Las Vegas Review-Journal

NHL Quarantine of players unlikely

As teams gear up for camps, safety concerns remain

- By Stephen Whyno The Associated Press

Jason Spezza’s confidence in the NHL returning has not been shaken by word of 11 fellow players testing positive for the coronaviru­s.

Given his involvemen­t in NHL Players’ Associatio­n talks, the veteran Toronto forward knew from doctors’ input there would be positive test results in hockey, just as there have been in other sports as group workouts ramp up across North America.

Those very well may continue to happen with training camps scheduled to open July 10, yet deputy commission­er Bill Daly said Thursday the league and NHLPA are not considerin­g putting teams in quarantine­d “bubbles” for those mandatory sessions. Instead, players are being instructed to stay home when not at the rink, with the hope that frequent testing and health protocols will prevent any outbreaks before, hopefully, games resume in latejuly.

“I’m pretty confident that once we get into hub cities, we’ll be able to do a good job of keeping it out,” Spezza said. “I think getting there is going to be the challenge, and that’s where it takes a little bit of discipline for us as players to make sure we don’t kind of derail the plans.”

The league and players are still working to finalize a return-to-play agreement that would entail a 24team playoff to award the Stanley Cup. It’s understood that players, coaches and staff would be quarantine­d from the general public for the duration of the playoffs and tested regularly.

Until arriving in one of those cities as early as July 23 or 24, players and their families are still out in the real world and face the risk of exposure.

“You have a whole bunch of people in close proximity to each other for prolonged periods of time, they may be traveling together exposed to other individual­s that you don’t know who they’ve been exposed to,” Atrium Health medical director of infection prevention Katie Passaretti said. “Any time you’re bringing groups together and then sending

 ?? Jeffrey T. Barnes The Associated Press ?? Toronto’s Jason Spezza, right, says players will need to be discipline­d once the league and the players’ union have their return-to-play plans down pat.
Jeffrey T. Barnes The Associated Press Toronto’s Jason Spezza, right, says players will need to be discipline­d once the league and the players’ union have their return-to-play plans down pat.

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