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Injured NHL players have 2nd chance in restart now that they’re healthy

The Blue Jackets’ Seth Jones skates during the team’s July 20 practice in Columbus, Ohio. He is among NHL players who would’ve missed some or all of the playoffs if they had started in April. Instead, the silver lining of the coronavirus pandemic halting the season is those players are healthy and ready to contribute again. (AP photo)

Seth Jones stood on his surgically repaired right ankle as his Blue Jackets teammates practiced and played without him. That took its toll.

“It gets mentally draining,” Jones said.

Tampa Bay captain Steven Stamkos and Pittsburgh All-Star Jake Guentzel know the feeling.

Like Jones, they were injured late in the NHL season and would have missed part or all of the playoffs had they started in April. Instead, the four-month pandemic shutdown has given them a second chance for them to heal up in time for the rescheduled battle for the Stanley Cup.

“I probably wouldn’t have had that opportunity,” said Stamkos, who underwent core muscle surgery in early March. “You never want to see what’s gone in the world. But from a hockey perspective it gave me a chance to get as healthy as possible and be ready for Game 1. For me personally from a hockey perspective, that was great.”

The Arizona Coyotes' Phil Kessel, right, chats with Vegas Golden Knights goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury during warm-ups before an exhibition game Thursday in Edmonton, Alberta. (AP photo)

Being ready for Game 1 under normal circumstances — if Columbus held on to make the playoffs without him — would have been a struggle for Jones. That was the eight-week mark since surgery, with an 8-10 week recovery timeline.

“I really didn’t start feeling back to myself on the ice until about week 13 to 15,” Jones said. “The extra time obviously did pretty good for me.”

The 25-year-old called the situation “a little bit of a blessing in disguise.” Captain Nick Foligno knows having Jones is huge for the Blue Jackets against the high-powered Toronto Maple Leafs in the best-of-five qualifying round.

“It would’ve been a lot different had we been playing the playoffs with him on probably one leg,” Foligno said. “To know that he’s feeling good and excited about his opportunity to be able to play at full health I think is a huge boost for our club and something that we don’t want to waste.”

Having Guentzel back is a boost for the Penguins, who open their series against the Montreal Canadiens when the playoffs begin today. The 25-year-old thought his season was over after undergoing right shoulder surgery in late December that carried a 4-6 month recovery time.

Seven months later, he’s good to go.

“I wasn’t sure what was going to happen, so to get this opportunity, I’m pretty happy about it — to get a chance to battle with these guys and have a chance to win the Stanley Cup,” Guentzel said. “From my end, I’m pretty happy that I get this chance to do this.”

Some may still not get the chance.

Carolina defenseman Dougie Hamilton recovered from a broken left leg but has been absent from several recent practices, and his status is in doubt. Teammate Brett Pesce and Columbus forward Josh Anderson would each need his team to advance to at least the conference final to be ready after shoulder surgery.

“Who knows what’s going to happen,” said Carolina general manager Don Waddell, a former Northern Michigan University player.

Stamkos knew what to expect from his history of injuries. He felt good skating in a small group with no contact, then “hit a little rut” that caused him to miss the start of training camp and is now on pace to return during round-robin play next week.

“Chalk it up to the ups and downs of going through a rehab,” Stamkos said. “We’ll see how it goes.”

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