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SAVING THE NHL SEASON : Q & A : Teams Don’t Have All the Answers Yet

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TIMES STAFF WRITERS

The NHL players and owners have reached a settlement. That much is easy to understand. But what this means to those who follow the NHL is more complicated. Here are some of the questions you might want answers to.

Question: The players have until noon Friday to ratify or reject the agreement. Which will it be?

Answer: Although not all players are in favor, the union is expected to vote for ratification. All it will take is a simple majority of the 700-plus union members. “I’m sure nobody’s ecstatic,” said Ted Donato, the Boston Bruins’ assistant player representative. “(But) guys are happy to be playing hockey again.”

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Q: How will this season be different?

A: Teams probably will be scheduled to play 48 games over 101 days instead of 84 games over 190, but there will be a full four rounds of playoffs ending before July 1. The seventh game of last season’s Stanley Cup finals was played June 14. The All-Star game, scheduled for Jan. 21 at San Jose, has been canceled.

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Q: When will the games begin?

A: Possibly as soon as Jan. 20. The NHL will release the schedule Friday.

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Q: Who will the Ducks and Kings play in their openers?

A: The only thing they know for sure is that their opponents will be from the Western Conference. To make it easier, and less expensive, for teams to negotiate their compact schedules, they will play games only against conference rivals in the regular season.

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Q: When will tickets be available?

A: Tickets are expected to be available no sooner than Saturday.

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Q: If I already have tickets, what should I do?

A: Fans holding Ducks’ tickets should keep them for now and the team will announce a revised policy after it receives its schedule. King fans holding season seats and mini-plans will receive new reprinted packages before the season opener. Previously purchased individual game tickets will be valid only for the date printed on the ticket, regardless of opponent. Tickets can be refunded or exchanged at the original point of purchase if they were purchased for games scheduled from Oct. 5, 1994 to Jan. 14, 1995, for dates no longer on the reconfigured schedule or if the ticket-holder chooses not to see that opponent.

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Q: Who won the lockout?

A: Certainly not the fans, who, in most cities, will be required to pay full price for what is expected--at least for the first few weeks--to be sub-par hockey. Edmonton has slashed prices on 4,000 seats, but other teams are not racing to duplicate the gesture.

As for the players and owners, neither side left the table gleefully. “My father told me that the definition of an agreement is when both sides go away unhappy, and there is probably some truth to that,” New Jersey Devil forward Tom Chorske said.

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Q: What did the owners want when they locked out the players, and how much of it did they get?

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A: The owners were looking for a mechanism to slow the escalation of players’ wages. They wanted a salary cap and had hired Commissioner Gary Bettman for that purpose. The owners did get measures that will slow salary growth in other ways. “It’s enough for us to manage our business properly,” King owner Joe Cohen said. “We spent a lot of time with each proposal analyzing it from the Kings’ point of view and believe this gives us the tool to do it.”

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Q: What did the players have before that they lost in this negotiation?

A: In the previous agreement, there was no restriction on entry-level salaries. Several recent high-priced rookies such as Eric Lindros and Alexandre Daigle helped drive up salaries through a trickle-down effect. Now, there is a limit on the amount rookies can be paid. Also, there had been fewer restrictions on arbitration.

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Q: Why did it take so long?

A: As in most long labor disputes, both sides underestimated their opponents’ resolve. The players and owners would have benefited from agreeing to this deal at the start of negotiations. “I think when you look at it from both sides, my question is, ‘Was it worth losing so much of the season for?’ ” Hartford Whaler General Manager Jim Rutherford said. “I believe that the deal we have now certainly could have been worked out last summer.”

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Q: When will Fox telecast its first game?

A: Except for losing the All-Star game, which was supposed to be its debut, Fox’s five-year, $155-million deal with the NHL has not been affected. It probably will go ahead with plans to televise regular season games on April 2 and April 9, although the matchups might be different because of the new schedule. Nine playoff games, including Game 7 of the Stanley Cup finals, if necessary, also will be televised.

ESPN wants to televise a game on the day play begins, probably on ESPN2. Afterward, it would like to televise 14 regular season games on ESPN and three games a week on ESPN2. Prime Sports, Fox and ESPN will announce their plans after the league schedule is released.

Prime Sports, KTLA and La Cadena Deportiva, which televise the Kings, and Prime and KCAL, which televise the Ducks, will announce plans when the schedule is released.

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Q: How will the layoff affect the players?

A: Some have been skating regularly during the lockout, but, for the most part, they are not in the shape they were when training camps ended. Nor will they be when the season opens. Some coaches, anticipating injuries, already are scouting minor league teams for potential replacements. “I have a feeling there will be more injuries than under normal circumstances,” defenseman Steve Smith of the Chicago Blackhawks said. “Guys stepping into games more quickly will do this.” Boston’s Cam Neely said it was difficult for players to motivate themselves to train during the lockout. “We asked ourselves, ‘Are we doing this for a reason?’ ” he said. “Mentally, it can get tough to get on that bike and get on the ice.”

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