EIHL board suspend Giants season

Author: David McCammondPublished 15th Sep 2020

15th September in any other time would signal the start of a new Elite League campaign for the Stena Line Belfast Giants following what fans would refer to as a 'long offseason', usually from mid April.

Not in 2020. The longest offseason in the Giants history has been confirmed due to the continuing uncertainty around large crowds gathering indoors, a necessary component for the viability of top flight UK ice hockey.

15th September in 2020 sees the EIHL announce the effective cancellation of the 2020/2021 season.

To most this won't come as a surprise, plenty of tweets predicted this state of play long before the League's eventual annoucement.

Full EIHL statement:

On Monday’s video conference call, the 10 teams of the Elite Ice Hockey League unanimously agreed that they cannot commit to a 2020-21 league season starting on December 5th as previously planned, and the season will be suspended.

League Chairman Tony Smith spoke on behalf of the ten member teams:

“We’ve been very open that we need to have fans back in our arenas for us to begin playing again. We operate around 75% to 100% capacity at our venues and this is the level of crowds we would need in order to go ahead at any point, which isn’t a realistic option right now.

"Government compliance along with the safety of our players, officials, staff and fans is paramount to this decision.

“If government guidance and support were to change, some teams may be ready to revise their plans to return to play and would need a minimum of eight weeks to prepare.

"We are looking into the possibility of some form of top level ice hockey in the UK potentially taking place in early 2021. This could start in late January or early February and go through into late June, but may not include all teams and again this is dependent on crowds being allowed back inside venues.

“We continue to speak with the Department for Culture, Media and Sport and devolved administrations about their plans for the return of fans to arenas that would enable this to happen, but having a full EIHL season starting in 2020 with ten teams is now beyond us, unfortunately.”