Times Colonist

NHL return may face border restrictio­n hurdle

- JOHN WAWROW

The NHL is still more than a week away from determinin­g a returnto-play format, a person familiar with discussion­s told the Associated Press on Tuesday.

And what that plan resembles could be complicate­d further should the U.S. and Canada extend border restrictio­ns to non-essential travel into July.

The person spoke after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced border restrictio­ns will stay in effect through June 21. This marks the second time the restrictio­ns have been extended since first being put into place March 18 because of the new coronaviru­s pandemic.

“I am hopeful that today’s announceme­nt will not have a material impact on our return to play discussion­s and timeline,” NHL deputy commission­er Bill Daly wrote in an email.

Though the NHL has left open the possibilit­y of having training camps open as late as early August, it was unclear what effect further border restrictio­ns will have on a league with seven of its 31 teams based in Canada.

There’s also a question of how travel restrictio­ns will affect players, many of whom have returned to their off-season homes — including about 17% of players currently self-isolating overseas.

In a separate developmen­t, the NHLPA’s executive board voted to defer the final payment of players’ regular season salaries through the end of May. Players were owed their final cheques on April 15, before voting to defer those payments for a month.

The decision provides temporary relief to the NHL’s bottom line, opening the possibilit­y of players foregoing some or the entire remainder of their final cheques. The players stand to lose all or a portion of what they are owed. Players and owners split hockey-related revenue on a 50-50 basis, with a percentage of players’ salaries placed in an escrow fund. Owners can draw from the fund should their share fall below 50%, which is projected to happen this season.

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