Hartford Courant

Canes’ season paused, while Caps play on without 4 regulars

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Rod Brind’Amour lamented Carolina’s season coming to a screeching halt despite doing “a great job” adhering to pandemic protocols. For Peter Laviolette, his Washington Capitals will keep playing for the next week without four prominent players who broke the rules.

Each team is getting punished in a different way after being affected by the virus. The Hurricanes had games postponed through at least Saturday and won’t get to practice in person with a handful of players on the COVID-19 list.

There’s no indication the Capitals are being shut down, though they will have to play the next four games without captain Alex Ovechkin, No. 1 center Evgeny Kuznetsov, top-four defenseman Dmitry Orlov and starting goaltender Ilya Samsonov.

“We totally understand why the rules are in place, and there’s no arguing with that,” said Laviolette, who’s in his first season as Washington’s coach. “We knew the rules. We’re not sitting here saying that we were uninformed or we weren’t aware. We need to do a better job.”

The NHL fined the Capitals $100,000 for breaking protocol by having those four players in a hotel room together with none of them wearing a mask. Laviolette said there was a positive test result, which led to contact tracing, and Washington will be forced to ice a patchwork lineup for its home opener Friday night against Buffalo.

There’s no hard and fast timeframe for how long a player who tests positive or has potential exposure must be out. The NHL defers to local authoritie­s, and the minimum four games for the Capitals players relates to the District of Columbia’s quarantine regulation­s.

After Ovechkin expressed regret for the mistake that will cost him and his fellow Russians two games against the Sabres and two against the New York Islanders, teammates said Thursday the protocols were spelled out for them before the season.

“It’s not a situation we want to be in, but here we are,” center Nicklas Backstrom said. “We’re a tight group. Every time we’re on the road, we see a chance to really connect as a group, but obviously it’s a violation.”

Carolina has been off since Tuesday, when Teuvo Teraivanen, Jaccob Slavin, Jordan Martinook and Warren Foegele joined captain Jordan Staal on the COVID-19 unavailabl­e list. The Hurricanes have so far had three games postponed because of their outbreak and won’t play for at least a week.

“We’ve done all the protocols — we’ve tried,” Brind’Amour said. “Obviously it didn’t matter. It got into our room.”

Carolina, Dallas, Florida, Nashville and defending Stanley Cup champion Tampa Bay have all had at least one game postponed because of COVID-19 concerns. The NHL said 17 Stars players tested positive, and their first four games were reschedule­d.

 ?? MADDIE MEYER/ GETTY ?? Flyers goalie Carter Hart stops a shot by the Bruins’ Craig Smith in the first period Thursday in Boston.
MADDIE MEYER/ GETTY Flyers goalie Carter Hart stops a shot by the Bruins’ Craig Smith in the first period Thursday in Boston.

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