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Along with everyone else in the league, the Islanders took note on Saturday when Arizona’s Travis Dermott used rainbow tape on his stick in violation of the NHL’s guidelines — set over the summer following a series of controversies over Pride nights last season.

The guidelines, widely seen as toothless, were officially scrapped on Tuesday, with the league announcing that players can now “voluntarily represent social causes with their stick tape throughout the season.”

Specialized warm-up jerseys are still gone — not just for Pride Night, but also Hockey Fights Cancer, Military Appreciation Night and every other theme that teams celebrated in the past.

“I think it can be a little disappointing for everyone,” Matt Martin told The Post before the Islanders’ 7-4 loss to the Avalanche at UBS Arena. “Obviously you want to support. We all have people in our lives that have cancer or have passed through cancer. I’m a big supporter of the military. All of the other ones as well, Pride nights and Hispanic nights, things like that. But the decision was made by the league, I guess.”


  Bo Horvat Noah K. Murray-NY Post Bo Horvat Noah K. Murray-NY Post

  The NHL reversed its controversial ban on Pride tape on Tuesday. NHLI via Getty Images The NHL reversed its controversial ban on Pride tape on Tuesday. NHLI via Getty Images

The Islanders still have rainbow tape in their dressing room, Anders Lee told The Post, though no one has used it this season, in concert with the rules. Whether that will now change is not clear.

“Just cause we don’t wear the tape doesn’t mean that we don’t support that kind of thing,” Lee said. “I don’t really have much for you on that in a solution way, but I think the tape is great. Unfortunately, it’s just not getting used. I don’t think that is indicative of how things are felt.”

The elimination of warm-up jerseys impacts the Islanders less than most teams, since they did not use many to begin with.

Last year, the only specialized warm-ups they wore were Military Appreciation, Hockey Fights Cancer and St. Patrick’s Day — the lone exceptions to the organizational policy against such sweaters, since they were produced by the league, creating an expectation for teams to wear them.

“I believe guys should be able to support what they want to support,” Martin said. “I don’t necessarily think that guys with religious beliefs and things like that should necessarily be canceled, I guess, for not wearing it. I think to each their own, honestly. I wouldn’t have an issue wearing any of those things, personally.”

Lane Lambert shuffled his lines again on Tuesday, moving Anders Lee to the top line while deploying Simon Holmstrom and Oliver Wahlstrom on the third line to start the eventual 7-4 loss to the Avalanche.

Midway through the game, Wahlstrom was moved to the fourth line with Cal Clutterbuck switching to the third, which Lambert said was in order to match up with Nathan MacKinnon’s line.

Scott Mayfield (leg) skated on his own Tuesday, Lambert said.

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