Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
Sport
Ben Pope

Blackhawks undaunted by home-ice disadvantage at Oilers’ Rogers Place

Rogers Place in Edmonton flooded Thursday but is expected to still host the Blackhawks-Oilers series in August. | AP Photos

2020 is the year the NHL can’t catch a break.

In case a global pandemic and the consolidation of 24 NHL teams into two hub cities weren’t enough, torrential rains in Edmonton flooded parts of Rogers Place — one of those two hub arenas — on Thursday.

“Sometimes you almost have to step back and laugh a little bit,” Patrick Kane said after Blackhawks practice Friday. “Someone doesn’t want this to happen.”

Fortunately, unlike COVID-19, it seems the flooding problem will be resolved quickly.

Rogers Place officials reported Friday the damage was restricted to concourse areas and that cleanup has already begun.

“We do not foresee any significant delays or barriers to either Oilers training camp or preparations [and] activities related to our hosting as [an] NHL hub city,” the arena posted on Twitter.

The aftermath of flooding in the Rogers Place concourse.

That’s good news for the Hawks, Oilers and the rest of the Western Conference in that their playoff series, scheduled to begin Aug. 1, will be unaffected by this latest natural disaster.

But it also means the Hawks will still have to play the entirety of their best-of-five series in Edmonton after all, on a rink the Oilers know extremely well.

There are a few small but unmistakable advantages the Oilers will enjoy. They’ll know how bouncy the boards and glass sections are, how the summer ice conditions are. They’ll have a sense of comfort in an arena they’ve been in hundreds of times.

On the other hand, the biggest home-ice advantages in a normal regular season game won’t be at their disposal.

There will be no fans in the building. And the official “home team” in each game will rotate as normal, so the Oilers won’t get to use the always-more-spacious home locker room and play matchups with their line changes any more frequently than usual.

Thus, the Hawks don’t seem very concerned about their home-ice disadvantage.

“Obviously it’s their rink, so they’ll be comfortable there, [but] they don’t have the crowd,” coach Jeremy Colliton said. “For the most part, it’s a pretty even playing field. It’s more so how they play and the challenges that presents. They got some pretty good players.“

The Oilers beat the Blackhawks 4-3 in the two teams’ lone meeting in Edmonton this regular season.

“I don’t know if it gives them any advantage,” Duncan Keith added. “They’re in their home arena, but at the end of the day, the fans aren’t there… I’d like to think it’s be pretty even.”

Kirby Dach, who hails from an Edmonton suburb, was the only Hawks player interviewed this week to acknowledge any sort of disadvantage.

“Maybe a little bit,” Dach said. “Just them getting to practice in that rink time and time again and knowing how the boards play comes into factor. But...there’s not a lot of fans that are going to be there, so the noise won’t be there. For us, that’s a good thing. We’ve got a lot of young guys that are going to experience playoffs for the first time, and that home crowd noise can really play a factor.”

That silence will be an exceedingly strange first-time experience for every player involved.

And while it won’t provide either side an advantage, it’s the one thing about the Edmonton hub experience the Hawks seem most intrigued about.

“It’s been a long time since we’ve played hockey without fans in the building. You’d have to go back to minor hockey, where it’s basically your parents up there,” Keith said. “It’s something that we all have to deal with.”

Note: Hawks defensemen Connor Murphy and Olli Maatta missed practice Friday, and Colliton said they were both “unfit to play” — the NHL’s new universal term. With Calvin de Haan still attending to a family emergency, the Hawks are currently alarmingly undermanned on defense.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.