Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Divisional play only, 56 games are on table

Canadian teams, Sharks in limbo

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The NHL is preparing for a pandemic-altered regular season limited to divisional play while trying to determine if the league’s seven Canadian teams will be allowed to play intheir country.

Taxi squads also are coming back as part of a tentative return-to-play plan reached Friday, and at least one team won’t be opening its season at home.

The San Jose Sharks reportedly will open training camp and start the regular seasonin Arizona.

The deal already has received support from the NHL Players’ Associatio­n, and features a 56-game regular season beginning Jan. 13. Training camps for the seven teams that didn’t qualify for the playoffs last season would open Dec. 31, with the remaining 24

The Sharks missed the playoffs, and their status is in limbo because Santa Clara County in California has banned contact sports through at least Jan. 8. The Sharks will follow in the steps of the NFL’s San Francisco 49ers, who are closing out theirseaso­n in Arizona.

The Sharks said they had no comment “at this point” on relocating to Arizona.

In an email to the AP, NHL deputy commission­er Bill Daly deferred questions to the Sharks regarding their status. Daly added he was unable to share many details of the plan because the league has yet to brief its general managers.

As for the issues affecting the Canadian teams — Montreal, Toronto, Ottawa, Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver — Daly said they remain unresolved. Discussion­s are to continue through the weekend.

If health officials approve the NHL’s plan, the seven teams would compete in a new Canadian Division.

“The resumption of sports events in Canada must be undertaken in adherence to Canada’s measures to mitigate the importatio­n and spread of COVID-19,” the Public Health Agency of Canada said Thursday in a statement. “NHL teams and other profession­al sports must operate within the rules of their provincial jurisdicti­ons for sports or sporting events.”

If the NHL is not be allowed to play in Canada, the teams would have to relocate to the United States.

Should that happen, Daly said the options would include having the teams compete in same division or have them divided among four realigned divisions based on location.

The NHL already is planning on a schedule in which teams compete only within their divisions.

While the NHLPA’s executive board already has supported moving forward with the agreed upon terms, the league’s board of governors has yet to vote, which is expected to happen in the next fewdays.

Under the plan, teams will continue with 23-player rosters with the addition of a “taxi squad,” made up of four to six players.

The additional players are necessary because the NHL won’t have a minor league systemto draw on because the American Hockey League has pushed back its start to Feb. 5.

Exhibition games aren’t expected to be included in the lead-upto the season.

The NHL, like the NBA, finished last season in a quarantine­d bubble — one hub in Toronto, another in Edmonton, Alberta. NHL commission­er Gary Bettman awarded the Stanley Cup to the Tampa Bay Lightning in late September in Edmonton.

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