Monthly Archives: June 2020
NHL Morning Coffee Headlines – June 19, 2020
Report: Canadian government paves way toward allowing hub cities
The three Canadian cities seeking to host NHL games under the league's return-to-play plan appear to have cleared a significant hurdle.
Canada's government issued an order in council that would allow Edmonton, Toronto, or Vancouver to serve as one of the NHL's two hub cities if play resumes, a federal official told The Canadian Press on Thursday.
The order, which would reportedly green-light a "cohort quarantine," still needs to be signed by the country's Governor General.
It would let the league work around Canada's mandatory 14-day quarantine period for all individuals entering the nation.
The NHL reportedly had to provide a plan that adhered to Canada's public health requirements before the government went ahead with the order.
On Tuesday, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Canada was open to having one of its cities serve as a hub for the NHL as long as it was approved by local health authorities.
The three aforementioned Canadian cities were among 10 in North America that NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said were under consideration when the league unveiled its 24-team playoff plan in late May.
Deputy commissioner Bill Daly later said the league would be open to having a Canadian city serve as one of the hubs, but that the 14-day quarantine period could prevent it.
Earlier in May, Trudeau said "anyone who arrives from another country will have to follow all the rules of quarantine in an extremely strict manner," but he added that the implications of the border rule on the NHL were unclear.
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Carcillo suing CHL over abuse, assault in hazing of underage players
Warning: Story contains graphic content
Former CHL players Daniel Carcillo and Garrett Taylor initiated a proposed class-action lawsuit against the Canadian Hockey League and its three major junior leagues.
In the proposed lawsuit, Carcillo and Taylor allege widespread abuse, hazing, and bullying of underage players by senior players, team staff, and coaches.
"Survivors of such abuse have come forward and continue to come forward to this day," the statement of claim reads, according to TSN's Rick Westhead. "However, the defendants have stubbornly ignored or failed to reasonably address this institutionalized and systemic abuse.
"Rather than respond to or make meaningful attempts to prevent such abuse, the defendants have instead perpetuated a toxic environment that condones violent, discriminatory, racist, sexualized, and homophobic conduct, including physical and sexual assault, on the underage players they are obligated to protect."
In the 46-page document filed in Ontario Superior Court in Toronto on Thursday, Carcillo and Taylor described multiple alleged incidents. Those include players urinating and spitting on rookies in showers while a head coach laughed it off, and first-year players being struck on their bare buttocks with a sawed-off goalie stick.
The allegations have not been proven, nor has the CHL responded to Thursday's legal action.
The proposed lawsuit is seeking damages for "negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract, and a declaration that the teams and the leagues are vicariously liable for abuse perpetrated by their employees and players," according to The Canadian Press.
"It is on behalf of underage minors who suffered violent hazing, physical and sexual assault, and psychological trauma while playing major junior hockey," Carcillo wrote in a statement Thursday.
"I believe this case will give those who were abused a chance to be heard," he continued. "In my experience, sharing stories of abuse is part of the healing process. It allows a person to take the power back. I also believe that this lawsuit will create real, positive change in Canadian junior hockey. This type of abuse has nothing to do with the sport and it needs to stop."
Carcillo, who twice won the Stanley Cup with the Chicago Blackhawks, played three OHL seasons with the Sarnia Sting and the Mississauga IceDogs. He retired from the NHL after nine campaigns in 2015.
Taylor spent parts of two seasons in the WHL with the Lethbridge Hurricanes and the Prince Albert Raiders.
The OHL, Waterloo Regional Police, and the Kitchener Rangers are investigating recent allegations made by former Ranger Eric Guest. He said a veteran player forced him and a young teammate to do cocaine when Guest was 16.
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Report: Rangers’ Andersson to remain in Sweden until traded
Lias Andersson's tenure with the New York Rangers appears to be over for good.
The seventh overall pick of the 2017 NHL Draft has declined an invitation to join the team for training camp and is opting to remain in his native Sweden, according to the New York Post's Larry Brooks.
Andersson will play the 2020-21 season in Sweden if the Rangers do not trade him and could do so even if he is dealt, depending on the timing of a deal, Brooks added.
The 21-year-old forward reportedly requested a trade in December. The Rangers loaned him to HV71 of the Swedish league in January.
Andersson has tallied nine points in 66 NHL games across three seasons with New York.
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Report: NHL doesn’t want teams playing in own hub cities
The NHL's Eastern and Western conferences could find themselves switching places when play resumes.
"The NHL's preference would be that a home team doesn't play in its own hub," TSN's Bob McKenzie reported on Thursday's edition of "Insider Trading." "That is to say if Vegas were to be a hub, the Vegas Golden Knights wouldn't play in Vegas, they would play in the other hub. That's the preference."
The switch would presumably be made in an effort to avoid giving players on any one team the distinct advantage of playing and living in their home city for the duration of the playoffs.
It's possible, however, that both hub cities will be located in the same conference, making such an advantage unavoidable.
"It's entirely conceivable that both hubs could be in the West," McKenzie continued. "So let's say it's Vegas and Vancouver, or Vegas and Edmonton - distinct possibilities. That would mean one of Vegas or Vancouver would be at home in one of those two cities. Or one of Edmonton or Vegas would have to be at home."
McKenzie noted that Toronto, Edmonton, Vancouver, and Las Vegas are all still in the running to serve as hubs for the league's 24-team playoff. He did not specify if any of the other six cities among the original 10 candidates - Chicago, Columbus, Dallas, Los Angeles, Minneapolis-St. Paul, and Pittsburgh - are still under consideration.
The league is expected to announce Monday the two cities that will each host 12 teams, John Katsilometes of the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported earlier in June.
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Marner: NHL doing ‘all the right things’ to ensure player safety
Mitch Marner likes what he's seen so far from the NHL in terms of keeping its players and staff safe, and has faith in the league to continue to do so.
"I think the NHL has everything under control through what I've seen through the last week or so," the Toronto Maple Leafs forward said Thursday, according to Sportsnet's Chris Johnston. "They’re doing all the right things to make sure no one's in the wrong or going to be in a bad place if anything happens.
"I think they're going to do what's best for their athletes and make sure that they're willing to look after us and take care of us."
Marner is one of a handful of Leafs players who have returned to the team's facilities amid Phase 2 of the league's return-to-play plan. During this phase, players are allowed to train in groups of up to six and need to take a number of measures to ensure one another's safety.
Players' temperatures are checked daily when they enter the facility, they undergo twice-weekly nasal swab tests, and they're required to wear masks when they're not working out, among other regulations.
While the circumstances are far from normal, Marner added that he's enjoyed being able to get back together with some teammates. He's been hitting the ice with John Tavares, Ilya Mikheyev, Jake Muzzin, Cody Ceci, and Jack Campbell.
"It's great getting back out there with a couple of the guys and getting to enjoy all that stuff and hanging out in the locker room again with them," Marner said. "It's something that I think a lot of guys really do enjoy, just being in the locker room and kind of just joke around and chirp each other."
The league tentatively aims to initiate Phase 3 of its return-to-play plan on July 10, which would allow teams to open up training camps in full for all players.
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NHL Playoffs Breakdown: Western Conference Round 1 Oilers vs. Blackhawks
Blue Jackets activate Seth Jones off IR
The Columbus Blue Jackets activated star defenseman Seth Jones off injured reserve, general manager Jarmo Kekalainen announced Thursday.
Jones missed the club's final 14 regular-season games before the pause in mid-March due to an ankle injury, which came with an 8-10 week recovery timeline. He'll be able to join the club when training camps open July 10 and is expected to suit up for Columbus' play-in best-of-five series versus the Toronto Maple Leafs.
The Blue Jackets sorely missed Jones while he was injured, winning just three of 14 contests without their defensive leader. The 25-year-old rearguard was putting together another terrific campaign before he was hurt, registering 30 points in 56 games while averaging over 25 minutes per night against opponents' top offensive threats.
Columbus also activated defenseman Dean Kukan off the IR on Thursday. He missed 29 games before the pause due to a knee injury.
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Habs’ Drouin hopes to carry early-season confidence into play-in round
Montreal Canadiens forward Jonathan Drouin is healthy again and hopes to rekindle the confidence he had early in the 2019-20 season if and when the NHL returns to the ice this summer.
"I just want to grab what I did in that first (part of the) season and bring it to whenever hockey starts again," Drouin told Sportsnet's Eric Engels. "In those three months (away from hockey) I looked at some of those games and the reason I was playing well, the reason was I was skating. You look at those things and you want to bring those things back when hockey comes around again. But, definitely, I want to go back to that same pace and that same feeling I had."
Drouin started his season with 15 points in 19 games but suffered a wrist tendon injury in November that kept him out of Montreal's lineup for nearly three months. He suited up for eight contests in February but was sidelined with an ankle injury shortly before the league suspended play.
Prior to his first injury, Drouin believes he was playing his best hockey since the Canadiens acquired him from the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2017.
"I felt way more comfortable in the first couple of months of the season than I had ever been in Montreal," he said. "Just playing hockey, it didn't matter. The team was playing well, I was playing well, and I just felt good about my game at the time. And I felt confident going against any team and in any building ... At least I saw I can be an impact player every night if I show up and play the game I’m supposed to play, and that was a good time for me."
The Canadiens captured the 12th seed in the Eastern Conference and are slated to battle the Pittsburgh Penguins in a best-of-five to advance to the traditional 16-team playoff format.
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