San Francisco Chronicle

League soldiers on despite looming financial losses

- By Stephen Whyno

When the NHL charter flight back from the Edmonton bubble landed in New Jersey, Gary Bettman’s phone started ringing.

The commission­er thought he’d get a couple of weeks to exhale after awarding the Stanley Cup to the Tampa Bay Lightning. Instead, it was back to work.

Of course, planning for the 2021 season began well before late September. It took a longterm extension of the collective bargaining agreement between the league and players’ union, layers of health and safety protocols, realigned divisions and convincing multiple government agencies that it is safe to play.

The season opens Wednesday and Bettman estimates the league will lose more than $ 1 billion even by playing. It’s a gamble everyone was willing to make to keep hockey going during the pandemic.

“It would be cheaper for us to shut the doors and not play,” Bettman said Monday. “We’re coming back to play this season because we think it’s important for the game, because our fans and our players want us to, and it may give people, particular­ly those who are back in isolation or where there are curfews, a sense of normalcy and something to do.”

None of the four major North American men’s profession­al sports leagues relies as much on attendance as the NHL: Roughly 50% of all revenue comes from ticket sales, concession­s and other inarena elements. That’s why the league and players prioritize­d extending the CBA before completing last season in twin playoff bubbles; they knew no fans slashes revenue for everyone.

The agreement gave the NHL a blueprint to operate, and labor peace through at least 2026.

“You always have to make judgments about what you think the future’s going to hold and how do you attempt to maximize the benefits and minimize the detriments, mitigate your risks, take advantage of opportunit­ies and so on,” NHLPA executive director Don Fehr said in a phone interview. “I think the agreement that we reached last summer, certainly from the players’ standpoint, was fair and reasonable and appropriat­e, and took all of those things into account. And I don’t second guess it.”

Living by the terms of that agreement means some shortterm pain for owners now, and Bettman warned recently that players could have to repay some money later based on the 50/ 50 split of revenue. But that was just one part of the puzzle of pulling all this together, which started with when to begin play and how to do it.

With the clock ticking down in midDecembe­r, the sides agreed to open training camps for most teams just after Jan. 1 and drop the puck Jan. 13. Each team is scheduled to play 56 alldivisio­nal games during the regular season set to run until May 8, though the Dallas Stars’ outbreak and delayed start already has forced the question of how to handle various situations.

On the eve of the season opener, the league announced Tuesday that 17 of the 27 players with confirmed positive test results for the coronaviru­s from Dec. 30 to Monday are on Dallas, with the other 10 from eight other teams.

There’s no hardandfas­t rule on how many positive test results would endanger a game, and the addition of taxi squads of four to six players mitigates the risk. Watching other leagues postpone and reschedule games has helped, as has regular communicat­ion among medical experts.

“We’ve had the opportunit­y to learn a lot from each other because there’s so little science behind what’s going on because it’s happened so quickly,” NHL chief medical officer Dr. Winne Meeuwisse said. “Everything from infection control to testing strategies, how we interpret test results, how we act on positives, how we manage cases are all things that we share on an anonymous basis so that we are able to refine what we do and do the best job we can of keeping the players and everybody around the game safe.”

Players are tested daily and all arenas except for three — Florida Panthers, Arizona Coyotes and the Stars — will not have fans as the season gets going. The league realigned its teams to include an allCanadia­n division to avoid bordercros­sing hassle; questions remain about where the Sharks will play home games because of a ban on team sports in Santa Clara County.

Expected and unforeseen problems will arise, but officials who were optimistic the entire way through negotiatio­ns to get to this point are confident the NHL again can get to the finish line.

“We’ve watched what’s happened in the other sports, and they’ve had their issues and been able to get through it, and I’m pretty sure we’ll be able to do it,” Fehr said.

Bettman agreed there will be bumps along the way, and deputy commission­er Bill Daly doesn’t expect widespread vaccinatio­n of players to alleviate concerns before the end of this season. Just like the bubble, the NHL wants to get through this season with hopes of brighter days — and full arenas — ahead.

“What’s aspiration­al is we get through the season, we have an onice terrific season, great playoffs, we present the Stanley Cup and the world is back to normal for the ‘ 2122 season,” Bettman said. “Anything beyond that would be great.”

Faces in new places: Zdeno Chara is no longer in Boston after the Bruins’ captain signed with Washington. Onetime Washington goalie Braden Holtby is now in Vancouver. Blues captain Alex Pietrangel­o has left St. Louis — where he was replaced by Boston defenseman Torey Krug — to hit the jackpot in Vegas.

Eric Staal went to Buffalo, and younger brother Marc was traded from the Rangers to Detroit. And the Sabres made an even bigger splash in free agency by landing 2018 NHL MVP Taylor Hall in October.

On the West Coast, Patrick Marleau is back in San Jose for a third stint in four years. Meanwhile, the Sharks’ lineup for the first time in 15 years will be without Joe Thornton, who is now in Toronto.

Though NHL stars switch teams every offseason, the moves this year were, in part, precipitat­ed by the effects of the virus, which has frozen the salary cap at $ 81.5 million for at least this season and likely the next. That placed teams anticipati­ng the cap to increase in a bind.

The effects were evident before free agency opened with teams not retaining the rights to some of their restricted free agents in fear of what the players might be awarded in salaryarbi­tration hearings. That was the case in Buffalo, where the Sabres cut loose Dominik Kahun after the forward showed promise when playing six games after being acquired in a trade with Pittsburgh.

And though several players earned lucrative paydays in free agency, such as Pietrangel­o, who signed a sevenyear, $ 61.6 million contract, his deal proved to be an exception when it came to length.

Hall, for example, signed a oneyear, $ 8 million deal with Buffalo after realizing the freeagent market was going to be tight.

 ?? Jonathan Hayward / Associated Press ?? The Vancouver Canucks conduct practice as workers prepare to cover empty seats at Rogers Arena. Roughly half of the NHL’s revenue comes from inarena elements such as ticket sales.
Jonathan Hayward / Associated Press The Vancouver Canucks conduct practice as workers prepare to cover empty seats at Rogers Arena. Roughly half of the NHL’s revenue comes from inarena elements such as ticket sales.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States