Bettman defends NHL's expansion
playoff format
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[June 16, 2020]
Commissioner Gary Bettman stands
by the NHL's decision to admit 24 teams into the playoffs when
action restarts this summer.
With the regular season declared complete and 24 teams headed to the
newly revised postseason, 77 percent of the league's teams will be
in the playoffs.
Speaking Monday on ESPN's "The Return of Sports" special, Bettman
said, "I think everybody can feel good, based on the combination of
the play-in round and the way we're going to run the playoffs, that
this will be a full competition which will bring out the best in our
teams and our players. The Stanley Cup champion will be deserving of
that crown and the most storied trophy in all of sports."
The top four teams in each conference, based on points per game
played, are guaranteed berths in the playoffs' round of 16. Those
teams will conduct round robins to determine seeds No. 1 through No.
4 for each conference.
At the same time, the playoffs will commence with series in each
conference pitting seeds No. 5 vs. No. 12, No. 6 vs. No. 11, No. 7
vs. No. 10, and No. 8 vs. No. 9.
"While the regular season was largely completed, we had a number of
teams that were on the bubble," Bettman said on ESPN. "And you know
we have extraordinary competitive balance (in the NHL) and any of
those teams that were on the bubble outside of the top 16 in each
conference had a legitimate chance of making the playoffs, some more
than others. And we decided we needed a play-in round to give those
teams a chance to ultimately make the playoffs, and that's going to
be a best-of-five series."
Following the opening round of the playoffs and the round robins
involving the top teams, the remainder of the postseason will follow
the traditional pattern: best-of-seven series in the round of 16,
conference semifinals, conference finals and the Stanley Cup Final.
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NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman speaks to the media prior to the ice
hockey NHL Global Series match of the Florida Panthers vs Winnipeg
Jets in Helsinki, Finland November 1, 2018. Lehtikuva/Martti
Kainulainen via REUTERS
Training camps are tentatively set to open July 10, putting the
league on track to start games in early to mid-August. Play will be
held in two hub cities that have yet to be announced, with one
widely expected to be Las Vegas.
Bettman said Canada's current requirement of a 14-day quarantine
period for those entering the country might prevent the league from
putting a hub north of the border.
"We are working particularly with the Canadian government about
determining how we can deal with moving from the training camp phase
to a possible hub in Canada," Bettman said. "Because obviously if
the players would have to quarantine for 14 days in between training
camp and going to the hub, that wouldn't work."
Once teams are in a hub city, daily COVID-19 tests would be
administered.
"If there's one positive test -- again, this will be under the
strict guidance of the medical people -- that person will be
isolated," Bettman said. "And we'll be monitoring anybody, through
contact tracing, that was in close proximity. Obviously, for any
sport, if you have a major outbreak, it's going to change
everything, but we're being told that an isolated case or a couple
of isolated cases shouldn't interfere with the plans, and we should
be able to move forward."
(Field Level Media)
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