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NHL expected to follow NBA and postpone Thursday’s games

NHL encouraged to postpone its playoff games on Thursday as well
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North American pro athletes tried to shift the spotlight from the sporting arena to social justice reform Thursday as several games were postponed in an attempt to provide time for reflection on recent developments and continue the fight against racial injustice and inequality.

The moves come after the recent police shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man, in Kenosha, about 65 kilometres south of Milwaukee.

The NBA got things started Thursday by postponing its slate of playoff games for a second day, including the second-round opener between the Toronto Raptors and Boston Celtics.

Other men’s leagues were expected to follow suit although nothing had been finalized by late afternoon.

The Hockey Diversity Alliance submitted a formal request to the NHL to postpone two evening playoff games. The Vancouver Canucks, the lone Canadian team left in the post-season, were scheduled to play the Vegas Golden Knights in Edmonton.

Reports indicated there would be at least four Major League Baseball postponements as well, including the Toronto Blue Jays game against the Boston Red Sox in Buffalo, N.Y.

On a video conference call earlier in the day, Blue Jays general manager Ross Atkins said the team “will absolutely support” what the players want.

“It’s heartbreaking. I can feel it in our clubhouse, I can feel it amongst our players,” he said. “We know that we have to be better as a society and we know that more change has to occur. Our players want that.

“I’m proud of how our players have spoken up and continued the dialogue.”

Major League Soccer had the day off but media availabilities with Toronto FC and the Montreal Impact ahead of their Friday night game at Saputo Stadium were indefinitely postponed.

The tennis schedule was postponed for the day at the Western & Southern Open in Flushing Meadows, N.Y., where Milos Raonic of Thornhill, Ont., has reached the semifinals at the ATP Tour event.

“There (are) many people that are not being treated fairly, are being disrespected, having to live in fear, a lot of things that I have never had to experience,” Raonic said late Wednesday night. “It’s very unfortunate, very sad. I’m hoping that there is a change, and I’m hoping that the actions that do take course over the next days, weeks, months, years — this isn’t going to change in a day — do create a change, a systematic change that creates an equal opportunity for everybody.”

The Milwaukee Bucks were the first team to decline to play Wednesday afternoon, one of three NBA games that were postponed that day.

Some games were postponed in MLB, MLS and the WNBA while one NHL game was preceded by a ‘moment of reflection.’ All three NHL games went ahead as scheduled.

Executive vice president Mike Bass said the NBA hoped to resume play Friday or Saturday.

The WNBA also postponed all its games on Thursday for the second day in a row.