Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Short season may ramp up rivalries

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The NHL has started seasons of fewer than 82 games in January and played into the summer to award the Stanley Cup.

Just not like this. When the puck drops on the regular season in five rinks Wednesday, it will be the start of a 56-game sprint to the playoffs with all divisional play until the semifinals. That will ramp up the rivalries, reduce travel during the pandemic and make this a once-in-a-lifetime chase for a title.

“We’re going to see a 56game season, but it’ll be 56 playoff games,” veteran New York Islanders General Manager Lou Lamoriello said. “It’s exciting. I think the divisions the way they’re in front of us, it’ll be great for the fans and I think the players will enjoy it, also, so I think the rivalries will just raise to a level we haven’t seen in a long, long time.”

If hockey can navigate the perils of the virus like other sports. Already three teams have been affected, with Dallas unable to start the season on time.

Fans won’t be able to watch in person at the beginning except in a handful of U.S. Sun Belt markets. Tampa Bay on Saturday reversed course on beginning the season with a limited capacity of 3,800 in the arena that’s also hosting the NBA’s Toronto Raptors, citing the recent rise of covid-19 cases and hospitaliz­ations in the area.

Teams will play every division rival at least eight times, often consecutiv­ely like a baseball-style schedule.

That includes a never-before-seen all-Canadian North Division because of border restrictio­ns. Four teams from each of the four divisions make the playoffs and play it out until there are four left in contention for the Cup by the start of summer.

“It’s going to be a wacky year playing teams back-toback and playing the same team kind of repetitive­ly,” Washington defenseman John Carlson said. “It’s going to be different than anything we’ve dealt with.”

Far different than completing the 2019-20 season in quarantine­d bubbles in Canada with Tampa Bay winning it all. Being out in the world means coaches in masks behind the bench, no venturing outside the hotel and arena on the road, and six months of pure hockey in the hopes of avoiding the kind of teamwide outbreaks that have already hit the Stars and have others on edge.

“You don’t want to bring the virus into the locker room, and if it is, you want to do your job of eliminatin­g it as soon as possible,” St. Louis forward Brayden Schenn said. “I think the team that at the end of the day is going to be the smartest off ice is going to have the best chance to win because I think that’s going to limit players going down with the virus.”

The schedule and protocols were designed with that in mind. If they work and most if not all games go on as scheduled, it could improve the quality of play.

“Not having to travel [as much], just kind of getting settled in one place and playing a team a couple times could kind of increase the rivalry aspect,” three-time Cup-winning Pittsburgh captain Sidney Crosby said. “The product will probably be the best it can be.”

Much of that depends on goaltendin­g, with each team likely relying on more than just its starter given the condensed schedule. Coaching will also be different.

“It changes the coaching side probably more than the playing side,” Colorado Coach Jared Bednar said. “You’re familiar with your opponent: you maybe have just played them a couple times, and you play them another two-game set, you can approach it like it’s a little bit of a playoff series.”

Just as the temperatur­e tends to rise over the course of a playoff series, players expect to be just a little bit madder on the ice this year because contempt will build over mini-series and the season as a whole.

“It’s going to get heated,” said Corey Perry, who joined Montreal after reaching the final with Dallas. “In the regular season, people tend to forget a little bit what happened the game before. But this, there’s going to be backto-backs or a day in between and guys won’t forget. And those are the fun games to be a part of.”

 ?? (AP file photo) ?? St. Louis Blues forward Brayden Schenn said teams that handle covid-19 restrictio­ns the best will succeed this season. “I think the team that at the end of the day is going to be the smartest off ice is going to have the best chance to win because I think that’s going to limit players going down with the virus,” he said.
(AP file photo) St. Louis Blues forward Brayden Schenn said teams that handle covid-19 restrictio­ns the best will succeed this season. “I think the team that at the end of the day is going to be the smartest off ice is going to have the best chance to win because I think that’s going to limit players going down with the virus,” he said.

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