Times Colonist

Summer hockey: NHL unveils 24-team plan

Training camps planned for early July

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

TORONTO — The NHL has a plan. Now it’s hoping to eventually get the green light.

The league unveiled a returnto-play format Tuesday that calls time on the rest of the regular season and would feature 24 of its 31 teams if the 2019-20 campaign is allowed to resume.

NHL commission­er Gary Bettman announced the regularsea­son schedule — which was paused March 12 as the COVID-19 pandemic brought most sports around the world to a halt — is “deemed to be completed” and that a round-robin and “play-in” qualifying round would precede a 16-team playoff.

“These are extraordin­ary and unpreceden­ted times,” Bettman said. “Any plan for the resumption of play, by definition, cannot be perfect ... but we believe we have constructe­d an overall plan that includes all teams that as a practical matter, might have had a chance at qualifying for the playoffs when the season was paused.

“This plan will produce a worthy Stanley Cup champion.”

The league hopes to have players at team facilities early next month under strict health and safety guidelines, hold training camps sometime after July 1 and begin playing games by early August.

“It’s been an important day for sports and for the NHL in this incredibly unique, difficult and trying time,” Bettman said on a video conference call with reporters. “We hope that this is a step back toward normalcy.”

Tuesday’s news was just that, but also doesn’t guarantee a return to action. The NHL still has plenty of work to do, including receiving the go-ahead from government and health officials, determinin­g timing, the location of hub cities and testing procedures.

“We have a long road in front of us,” deputy commission­er Bill Daly said. “We’re going to keep working hard at it and listening to our medical advisers and making the decisions that are in the best interests of our players and our club staff members and our fans.”

The 24-team plan would see the top-four clubs from both the Eastern and Western Conference play two mini round-robin tournament­s to determine seeding for the playoffs in a pair of yet-to-bedetermin­ed hub cities.

The other eight teams in each conference would play best-of-five “play-in” series — No. 5 vs. No. 12, No. 6 vs. No. 11, No. 7 vs. No. 10, and No. 8 vs. No. 9 — to round out the 16 clubs left standing.

The first- and second-round post-season matchups could be either best-of-five or best-of-seven series, but the conference finals and Stanley Cup will be best-ofseven. It also remains to be seen if teams will be put in brackets like the NCAA’s March Madness basketball tournament or re-seeded after each playoff round.

Bettman said resuming the season will cost “tens of millions of dollars” — not insignific­ant for a league that still relies heavily on gate receipts — while Daly said he expects the NHL would have to administer between 25,000 and 30,000 COVID-19 tests to players and staff from the start of teams gathering at facilities through to the end of the final.

The league is eyeing two cities to serve as hubs — 10 remain on the short list, including Edmonton, Vancouver and Toronto — but Daly said the Canadian government’s current policy of requiring anyone entering the country to quarantine for 14 days would make those markets a non-starter.

“If we’re not able to really get an interpreta­tion of the quarantine consistent with our players’ ability to travel in and not have to do a strict self-quarantine in a hotel room ... we won’t be in a position to use any of the Canadian cities as a hub city,” Daly said.

Under the 24-team plan, Boston, Tampa Bay, Washington and Philadelph­ia would compete for the No. 1 slot in the East in a round-robin tournament, while defending Cup champion St. Louis, Colorado, Vegas and Dallas would do the same out West.

The East’s best-of-five “play-in” series would see No. 5 Pittsburgh vs. No. 12 Montreal, No. 6 Carolina vs. No. 11 New York Rangers, No. 7 New York Islanders vs. No. 10 Florida and No. 8 Toronto vs. No. 9 Columbus.

In the West, the best-of-five matchups would include No. 5 Edmonton vs. No. 12 Chicago, No. 6 Nashville vs. No. 11 Arizona, No. 7 Vancouver vs. No. 10 Minnesota and No. 8 Calgary vs. No. 9 Winnipeg.

The four winners of the best-offive matchups in each conference would then be pitted against the top-4 seeds.

The seven teams on the outside looking in — Buffalo, New Jersey, Anaheim, Los Angeles, San Jose, Ottawa and Detroit — now all face an off-season that could stretch into next winter.

Asked what all this means for the 2020-21 season, which the league wants to play in its entirety, Bettman said it might not start until after the calendar flips to the new year.

“There’s no magic to starting in October,” he said. “Our buildings, our markets can handle it. We could start in November, we could start in December, we could start the beginning in January if we had to.”

The NHL also announced the format for its draft lottery, which will be held June 26 for the seven teams outside the top-24. The eight teams eliminated in the qualifying round will also be eligible, but the order of the top-three picks may not be decided until after the “play-in” is completed.

 ??  ?? Commission­er Gary Bettman: “This plan will produce a worthy Stanley Cup champion.”
Commission­er Gary Bettman: “This plan will produce a worthy Stanley Cup champion.”

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