Rested and recharged after pause, New Jersey Devils return to practice, will play on Tuesday

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Monday, February 15, 2021

The New Jersey Devils are back at work after 19 players landed on the NHL's COVID-19 list and forced the postponement of seven games since the end of January.

The Devils, who play the Rangers on Tuesday, practiced Monday for the first time since beating the Sabres in Buffalo on Jan. 31.

Over the next three days after that game, 11 players were added to the NHL's list of players unavailable because of COVID-19, pushing the Devils' total to 17. The list reached 19 on Feb. 9.

"It's kind of unfortunate and it's kind of crazy how fast it spreads," forward Miles Wood said Monday. "I think that's the scariest part. You know, it took down a team within a matter of three days, so it's very serious."

New Jersey has 10 points, but has played in just nine games, fewest in the East Division. Headed into Monday, the Devils had at least four games in hand on every team in front of them.

Goaltender Mackenzie Blackwood was the first to test positive on Jan. 20. Veteran Travis Zajac, who is two games shy of his 1,000th regular-season game with New Jersey, was sidelined before the Jan. 29 game in Buffalo. Kyle Palmieri got his positive test on the morning of the 31st and then things mushroomed after the team arrived in Pittsburgh for a game on Feb. 2. The NHL shut down the Devils, forcing the team to send players home in two groups, those in the isolation group and those who were healthy.

Wood didn't test positive. He had COVID-19 before training camp opened this year, so a lot of players asked him what to expect. He said he had a head cold. However, he knew of others who had high fevers.

Palmieri, who practiced Monday, said he felt nothing for a couple of days after his positive result. Two or three days after the result, the symptoms developed and lasted until the end of the week. He said his sense of smell is just returning.

Zajac, who went into the protocol a few days before Palmieri, remains in it.

Blackwood said he had a bad cough and a hard time breathing. He is just rounding back into shape, and said he's ready for the Rangers in New York if called upon since the team has been off for two weeks. He also said seeing the team come down with COVID-19 was "crazy."

"I didn't expect that to happen, but my thoughts were just: 'I hope this isn't because of me,'" Blackwood said.

Palmieri doesn't believe the Devils did anything wrong to cause the spike. He said players have been wearing their masks, eating meals in their hotel rooms and holding each other accountable.

"We're spending an hour or two hours, however, over the course of a game next to each other on a bench breathing heavily and I mean, playing hockey is a tough sport," he said. "You're coming back and you're pretty gassed and you're trying to catch your breath. So that's a lot of close contact, heavy breathing. You read enough about this virus, that's probably one of the worst things you can do is long extended times of heavy breathing among people without masks."

Palmieri admits there has been some anxiety the past two weeks. Players have been concerned about keeping their families healthy and the possible long-term effects of COVID-19.

"You think about every scenario going through your head and what could happen," Palmieri said. "But hopefully, as we all start to come back, everyone returns to full health. And like I said, we get back to playing hockey and doing the thing we love."

Devils coach Lindy Ruff has told his team to treat the past two weeks like a reset. He felt the team was playing well before the break. He wants his players to focus on defense and taking short shifts on Tuesday. Special teams were covered on Monday along with getting the players to skate and improve their stamina.

"I don't think any coach has really dealt with anything like this and, you know, to have that number of players go out and now have to have a reset," said Ruff, who has spent nearly two decades as an NHL head coach. "I think you can find lots of excuses, you know, that you could lose a game. I want to find reasons we can win."

Wood said playing the Rangers will help. It's a rivalry game and he said there is no reason the Devils won't be up for it.

"We have a lot of young guys on the team and, to be honest, I don't think it's going to affect us that much," Wood said. "I think the adrenaline will take over and we'll be right back to game shape."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.