NHL Notebook: A look at some of the stories to watch in 2022
NHL life in 2021 — like regular life — was dominated by COVID-19.
The league manoeuvred, contorted and pivoted to play a 56-game campaign that culminated in July with the Tampa Bay Lightning winning their second consecutive pandemic Stanley Cup.
Things were going well to start this season until the Omicron variant swept across North America, forcing a string of postponements, team shutdowns, fans being barred from some Canadian arenas due to new coronavirus restrictions, an extended pause over the holiday break, and the NHL’s decision to back out of the Beijing Olympics.
COVID-19 will no doubt cast a long shadow again in 2022, including how the schedule is reworked and the economic affect on a league that less than a month ago was projecting a return to US$5.2 billion in revenues.