the city was making too many concession­s to the NHL — and by extension, the Blue Jays who have returned home from Florida to train — when other aspects of city life remain locked down in the early stages of COVID -19 recovery.

“It’s a judgment call,” Tory said. “If you want to be critical, you can be critical of all three government­s (civic, provincial and federal, in concert with Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainm­ent Ltd. in the case of the NHL) who’ve worked extremely closely together on this. You try to see if there are going to be these sports spectacles taking place that are going to be a lot of interest to a lot of people in Toronto and beyond, that they can take place in our city.”

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