Speaking during a virtual panel discussion,
Bettman said teams would rotate in and out of hubs if that was
the way forward but any plan would be a collaborative effort
between the league and its players' body (NHLPA).
"You'll play for 10 to 12 days. You'll play a bunch of games
without travelling. You'll go back, go home for a week, be with
your family. We'll have our testing protocols and all the other
things you need," Bettman said https://www.nhl.com/news/nhl-could-play-reduced-schedule-for-2020-21-season/c-319607032.
"It's not going to be quite as effective as a bubble, but we
think we can, if we go this route, minimise the risks to the
extent practical and sensible... that's one of the things we're
talking about."
Border restrictions due to the pandemic will prevent teams from
moving smoothly between Canada and the United States and Bettman
said that was another factor to consider.
"Obviously, we're not going to move all seven Canadian
franchises south of the 49th Parallel, and so we have to look at
alternative ways to play," Bettman added.
"While crossing the U.S.-Canadian border is an issue, we're also
seeing within the U.S. limitations in terms of quarantining when
you go from certain states to other states. It's again part of
having to be flexible."
The NHL and NHLPA said last month they were targeting Jan. 1 as
the start date for the 2020-21 season.
The 2019-20 season stalled by the pandemic was completed on
Sept. 28 when the Tampa Bay Lightning won the Stanley Cup in a
bio-secure bubble in Edmonton, Canada.
(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Bengaluru; Editing by Toby
Chopra)
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