Sunday, 12 teams arrived, and everything went very smoothly. All the flights landed on time, and everybody checked into the hotels and received their welcome packets and Event Credentials. The equipment managers and trainers got set up at the practice facility. All in all, a very smooth day. Shout out to the entire NHL Events team for all their hard work to make yesterday happen.
Monday was officially Day 1 of everybody in the bubble. I spent the first half of my day at one of the two Toronto hub hotels, the Fairmont Royal York. Some of us have been here for several days already, and it was nice to see the coffee truck provided by Tim Hortons come online. A lot of people took advantage of some freshly brewed Tim Hortons coffee to start their day. (I had two cups of coffee and one muffin. We'll leave it at that.)
We had to tweak to the transportation system a little to accommodate the volume of 12 teams practicing in one day at a single multi-pad practice facility. Because of the space required for social distancing on the buses, you need two buses per team, and with limited space in the Secure Zone, the buses can stack up. But Mark Black, vice president, international operations, events, had a solution for everything. We created a drop-off location, so there could be overlap without teams getting in each other's way. Everyone got to practice on time.
We met with the hotel about food and beverage, got their feedback on the first night, and discussed the days ahead. I also made a point to walk around a little and be visible, asking GMs, coaches and players how things were going to make sure they felt that they had someone to talk to, or someone to complain to, if necessary. Luckily, I was on the receiving end of a number of compliments, so it made us all feel pretty good about arrivals and how things are going so far.
I went to Scotiabank Arena for the second half of the day to make sure we're ready to go for our doubleheader of exhibitions tomorrow. The Pittsburgh Penguins play the Philadelphia Flyers (4 p.m. ET; NBCSN, NBCSP+, ATTSN-PT, NHL.TV) and the Toronto Maple Leafs play the Montreal Canadiens (8 p.m. ET; NHLN, SN1, TVAS).
I checked in with Derek King, senior manager, facilities operations, hockey operations. He said the ice is good and ready to go.
I also did a walk with our Entertainment/Game Presentation Group. To give a glimpse of the detail in their preparations, we were journey-mapping how the various technical and camera operators get to their specific locations, because we have to make sure certain groups don't cross paths with other groups based on the medical protocol. These are things we don't normally have to think about at an event, but we're thinking about them and getting through them.
I am very excited to see hockey. I'm actually trying to map out my day tomorrow to make sure I can catch some of the action. I think everybody is getting excited for the games. This morning, people were like, "Can't we start today?" Obviously come Saturday, when the Stanley Cup Qualifiers begin, it'll be more exciting when it starts to mean something.