Los Angeles Times

NHL, players forge agreement to return

They are tentativel­y set to open a 56- game season on Jan. 13 with realigned divisions.

- By Helene Elliott

The NHL and NHL Players’ Assn. tentativel­y agreed to begin the pandemic-delayed 2020- 21 season on Jan. 13 with each team playing a 56- game schedule solely within one of four temporaril­y realigned divisions, NHL Deputy Commission­er Bill Daly confirmed Friday night in a post published on the league’s website.

The post also confirmed that one division will envelop all seven Canada- based teams, freeing them to compete against one another while avoiding severe travel restrictio­ns that limit border crossings between the U. S. and Canada. Those restrictio­ns led the NBA’s Toronto Raptors to relocate to Tampa, Fla., this season and sent Major League Baseball’s Toronto Blue Jays to Buffalo to play home games last season.

The top four teams in each of the new divisions will qualify for the Stanley Cup playoffs, according to reports by Canada’s Sportsnet network.

The executive board of the NHLPA was scheduled to discuss the agreement Friday night. The league’s Board of Governors was scheduled to convene via conference call over the weekend.

The NHL said the tentative agreement includes health and safety protocols. Enough other issues, however, remain unresolved to make it possible the opener will be pushed back a few days. The principal issue is securing approval from health officials in the five Canadian provinces that are home to NHL franchises. The province of Ontario recently instituted a lockdown in Toronto, home of the

Maple Leafs.

“The NHL and NHLPA have had to adjust to government regulation­s at all levels, from restrictio­ns at the Canada- United States border to local limits on gatherings, and the coronaviru­s situation in each of the markets for the 31 NHL teams,” the league’s post said.

The presence of fans in arenas in even limited numbers would be determined by local, state or provincial health policies in each city. Less than a quarter of the NBA’s 30 teams are expected to admit fans when that league opens its season Tuesday.

As tentativel­y agreed, training camp will open Dec. 30 or Dec. 31 for the seven NHL teams that missed the 2019- 20 playoffs, a group that includes the Kings and Ducks. Camp for the 24 remaining teams will open Jan. 3.

The NHL paused the season on March 12 because of the pandemic. It resumed play Aug. 1 with an expanded f ield of 24 teams playing in bubbles in Edmonton and Toronto. The Tampa Bay Lightning won the Stanley Cup on Sept. 28 in Edmonton.

Replicatin­g a hub setup remains a possibilit­y for

2020- 21, though players reportedly oppose being separated from family for the time necessary to play a 56game schedule. Players will be allowed to opt out if they have concerns for their health or if they feel they must protect a close family member who is considered at risk of developing a health problem. There won’t be any exhibition­s. Each team will have a taxi squad of four to six players, in deference to the short preparatio­n time and the possibilit­y the coronaviru­s might render players unfit to play while mandating isolation of those who came in contact with people who test positive.

The absence of fans in arenas will hurt the NHL, which is the most gate- dependent of the four major North American profession­al leagues.

By playing 56 games, however, the league and individual teams will be able to generate vital revenue through TV contracts and in- arena advertisem­ents. There’s precedent for playing a shortened season: Lockouts imposed by Commission­er Gary Bettman cut each team’s 82- game schedule to 48 games in 1994- 95 and in 2012- 13, each time with a mid- January start.

 ?? Jason Franson Associated Press ?? TAMPA BAY celebrated its title on Sept. 28. Camps could open this month for nonplayoff teams.
Jason Franson Associated Press TAMPA BAY celebrated its title on Sept. 28. Camps could open this month for nonplayoff teams.

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