The Province

New normal in hockey is anything but

The NHL restart plan actually looks reasonable compared to some other sports

- ED WILLES ewilles@postmedia.com @willesonsp­orts

Let’s look at the bright side of the COVID-19 pandemic: the B.C. Lions are still undefeated. While we’re spreading the positivity around, here are the Monday morning musings and meditation­s on the world of sports.

If the scope of the NHL’s restart plan hasn’t fully registered, take a moment to consider everything in play as the league franticall­y tries to salvage some semblance of a season.

For starters, the NHL and the players associatio­n are essentiall­y negotiatin­g a new collective bargaining agreement on the fly to reflect the new world order. Highlights, as per The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun, include a flattened salary cap of US$81.5 million for 2020-21; a reworked formula for calculatin­g escrow; deferment on players’ salaries; and an increase in the playoff pool.

If ratified by the PA, the new agreement will run to 202526. For a league which has had four work stoppages in the last 28 years, that’s encouragin­g. But it’s contingent on the NHL returning to some form of normalcy in 2020-21 and that’s hardly a foregone conclusion.

Come to think of it, so is the fate of the proposed Stanley Cup tournament which is supposed to begin later this summer. The league has already pushed back the start of training camps to July 13 from July 10 as it attempts to address myriad concerns posed by COVID-19. But if anyone call tell you when exactly players will be reporting, they’re guessing.

If that’s not all, it was also revealed NHL players will take part in the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing and the 2026 Games in Milan. That issue alone has consumed the media since the league opted out of Pyeongchan­g in 2018, but this week it was a sidebar to everything else.

Now here’s the best part. The NHL’s plan actually looks reasonably organized compared to the other North

American profession­al leagues which are attempting a restart. Major League Baseball is in chaos. Major League Soccer is even worse. The NFL has managed to avoid the spotlight but that will change in about a month.

As for the CFL, who knows what they’re doing?

This doesn’t mean the NHL will succeed. It just means it has a marginally better chance than some of the others but, after all this time and effort, there are still too many variables in the equation, too many things which are beyond the league’s control. The only thing we knew for certain about the novel coronaviru­s is it will charge through any crack, no matter the precaution­s, and wreak havoc on its surroundin­gs.

In the end the NHL can guarantee nothing, which leaves you with an anxious feeling as it tries to cram everything which needs to be addressed into an uncomforta­bly tight window.

You hope it succeeds. But the risk-reward ratio here is hard to justify.

Two things I didn’t know about baseball until this weekend.

One, when and if play resumes, relief pitchers will have to face a minimum of three batters or pitch until the inning is over.

Two, the game and the lockdown have produced some of the most enlightene­d voices in all of sports. Last week Colorado’s Ian Desmond gave his reasons for opting out of the season, citing family concerns, the political climate in America and the state of the game.

This weekend, it was Sean Doolittle’s turn to open some eyes. The Washington Nationals reliever noted his team is still waiting on N95 masks and gloves, and test results have been slow. This was before observing the following on America’s COVID-19 response. “We haven’t done any of the things that other countries have done to bring sports back. Sports are like the reward of a functional society and we’re just trying to bring it back, even though we’ve taken none of the steps to flatten the curve,” said Doolittle.

“If there aren’t sports, it’s going to be because people are not wearing masks, because the response to this has been so politicize­d. We need help from the general public. If they want to watch baseball, please wear a mask, social distance, keep washing your hands. We can’t just have virus fatigue and think, ‘Well, it’s been four months. We’re over it. This has been enough time, right?’ No, there’s things we have to do in order to bring this stuff back.”

Sports are like the reward of a functional society. Someone please put that on a T-shirt.

This tells you all you need to know about the impact of the pandemic on sports. Bryson DeChambeau, who won the Rocket Mortgage Classic after a controvers­ial encounter with a TV cameraman earlier in the tournament, is likely the most compelling athlete in the world right now.

Finally, if you don’t understand why the term Redskin or Eskimo is offensive, especially when used as a symbol or logo for a sports team, there’s little I can say here which will change your mind.

But the issue isn’t what you or I think. It’s what the Native Americans and Inuit — the people whose culture is at the root of this issue — think and on that basis, it’s hard to believe changing a team name still has resistance.

This has nothing to do with political correctnes­s. It has everything to do with respect. Indigenous people in North America have been denied respect for centuries.

They’ve also been subjected to dehumanizi­ng treatment by a society which has attempted to eradicate their culture even as it trades on the stereotype­s of that culture.

It’s time to change that. It was time 50 years ago.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Commission­er Gary Bettman, NHL brass and the National Hockey League Players Associatio­n are essentiall­y negotiatin­g a new collective bargaining agreement on the fly to reflect the new world order. If ratified by the PA, the new agreement will run to 2025-26.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Commission­er Gary Bettman, NHL brass and the National Hockey League Players Associatio­n are essentiall­y negotiatin­g a new collective bargaining agreement on the fly to reflect the new world order. If ratified by the PA, the new agreement will run to 2025-26.
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