ARIZONA COYOTES

Coyotes adapting to new normal with scrimmages, playoffs upcoming

Jul 22, 2020, 6:15 PM

Assistant coach John MacLean of the Arizona Coyotes draws up a play as the team huddles around duri...

Assistant coach John MacLean of the Arizona Coyotes draws up a play as the team huddles around during a NHL team practice at Gila River Arena on July 16, 2020 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

(Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

The Arizona Coyotes warmed up at around 11 a.m. at Gila River Arena on Wednesday morning, in front of a crowd of only a couple dozen. The audience consisted of staff and coaches, plus a small herd of media socially-distanced, all wearing masks.

The music was bumping in the arena like it would normally for pre-game warm-ups.

Then, the Coyotes played a scrimmage. Head coach Rick Tocchet’s comments afterward were as critical as his postgame comments can be.

“I thought it was OK, the scrimmage,” he said. “If I had to pick a meter, it’s probably halfway between average and good.”

This is Arizona’s new normal. Back to hockey, no fans, an empty arena, pressure to perform. On Aug. 2., the Coyotes have a postseason game against Nashville to start a five-game series. And with games in the 12 o’clock hour (in Edmonton) for at least the first three contests, the unusual circumstances will have to become familiar.

“To me, some guys are really good about playing at 12:30, some guys, not as well,” Tocchet said, when asked about there being no morning skate for the early games. “I think you have to warm up differently. I think not just your mind, but physically. You have to warm up more, get a little bit more of a sweat earlier-on. [There’s] got to be a little bit more pace to your warm up.

“It’s almost like boxers — before they get to the ring, they’re already sweaty and ready to go. It’s no different than afternoon games. You’ve got to be ready to go. You can’t wait. You can’t treat it like a practice.”

It helps that the Coyotes’ practices have been at the times that the first few games will be.

“I think it’s a good time for us right now, that’s the time we usually practice at, right around there, and that’s the time we’ve been working on right now,” forward Brad Richardson said. “For us, when you have to deal with a long summer, it’s actually a little harder to get used to those 7 o’clock games, because you’re used to skating in the morning and doing all your stuff in the morning, so by the time 7 o’clock rolls around, you’re almost getting ready for bed, to be honest.”

On Wednesday, it was the red team vs. the white team for three 12-minute periods. The sounds of players yelling at each other on the ice and communicating could be heard even in the top row of the lower bowl at Gila River Arena.

“The game’s a lot simpler when your’e talking to each other and helping each other out,” Richardson said. “A lot of times, you’re not seeing a lot of guys coming in quick. Any time you can help out your teammate, it makes a big difference.

“It’s going to be a little eerie. Playoff hockey is usually really loud. It’s going to be eerie in that way but everyone just adjusts and we’re still playing for the same prize. I think the fans are going to hear some interesting things that they normally wouldn’t hear, so I’m looking forward to seeing that.”

Comments

Comment guidelines: No name-calling, personal attacks, profanity, or insults. Please keep the conversation civil and help us moderate comments by reporting abuse.
comments powered by Disqus

Arizona Coyotes

Goaltender Connor Ingram...

Associated Press

Utah’s NHL team may use placeholder name for 1st season after move from Arizona

The NHL team moving from Arizona to Salt Lake City will be known as Utah, at least initially, until a long-term name is determined.

2 days ago

Tucson Roadrunners...

Alex Weiner

Mullett Arena? Stay in Tucson? Plan for the Coyotes’ AHL affiliate Roadrunners remains unclear

The path forward for the Tucson Roadrunners, the AHL affiliate of the Arizona Coyotes, remains unclear under owner Alex Meruelo.

3 days ago

NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman speaks during a press conference at Hyatt Regency Phoenix...

Kevin Zimmerman

Gary Bettman, Alex Meruelo blame Tempe voters for Coyotes’ relocation

Gary Bettman and Alex Meruelo are still stuck on a failed Tempe vote on an Arizona Coyotes arena project rather than any missteps.

3 days ago

Gary Bettman and Alex Mereulo speaking with Media in a press conference....

Bailey Leasure

‘We shall return:’ Gary Bettman remains committed to Arizona despite relocation to Utah

Gary Bettman remains supportive of NHL hockey in Arizona and Alex Meruelo despite the hockey team moving to Utah.

3 days ago

Alex Meruelo joins Burns & Gambo to discuss Coyotes move to Utah....

Bailey Leasure

Coyotes owner Alex Meruelo says selling Coyotes is something ‘I tried at every cost to avoid’

Arizona Coyotes owner Alex Meruelo joined 'Burns and Gambo' as he talked about the news of the sale and relocation of the team to Utah.

4 days ago

Arizona Coyotes owner Alex Meruelo joins Burns & Gambo in studio after team is sold to Utah group o...

Damon Allred

Alex Meruelo: ‘I am the only one’ to bring hockey back to Arizona

Coyotes owner Alex Meruelo believes in actions, not words so he wants Arizona hockey fans focused on the June 27 land auction.

4 days ago

Coyotes adapting to new normal with scrimmages, playoffs upcoming