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NHL, players take collaborat­ive approach in bid to resume

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Collaborat­ion or bust. Given the gravity of the new coronaviru­s pandemic and the abrupt decision to place the NHL season on pause in March, it didn’t take commission­er Gary Bettman and union chief Don Fehr long to realize they were going to have to work together if play was to resume any time soon.

Nearly four months to the day since the last puck dropped, the two sides put aside past difference­s to have a return-to-play plan in place, and the assurance of labor peace through September 2026 to go with it.

“When we got to March 12 and decided to take the pause, that began a period of perhaps unpreceden­ted collaborat­ion and problem solving,” Bettman said during a Zoom conference call with reporters Saturday, a day after the league and players ratified a 24-team expanded playoff, set to begin Aug. 1, and a fouryear extension of the collective bargaining agreement.

“It was a recognitio­n by both sides that we were being confronted with an incredibly difficult, a novel, unpreceden­ted situation. I believed we would get to this point because it was the right thing to do for the game and for everybody involved in the game.”

Fehr, the NHL Players’ Associatio­n executive director, not only agreed with Bettman, but went out of his way to credit the owners for the approach.

“I was persuaded well before the end of March that not only was this different, but it was being approached in a fundamenta­lly different way. I always thought we would find a way to reach an agreement,” Fehr said.

The bond establishe­d between the two was apparent during the 55-minute session, with Fehr agreeing with Bettman and then acknowledg­ing how unusual that was by by saying: “I think that indicates something about the approach that was taken in these talks.”

Training camps are set to open Monday, which also represents the deadline for players to determine whether to opt out without penalty. If all goes as planned, teams will depart for their two respective hub cities, Toronto and Edmonton, Alberta, on July 26 to open a two-month playoff leading to the awarding of the Stanley Cup.

Many uncertaint­ies remain, with Bettman and Fehr unable to provide definitive answers.

While acknowledg­ing the likelihood of players testing positive for COVID-19, deputy commission­er Bill Daly was unable to say how many players would have to do so for the league to postpone or cancel the playoffs altogether.

Though conference playoffs and Stanley Cup Final are scheduled to be held in Edmonton, a person with direct knowledge of the plans told The Associated Press the site might change if the pandemic spikes in Alberta’s capital. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is an alternate plan that’s not been discussed publicly.

Bettman and Daly, who are based in New York, weren’t even sure if or when they could cross the border to personally attend games because those entering Canada are required to self-isolate for a 14-day period.

The only certainty is the NHL became North America’s latest profession­al sport to forge a path back to playing, but minus the public hiccups experience­d by its counterpar­ts.

Major League Baseball’s season was nearly scuttled before the two sides agreed to a 60-game format. Less than three weeks before NFL training camps are set to open, the league is experienci­ng push-back from its players on whether to play preseason games next month. Major League Soccer has had two teams already withdrawin­g from competitio­n because of the number of players testing positive for the coronaviru­s.

And not only is hockey on the verge of returning, the CBA extension assures 12 straight years of labor peace, the NHL’s longest stretch since Bettman took over in 1993. During that time, play has been halted three times by lockouts, the last in 2012-13, when the season was shortened to 48 games.

“I think Don and I both recognize labor peace was something we couldn’t even quantify how important it was,” Bettman said. “But we both knew that for the business of the game to come back strong, there was enough disruption going on in the world that we didn’t have to add to it.”

Fehr said the monthslong talks to reach a solution were a matter of perseveran­ce.

“This is a very bad analogy, but you have to sort of navigate the kayak in a storm until the storm’s over, and then make sure the kayak isn’t full of holes so that you can go on and sail it in calmer seas,” Fehr said in a separate interview with The AP. “Or to put it another way there was never any pretense that this was business as usual.”

Owners benefit because they can generate muchneeded revenue through sponsorshi­ps and advertisin­g, even though games will be played in empty arenas.

Though players will likely lose a portion of their salaries for seasons to come to make up for 50-50 split of revenue, they benefit from a CBA that includes the possibilit­y of returning to the Olympics, after the NHL opted out from the 2018 Winter Games in South Korea. The new labor agreement also addressed players’ demands to gain a postcareer subsidy for health care.

 ?? Mark Zaleski / Associated Press ?? In this Oct. 31 photo, Calgary Flames defenseman Travis Hamonic plays against the Predators during the first period in Nashville, Tenn. The Flames won’t have Hamonic for the resumption of the hockey season after he decided to opt out for family reasons.
Mark Zaleski / Associated Press In this Oct. 31 photo, Calgary Flames defenseman Travis Hamonic plays against the Predators during the first period in Nashville, Tenn. The Flames won’t have Hamonic for the resumption of the hockey season after he decided to opt out for family reasons.

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