Marin Independent Journal

Canucks’ COVID situation a ‘wake-up call’ for SJ players

- By Curtis Pashelka

The severe outbreak of COVID-19 cases among the Vancouver Canucks’ players and coaching staff served as a harsh reminder to the San Jose Sharks to remain vigilant in protecting themselves against the deadly disease.

As of Tuesday, the Canucks had 18 players on the NHL’s COVID-19 protocol list. Two Vancouver taxi squad players and three members of the Canucks coaching staff have also been affected by the outbreak, as the virus spread with frightenin­g efficiency throughout the team’s locker room.

“What I find the scariest about that is how quick that spread,” Sharks coach Bob Boughner said. “You can see in the league, there have been teams that had one guy, two guys, maybe four or five guys (out). But when that hits your whole team and staff and god knows, I’m sure families and everything else, that’s pretty scary.”

The NHL first announced last week that it was halting Canucks team activities, with Thursday as a targeted return to play. Those dates will obviously have to change, although no official updates have come this week from the NHL regarding the Canucks’ schedule.

Sharks players and staff members have had to follow strict Santa Clara County protocols since they were first allowed to return to San Jose in late January after spending all of training camp and the first two weeks of the regular season on the road.

The Sharks’ last regularsea­son game is scheduled for May 8, with the NHL playoffs to begin later in the month.

“You get a little bit of fatigue with the masks and

being extra careful,” Sharks goalie Martin Jones said. “Definitely a good reminder, especially with the end in sight, the end of the season. We’re so close. It’s important for us to buckle down here and be smart.”

There have been multiple reports of players being symptomati­c, although none so far have required hospitaliz­ations. Per Sportsnet in Canada, the Canucks may be dealing with the P-1 variant of the disease, which originated in Brazil and is more contagious.

A rise in local COVID infections due to variant cases is causing alarm among Santa Clara County health officials.

“It did give a lot of us guys a huge reminder and a huge wake-up call,” Boughner said. “We know we’re hopefully

close here to being able to vaccinate most people, but it’s scary. We send them our best. We know it causes a lot of issues with the NHL and scheduling, but all that said, just hoping these guys come out of it healthy and their families are healthy.”

Boughner, having turned 50 last month, said he’s already received his first COVID-19 vaccine shot and is now waiting for his second one.

Later this month, all California residents ages 16 and older are eligible to become vaccinated.

The NHL is not requiring players to get vaccinated, but teams in some U.S. jurisdicti­ons have already started that process as their players became eligible. Most Detroit Red Wings players, for instance, have already received their shots.

The Sharks have had two players test positive for the coronaviru­s after the start of the regular season — Tomas Hertl and Marcus Sorensen.

Hertl was out of the Sharks lineup for two weeks, missing six games from Feb.

27 to March 8. Sorensen’s initial positive test turned out to be a false positive. But, due to Santa Clara County’s regulation­s, Sorensen still had to isolate for 10 days. He missed five games.

Those isolation directives for people who test positive are still in effect. However, county rules state that vaccinated persons who have been exposed to someone with a suspected or confirmed case of COVID-19 are not required to quarantine if they are fully vaccinated.

Full vaccinatio­n means two or more weeks have passed since an individual has received a second dose in a two-dose series, or two or more weeks have passed for those who received one dose of a single-dose vaccine.

“It’s definitely something that I would consider,” Sharks winger Ryan Donato, who turns 25 on Friday, said of getting vaccinated when he’s eligible. “I’m not sure how that’s going to work, but if I had the option to, I think I would definitely take it.”

 ?? CHRISTIAN PETERSEN — GETTY IMAGES, FILE ?? Sharks coach Bob Boughner watches from the bench during the first period against the Coyotes at Gila River Arena on Jan. 16 in Glendale, Arizona.
CHRISTIAN PETERSEN — GETTY IMAGES, FILE Sharks coach Bob Boughner watches from the bench during the first period against the Coyotes at Gila River Arena on Jan. 16 in Glendale, Arizona.

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