San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

NHL now focusing on midJanuary season start date

- By John Wawrow John Wawrow is an Associated Press writer.

Time has all but run out on the NHL’s hope to start the season Jan. 1, with the league and NHL Players’ Associatio­n now focusing their discussion­s on opening play in midJanuary, a person familiar with the talks told the Associated Press on Friday.

A midJanuary start date has become more realistic given the number of issues that need to be resolved before players can begin traveling to their home cities.

The two sides still need to agree on a schedule, with the working plan featuring between 52 and 56 regularsea­son games per team. There has also been talk of a buffer being worked into the schedule in the event games are postponed due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, the person said.

Without going into detail, NHL deputy commission­er Bill Daly told the AP “various similar concepts are being discussed” when asked about the 52 or 56game schedule and midJanuary start.

Also needing to be resolved is a onetime divisional realignmen­t, with the likelihood of there being a seventeam allCanada division due to crossborde­r travel restrictio­ns, as well as an updated COVID19 protocol for players and teams.

Under a midJanuary start date, players would have to begin reporting to their teams after Christmas, followed by a shortened training camp and preseason. The regular season would likely stretch into early May, with the Stanley Cup Finals targeted to end in late June or early July.

It would be similar to the 2013 season, which began in midJanuary and featured a 48game schedule as a result of the NHL lockout. Teams also played a more condensed schedule by squeezing in 48 games over just under 100 days. In a normal season, teams play 82 games over the span of about 185 days in a schedule that includes breaks for Christmas, the AllStar Game and a bye week.

The start of the 202021 season has been considered flexible based on the uncertaint­ies involving the pandemic. The league initially considered having the season start in late November or early December, before pushing it back to Jan. 1. Commission­er Gary Bettman raised the likelihood of the date being changed last week during a Sports Business Journal panel discussion by calling it “a work in progress.”

The discussion­s regarding the start to the season have been ongoing, and are separate from the recent economic concerns raised by the NHL.

Some five months after extending the collective bargaining agreement, the league has proposed altering the deal to make up for projected losses affecting the 5050 revenue split between owners and players.

The CBA calls for players to defer 10% of their salary for the upcoming season, and it puts a cap on how much money will be kept in escrow over the length of the deal.

Last month, the league raised the possibilit­y of having players increase salary deferrals to 20% or 26% and increasing the escrow caps. Though Bettman said the league is not attempting to renegotiat­e the CBA, the players and several agents have accused the NHL of attempting to renege on what was agreed to in July. Agent Allan Walsh posted a series of tweets last week saying the NHL should have foreseen the possibilit­y of the pandemic lasting into 2021.

“They have a deal,” Walsh wrote. “Bottom line, some owners don’t like the deal and want better terms.”

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