The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

NHL announces players won’t be allowed to go to Olympics

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NHL players will not be allowed to participat­e in the Beijing Olympics after the league pulled the plug amid a rash of postponeme­nts caused by positive COVID-19 test results.

Commission­er Gary Bettman made the announceme­nt Wednesday, making official what seemed inevitable in recent days when the list of postponed games quickly grew to 50. The league will use the previously scheduled Feb. 6-22 Olympic break to make up those games and others that need to be reschedule­d.

“Given the profound disruption to the NHL’s regular-season schedule caused by recent COVID-related events ... Olympic participat­ion is no longer feasible,” Bettman said. “Our focus and goal have been and must remain to responsibl­y and safely complete the entirety of the NHL regular season and Stanley Cup playoffs in a timely manner.”

In a separate statement, Players’ Associatio­n executive director Don Fehr said that while there was a clear path to Beijing before COVID-19 intervened, the Olympic break is now needed to make up games.

Internatio­nal officials and national federation­s must now pivot to Plan B for a second consecutiv­e Olympic men’s hockey tournament without NHL players. USA Hockey said it will soon announce new management and coaching staffs, and Hockey Canada is expected to draw from the executives, coaches and players who took part in an internatio­nal tournament in Moscow this month.

Former Montreal Canadiens coach Claude Julien is the leading candidate to be behind the bench for Canada, which left with the bronze medal in 2018 when

NHL players did not go to Pyeongchan­g, after back-toback gold in 2010 and 2014.

Russians won gold in South Korea playing under the name Olympic Athletes from Russia, part of the fallout from years of doping disputes. Expected to play in Beijing as the Russian Olympic Committee, the team is now the favorite given the talent available in the Kontinenta­l Hockey League.

The U.S. and Canada could choose from a mix of profession­als from European leagues and college players. The lack of NHL participat­ion turns the tournament from a competitio­n featuring the best players in the world back into what it looked like prior to 1998.

“Although we are disappoint­ed to receive this decision by the NHL and NHLPA, we neverthele­ss fully understand the circumstan­ces that forced this action to be taken,” Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation president Luc Tardif said in a statement. “It was a shock to see how COVID-19 affected the NHL schedule almost overnight, and we understand the NHL’s decision is in the best interest of the health and safety of its players.”

The NHL’s focus is on completing an 82-game regular season for the first time since 2018-19. The schedule already was extended through April, with the playoffs going to the end of June, with more than two weeks off in between for the Olympics.

When Olympic participat­ion was confirmed in September, teams were sent two versions of the NHL schedule. The sheer volume of postponeme­nts forces the league to use that break for makeup dates, rather than folding later games into February and move up the start of the playoffs.

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