"I'm for it," the New York Islanders forward said Thursday. "I'm for playing into later into the year. But that being said, I don't know at what point do you cut it off. You need to resume a full season next year and you need to have that time and that rest too. It's such a fine line. The further we go, and to keep pushing it back, and you keep hearing these stipulations [that] it's going to run into June, July … I think at some point there has to be a date where you say, 'OK, the season's lost,' and we start recuperating for next year.
"As of right now, I think everyone's mindset is that we do want to play the [Stanley Cup] Playoffs. You work this hard all year … you play that many games and you're in the hunt, and then the season's just done, that's tough. You work all season long, all previous summer long to have a shot to win the Stanley Cup. Because of certain events that are out of all of our control, you can't do that, it's hard."
The NHL paused the season March 12 due to concerns surrounding the coronavirus. Whether the Islanders would qualify for the playoffs if the remainder of the regular season is canceled is one of the many unknowns. New York (35-23-10), which lost its last seven games before the pause (0-3-4), trails the Carolina Hurricanes and Columbus Blue Jackets by one point for a wild card from the Eastern Conference but has played two fewer games than the Blue Jackets.
"I'm sure we can make a strong case for point percentage and we'd squeak into the playoffs," said Eberle, who has 40 points (16 goals, 24 assists) in 58 games this season. "Regardless of what's going to happen, if we do resume and we do resume with the playoffs, there's going to be some teams upset that they're not in. Right now, it's a new situation, it's unique. No one's ever been through it, so somebody's going to get left out or … it's hard, if anything."