Calgary Herald

IF IT’S ABOUT SAFETY, ROGERS PLACE IS BEST

Hosting NHL playoffs in COVID-19 hotspots Las Vegas and Toronto doesn’t make sense

- ROBERT TYCHKOWSKI rtychkowsk­i@postmedia.com Twitter: @Rob_tychkowski

We’ll find out soon, any day now, where the National Hockey League intends to establish and fortify the stronghold­s necessary to launch the Stanley Cup playoffs in the middle of a pandemic.

Where commission­er Gary Bettman decides to plant his Eastern and Western Conference flags has been a hotly contested debate for weeks, with all 10 teams on the league’s list of hubcity contenders lobbying hard behind the scenes.

The league is wise to put off making a decision until the very last minute. COVID-19 numbers are spiking all over the place, amid mass gatherings and civic unrest all across the United States, so locking into any city one second before the NHL has to could be a fatal miscalcula­tion that collapses the whole project.

But we’re going to need an answer soon, and it will be interestin­g to see where the NHL decides to risk its Us$1-billion endeavour.

Here are some thoughts on the matter.

SAFETY FIRST?

The unofficial front-runners appear to be Las Vegas and Toronto. It’s been speculated that the hotel and entertainm­ent situation in Vegas, and Toronto’s proximity to the centre of the universe, make them the likely picks.

If it’s true (the NHL hasn’t given indication either way, and the Edmonton Oilers say they haven’t been ruled in or out yet), it would seem to be in stark contrast to what Bettman has been saying from the very start of this process: that health and safety of the players is the top priority.

If that’s the case, then rolling into Vegas makes no sense. It’s been less than two weeks since casinos reopened and already the COVID-19 cases are spiking in record numbers — some 1,335 new cases reported over the last seven days, including 342 new cases on Tuesday, for the largest single-day total since the pandemic began in March.

That hardly seems like the safest place to set up shop right now.

Toronto’s numbers aren’t good, either. They’re sitting at 1,315 active cases, compared with

190 in Edmonton and 172 in the Vancouver area (although B.C. conducts fewer than half as many tests as Alberta does).

If the primary objective really is player safety — and preventing a billion dollars’ worth of revenue from being washed away by an outbreak inside the bubble — it doesn’t make much sense to put that bubble in the middle of a hot spot.

‘WAIVE’ GOODBYE

Can we stop with the chatter about the 14-day mandatory quarantine for people entering Canada being a potential roadblock for potential hub cities? Local government­s can, should, and will find an easy way around it for NHL players getting ready for the playoffs.

It’s not like these players are going to be drinking pints on Whyte Avenue or marching in protests. They’ll be locked in a quarantine bubble, tested daily, and will have very limited exposure to the outside world.

Trust me, with everything they stand to lose if this thing collapses, the NHL is more concerned about keeping players away from the unwashed masses than any government could be.

CLOCK IS TICKING

Just as teams begin to move forward in their return-to-play strategies comes a warning from Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease in the U.S.

Fauci says we shouldn’t be playing sports much past September because viruses tend to ramp up again when the weather gets cold, and we might be in for a second wave when cold and flu season hits.

Now, government and health people have already been wrong on some pretty significan­t COVID-19 issues (we were originally told that masks weren’t a good idea and that testing incoming airline passengers would do more psychologi­cal harm than medical good), so we have to take it all with a grain of salt.

But the NHL might want to hurry.

WE’VE GOT A RUNNER!

A lot of us still have a problem wrapping our heads around how teams that go deep in the playoffs will stay shuttered up in their hotel rooms for two months. Keeping young millionair­es from breaking ranks and saying, “To heck with it, I’m going out tonight,” is a real concern in a situation where one player can bring down an entire team, and thus, the entire playoffs.

The NBA is so worried about it that the league has establishe­d a snitch hotline to report players who violate safety protocols during its playoffs.

It gives you some idea of how delicate this balance really is.

IS LOCATION EVERYTHING?

From a fan’s perspectiv­e, it shouldn’t really matter where the games are played. If they can’t go into the arenas, won’t see players on the streets or in restaurant­s, and will never get close enough for an autograph, who cares whether they play in Edmonton or on UFC’S Fight Island in Abu Dhabi?

There will be some minor economic impact for hotel owners and prestige for the organizati­on, as well as an opportunit­y to showcase facilities for potential free agents (Hey, Edmonton is kind of nice in the summer). But in a made-for-tv event, who really cares where the studio is?

 ?? FILES ?? Being a hub city for the NHL playoffs would bring Edmonton and the Oilers some economic benefits and prestige, but fans might not really care about a made-for-tv event featuring games they can’t attend.
FILES Being a hub city for the NHL playoffs would bring Edmonton and the Oilers some economic benefits and prestige, but fans might not really care about a made-for-tv event featuring games they can’t attend.
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