Houston Chronicle

NHL coaches, players optimistic on return

- By Helene Elliott

What world is this, that hockey will be played in August and Commission­er Gary Bettman is winning praise for bringing the NHL back to life — safely so far — at a time of year the ice usually has long since melted?

Up is down and down has become up because the NHL is emerging as a leader in restarting North American sports. The twist was that to pull it off the league had to set up shop in Canada, where it created 12-team hubs in Toronto and Edmonton to house players until possibly early October. The NHL’s brightest minds found the secret to keeping everyone happy as they undergo daily COVID-19 tests and follow strict health rules: Provide free coffee and donuts within teams’ fenced-off confines. Bettman had them at mapleglaze­d.

“I was probably pessimisti­c a couple of months ago when they started talking about this,” Rick Bowness, interim head coach of the Dallas Stars, said during a Zoom call held in Edmonton. “But coming here, it’s a wonderful feeling.”

The ultimate bubble hockey tournament will begin Saturday with best-offive qualifying round games that offer a reprieve for teams that would have been excluded under the usual 16-team format. The 5 vs. 12, 6 vs. 11, 7 vs. 10 and 8 vs. 9 pairings leave room for upsets and — no small considerat­ion — widen the circle to rope in the big markets of Montreal, Chicago and the New York Rangers.

Sunday, the top four teams in each conference will begin a round-robin mini-tournament to set seeding for the next round. All subsequent series will be best-of-seven and teams will be reseeded after each round.

“I think the team with the biggest mental strength, the strongest mental strength, is going to probably lift the Stanley Cup this year,” Edmonton Oilers goaltender Mike Smith said.

Everything can change quickly, as Major League Baseball learned when a COVID-19 outbreak hit the Miami Marlins and scrambled the schedule. But the NHL appears to have a strong chance to get this done with a minimum of glitches, especially since the league announced there were no positive results for COVID-19 among more than 800 players tested during the last week of training camp. Keeping players healthy then was the hard part. It’s easier to monitor them in the sanitized bubbles.

“The protocols have been working great, and people have followed the rules and guidelines,” Boston Bruins center Patrice Bergeron said. “It seems very safe, and we’re hopeful that we’ll be able to finish this playoff.”

Unlike in baseball but like the NBA in its bubble in Orlando, Fla., NHL players won’t hit the road. They’ll move only to the conference finals in Edmonton, also the site of the Stanley Cup Final.

“We’re not traveling, not going airplane to airplane,” Tampa Bay forward Patrick Maroon said. “It’s really scary. You don’t want to see players get (COVID-19). If players do it right and make sure everyone is staying inside the bubble we’ll move forward and be successful.”

The most jarring new feature of bubble hockey, as seen on TV, is the absence of fans and the energy they generate. During exhibition games last week, crowd noise was piped into Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena and Edmonton’s Rogers Place and lower-bowl seats were covered by blue tarpaulins. The noise was fine after goals but during play — when it apparently was meant to simulate conversati­ons in a populated arena — it was more annoying than lively. Better to hear players’ chatter. And additional camera angles didn’t always enhance the viewing experience.

Aspects of game presentati­on can be changed. The empty seats will remain.

Not that there’s a bright side to a pandemic-induced delay, but the 142-day pause gave a second chance to some players who otherwise might have missed the playoffs. Among them are Vancouver goalie Jacob Markstrom (knee), Pittsburgh forward Jake Guentzel (shoulder) and Columbus defenseman Seth Jones (ankle).

“It’s a little bit of a blessing in disguise,” Jones said.

Normally, predicting the course of the playoffs would include analyzing regularsea­son statistics and noting which teams were hot down the stretch. This season being decidedly abnormal, traditiona­l thinking is worthless. Winning streaks that were impressive in March are meaningles­s now. Plus, there’s the added wrinkle of the short qualifying round, a new experience for many players and coaches.

“In best-of-five your margin for error is slim,” Edmonton coach Dave Tippett said, “so you’d better be on top of your game from the start.”

 ?? Jeff Vinnick / Getty Images ?? The NHL has emerged as a leader in restarting sports in North America. Hubs of 12 teams were set up in Canada, with the cities of Toronto and Edmonton housing players until possibly early October.
Jeff Vinnick / Getty Images The NHL has emerged as a leader in restarting sports in North America. Hubs of 12 teams were set up in Canada, with the cities of Toronto and Edmonton housing players until possibly early October.
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