The Morning Call

A full season in a bubble? NHL says ‘no’

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The 64 days spent in the NHLplayoff bubble feel like six months to Barclay Goodrow.

“It’s tough,” the Lightning forward said. “It’s been a grind.”

It’s a grind he and players won’t do again next season. The league and Players’ Associatio­n will meet within the next two weeks to discuss the many possibilit­ies of what the 2020-21 season could look like, but there’s no desire to stage it entirely within quarantine­d bubbles.

“Certainly not for a season, of course not,” NHLPA executive director Don Fehr told The Associated Press on Sunday. “Nobody is going to do that for four months or six months or something like that. Whether we could create some protected environmen­ts that people would be tested and they’d be clean when they came in and lasted for some substantia­lly shorter period of time with people cycling in and out is one of the things I suspect we will examine.”

Not long after the Stanley Cup is awarded, the two sides will talk about when next season might start, how many games might be possible, what testing and protocols might be required and whether fans might be allowed into buildings at some capacity at some point.

A week after Commission­er Gary Bettman said a mid-to-late December or January start was possible, Fehr agreed that the tentative Dec. 1 opening night target date was the “earliest conceivabl­e date” the season could start and there’s good reason to believe it’ll be later.

The NHLPA is in the process of finalizing a committee to start answering the myriad questions hockey faces in trying to get another season going. And while that and negotiatio­ns will begin quickly, the league and players are on the same page, that just like the return to play plan, they want to take time to get this right.

“Nobody is going to rush it,” Fehr said.

 ?? BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY ??
BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY

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