Orlando Sentinel

IN BRIEF NHL training camps to open July 10

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The NHL and NHL Players’ Associatio­n gave the go-ahead Thursday for teams to open training camp on July 10 in the next step forward toward completing the pandemic-delayed season.

The league and union have already approved a 24-team playoff format but still need to decide on testing and health and safety protocols along with potential host cities for the games.

“I think safety’s first and foremost,” Penguins forward Jake Guentzel said earlier this week. “I still think there’s a lot to go into it.”

Camps are expected to weeks, if not slightly longer.

Under this timeline, exhibition games could begin as soon as July 24 with playoff games starting roughly a week later.

Setting a July 10 start for camps allows players to make arrangemen­ts to return to their home cities in light of quarantine regulation­s in the U.S. and Canada. Commission­er Gary Bettman said recently 17% of the league’s players were overseas.

Players were allowed to resume small-group, voluntary workouts and teams could open their training facilities Monday.

Groups of players began skating this week, while others were waiting for a firm timeline to ramp up for games.

Under the format devised by the Return to Play committee, the top four teams in each conference advance to the round of 16 and play separate round-robin tournament­s to determine seeding.

The other 16 teams play best-of-five series.

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Auto racing: Martin Truex Jr. used a trip to NASCAR’s shortest track to end a lengthy losing streak on the day the stock car series at long last banned the Confederat­e flag. Truex cruised down the stretch and won his first NASCAR Cup race of the season late Wednesday night in the first race under the lights at Martinsvil­le Speedway. Truex, the 2017 Cup champion, has been one of NASCAR’s biggest winners over the last three years, but failed to find victory lane for Joe Gibbs Racing over the first 10 races of this season. He won 19 times from 2017-2019. “I knew we were going to get one soon,” Truex said. “Hopefully we can get on a roll.”

NFL: The league has extended virtual offseason programs for teams through June 26. Although team facilities have opened for key personnel, coaches and players rehabilita­ting injuries, healthy players have been barred from those complexes due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The remote programs have taken the place of on-site work, and some teams already have said they are shutting those down. But on Thursday, the league said it will allow virtual work for an additional 15 days.

Soccer: Premier League players will not need to wear face masks arriving at stadiums, in dressing rooms or on the substitute­s’ bench when the competitio­n’s 100-day coronaviru­s shutdown ends next week. Clubs agreed on matchday protocols that include splitting stadiums into red, amber and green zones to reduce the risk of spreading the virus.

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