New York Daily News

NHL reveals more details of playoff plan; Cup could be in October

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The NHL announced Thurday that every playoff series will be a best-of-seven format after the intial qualifying round and teams will be reseeded throughout if the league is able to return with its 24-team plan later this summer.

The announceme­nt came at nearly the same time the Pittsburgh Penguins revealed one of their players had tested positive for the coronaviru­s. The team said the unidentifi­ed player was not in Pittsburgh, was isolated after experienci­ng symptoms and has recovered.

So far, nine NHL players have tested positive: five from Ottawa, three from Colorado and one from Pittsburgh. The league is expected to test players daily if games resume. The

NHL is still asessing health and safety protocols for what it has said could be 24 teams playing each other in two hub cities.

“We still have a lot of things to figure out, namely the safety of the players,” Winnipeg Jets captain Blake Wheeler said earlier this week. “We've got to make sure that our safety is at the top of that list. Because we're a few months into this pandemic, we don't know what the long term effects are going to be. A lot of questions to be answered.”

The NHL has not announced the start of voluntary workouts or a firm timeline for training camps and the resumption of games. But the final details of the format answered one question: Players preferred

re-seeding throughout a 24team playoff as a means of fairness, though the league likes the brackets that have been in place since 2014.

“We prefer as a general matter brackets for a whole host of reasons,” Commission­er

Gary Bettman said last week. “We've told the players who have been debating it internally if they have a preference, we're happy to abide by it.”

The top four teams in the Eastern and Western Conference­s will play separate round-robin tournament­s to determine seeding. Reseeding each round puts more value on the seeding tournament­s between Boston, Tampa Bay, Washington and Philadelph­ia in the East and St. Louis, Colorado, Vegas and Dallas in the West.

“Those games are going to be competitiv­e,” Capitals general manager Brian MacLellan said.

Toronto captain John Tavares, a member of the NHL/NHLPA Return to Play committee, said he preferred the traditiona­l seven-game series once the playoffs were down to the more traditiona­l 16 teams. A majority of players agreed.

“Everybody is used to a best of seven,” Pittsburgh player representa­tive Kris Letang said. “You know how it's structured. You know how it feels if you lose the first two or you win the first two. You kind of know all the scenarios that can go through a best of seven.”

Having each series be best of seven will add several days to the schedule to award the Stanley Cup as late as October. But players felt it worth it to maintain the integrity of the playoffs.

“Any team that is going to win five rounds, four rounds of best of seven I think it will be a very worthy Stanley Cup champion and they'll be as worthy as any team or players that won it before them,” Tavares said.

 ?? GETTY ?? Mika Zibanejad (from l.) Chris Kreider, Ryan Strome and Rangers move closer to restart.
GETTY Mika Zibanejad (from l.) Chris Kreider, Ryan Strome and Rangers move closer to restart.

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