Montreal Gazette

NHL wipes out 96 more games, all-star showcase

Arenas and mood dark as lockout has killed 422 games

- CHRIS JOHNSTON THE CANADIAN PRESS

Arenas around the NHL will remain dark for at least another three weeks.

Ninety-six more regularsea­son games were wiped off the schedule Friday along with the Jan. 27 all-star game at Nationwide Arena in Columbus because of the lockout..

“The reality of losing more regular-season games as well as the 2013 NHL all-star weekend in Columbus is extremely disappoint­ing,” deputy commission­er Bill Daly said.

With everything now cancelled through Dec. 14, the best-case scenario for the NHL is a shortened schedule of approximat­ely 60 games per team. All of those games would be played within a team’s own conference, according to a source.

Of course, that will only happen if the NHL and NHL Players’ Associatio­n can sign off on a new collective bargaining agreement — and soon.

The sides last sat at the bargaining table on Wednesday, when the NHLPA presented a new proposal, and they have no current plans to meet again. The union believes the remaining gap in negotiatio­ns could have been bridged had the league accepted that offer rather than cancelling more games.

“The gap that remains on the core economic issues is $182 million,” said NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr. “On Wednesday, NHL commission­er Gary Bettman said that the league is losing $18-20 million per day during the lockout, therefore two more weeks of cancelled games far exceeds the cur- rent economic gap. It makes the NHL’s announceme­nt of further game cancellati­ons, including the 2013 all-star weekend, all the more unnecessar­y, and disappoint­ing for all hockey fans — especially those in Columbus.

“The players remain ready to negotiate but we require a willing negotiatin­g partner.”

The current lockout has forced the NHL to cancel 422 regular-season games in total, plus the Winter Classic and all-star game, which amounts to over 34 per cent of the season.

This is familiar territory for a league in its third lockout in the last 18 years — each with Bettman as commission­er. The combined losses from those labour disputes now sits at 2,120 regular-season games, three all-star games, one Winter Classic and the entire 2005 playoffs.

Blue Jackets president Mike Priest said his team was “very disappoint­ed” it would not host the all-star game.

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