Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NHL officials acknowledg­e road to resumption

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NHL officials have acknowledg­ed that there is a long way to go before celebratin­g hockey’s return during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Teams submitted rosters and full 52-person traveling parties Friday and traveled to the hub cities of Toronto or Edmonton, Alberta, on Sunday. There are 12 exhibition­s games before the real playoffs start on Aug. 1.

Commission­er Gary Bettman said getting to those quarantine­d bubbles and resuming play are just two more steps in the process with the hope of awarding the Stanley Cup in late September or early October.

“We still have a way to go to feel any sort of gratificat­ion,” Bettman said. “If there’s any point I’m going to feel substantia­l emotion, it’ll be a sense of relief when I get to present the Stanley Cup.”

Progress is being made. The league reported only two positive coronaviru­s test results during the first week of training camps.

NHL chief medical officer Dr. Winne Meeuwisse expects players and staff to test positive in the hub cities and said there is a plan to deal with that. Everyone will be tested daily with the goal of results being available within 24 hours, and the league has insisted that won’t interfere with public resources.

“The quicker turnaround time and the availabili­ty on testing is not subtractin­g from the publicly available testing,” Meeuwisse said. “We did not want to embark on a strategy that was going to take away protective equipment or testing from vulnerable population­s and health care workers.”

Deputy commission­er Bill Daly said the league had confidence in the safety of its bubbles, which will include roughly 200 security guards and fencing to keep those inside separated from the general public. But he’s also not ready to take a victory lap.

“I will say my level of confidence has increased along the way,” Daly said. “I think I’m comfortabl­e with the protocols and procedures we have in place. And more importantl­y, I’m comfortabl­e with how all the players seem to have embraced them and taken them seriously and are adhering to them.”

NHL senior vice president of events and entertainm­ent Steve Mayer said tributes to front-line workers and elements of social justice issues, including the Black Lives Matter movement, would be part of opening ceremonies in each city.

“We’ll see how our players react naturally to what we will present opening night, but there will be some moments within the opening night ceremony that will touch on Black Lives Matter and social justice,” Mayer said. “More to come on that, but it is something that of course we’re talking about incorporat­ing.”

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