The Mercury News

NHL taxi squads will help teams stay on the ice during pandemic

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The NHL is bracing for bumps as it aims to pull off a season during the pandemic and the hope is that taxi squads will help teams stay on the ice.

The defending Western Conference champion Dallas Stars have already had to postpone their seasonopen­er this week because six players and two staff members tested positive for the coronaviru­s. The Stars won’t face an opponent earlier than Jan. 19, when they’re currently scheduled to play at Tampa Bay in a Stanley Cup Final rematch.

Dallas and every other team will likely lean on taxi squads this season.

NHL teams get to have four to six players on taxi squads after they clear waivers, essentiall­y expanding the size of the team beyond the 23-man limit when teams submit their rosters to the league on Tuesday.

Hundreds of players were put on waivers Monday, including Montreal’s Corey Perry and Tampa Bay’s Tyler Johnson and Luke Schenn. All could now be taxi squad-bound.

“We’re going into unchartere­d waters with the taxi squad that is in place to try to get us through the season,” Edmonton Oilers general manager Ken Holland said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. “Taxi squads will give us 29 players tested every day, practicing and traveling with us that are eligible to play in games on short notice.”

Players on taxi squads can be put on the active roster as late as 5 p.m. Eastern on a game day, giving clubs a better chance of having four lines, three defensive pairings and two goaltender­s even if rosters take a hit because of COVID-19 protocols. Teams must have three goaltender­s available among the 29 players.

While taxi squads will benefit teams trying to navigate the season, general managers will wrestle with whether they should keep prospects to play sparingly in the NHL or if sending them to compete regularly in American Hockey League games is better for their developmen­t.

When NHL teams do want to call up prospects from the minor leagues, those based in the U.S. will be able to get them on the ice quicker than some of the Canadian counterpar­ts.

“There will be a quarantine period of seven days to bring somebody up,” Stars GM Jim Nill said.

Edmonton, Vancouver and Calgary will have to wait longer. Those teams have U. S - ba sed minor league affiliates and anyone crossing the border for nonessenti­al reasons must isolate for 14 days.

DOAN RETURNING TO COYOTES IN FRONT OFFICE ROLE >> Shane Doan is returning to the Arizona Coyotes.

The Coyotes announced the longtime former captain has been hired as chief hockey developmen­t officer. Doan will serve as a strategic adviser to owner Alex Meruelo and general manager Bill Armstrong, supporting the business and hockey operations department­s.

Doan spent all 21 NHL seasons with the Coyotes, starting with the franchise’s last season in Winnipeg before moving to the desert in 1996.

He served as Arizona’s captain the final 13 years of his career before retiring after the 2016-17 season. MILBURY OUT AT NBC >> Mike Milbury is out and Mike Babcock is in for NBC Sports’ coverage of the NHL this season. Milbury had been with the network since 2008 after coaching the Bruins and serving as coach and GM of the Islanders. Babcock, an NHL head coach for 17 seasons, joins NBC Sports more than a year after being fired by Toronto.

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