Archive for June, 2005

The Globe and Mail: NHL and NHLPA Agree on Cap Formula

Disclaimer: Before you read this and get excited, remember what happened on Black Friday when The Hockey News and ESPN’s E.J. Hradek told us that the sides agreed in principle to a $45 million dollar cap and the season would be un-cancelled. The next morning we woke up only to learn that the sources who leaked that story turned out to be totally wrong. It took me until just recently to recover from that weekend. Take a breath and read below:

———————————————————————————————

According to The Globe and Mail, the NHL and NHLPA have agreed on a salary cap system that uses a formula for team-by-team revenue. After day-long negotiations the past two weeks, often without Gary Bettman and Bob Goodenow, it looks like the major hurdle before a new CBA has been cleared. Issues left to be agreed upon include arbitration, free agency, and what to do with current contracts and player rights.

The Globe’s league and player sources informed them that a salary floor and cap will be based on a percentage of each NHL team’s revenue, in effect a variable cap that will avoid punishing teams like the Wings as much for their success. But it does limit the gap between small market teams and Hockeytown, so it’s definitely a semi-controlled, semi-comunistic system. The salary cap would range from $22-24 million to $34-36 million in the first year, based on projections of team revenues. And this is what confuses me and apparently Bob McKenzie too:

“Say for argument’s sake, one NHL team has revenues of $100 million and another team has revenues of $50 million. If, as an example, the teams are permitted to spend 54 per cent of revenues on salaries, one team would have a cap of $54 million, while the other team would have a cap of $27 million. That is a $27 million spread between the two teams’ caps and you can rest assured it will be a frosty Friday in hell before NHL teams sign off on that type of discrepancy.”

He’s right. Sure, in the first year, the range might (I repeat, might) be from $22-36 million with revenues down and the league recovering. But what about down the road when profits increase steadily for some? Theoretically, the system could have no effect on the Wings if revenue is high enough. So buy some Red Wings jerseys and take the family down to Hockeytown Cafe! Such could mean the Wings’ continued success. I think.

And then I start to question how the cap could only range from $22-36 million. If it’s really based on a percent of team revenues, I’d think the Wings would be more than $14 million above a team like the Columbus Blue Jackets in the cap. Unless it’s a weighted system, a piecewise formula that would have teams in a range of revenues get X% as their cap and teams in another range of revenues get Y% as their cap. But surely it can’t just be a straightforward, league-wide percent and produce such a small range for a cap (unless they really think profits will be equally down at the same level for all teams, which I doubt).

And there’s more. The system also includes a a dollar-for-dollar luxury tax that is triggered at the halfway mark between the lowest and highest caps in the league. For example, if the floor on the lowest team is $24 million and the cap on the highest team is $34 million then the tax level will be $29 million. Another control on how much teams like the Wings can spend.

Just like what happened on Black Friday, the report is being denied by the NHLPA. Union spokesman Jonathan Weatherdon:

“The NHLPA and NHL discussions this week continue to cover a range of issues such as controls on team salaries, revenue sharing, Olympic participation, the amateur player draft and player retention rights. While the parties continue to have discussions to reach a common ground no agreements have been reached.”

Sources told the Globe that there’s a possibility a deal could be signed in the next three weeks. But before I get excited, I’m still really confused about how this cap system would work, and I’m left with more questions than anything. Another question is why the NHL would agree to such a system after all they’ve held out for: a hard cap at approx $36 million. This system is a soft, soft, cushy cap. It leaves room for teams like the Wings to spend relatively freely and is a victory for Mike Illitch after the NHL pushed for a hard cap for so long. And a victory for the NHLPA, if you really call a year-long negotiations stalemate a victory for anyone. I just don’t buy this story at all. I had a feeling the sides were coming closer as they spent 10-12 hours a day together, but this just doesn’t seem legit. Maybe parts of the leaked system are accurate, so hopefully more news will come out…

UPDATE 6/9, 6:45 PM

TSN has updated its story on the Globe and Mail report. Reports are mixed as to the accuracy of the Globe’s story. The Toronto Sun, quoting an anonymous source, reported today that salary cap figures had yet to be finalized but progress was made. The Vancouver Province, on the other hand, reported that a general salary cap formula had been accepted for some time. Other than mysterious, unnamed sources leaking questionable information, the NHL and NHLPA have stayed quiet, with the latter group confirming that discussions were continuing this week (Tuesday through Thursday). Stayed tuned.

UPDATE 6/10, 7:30 PM

The NHL and NHLPA are set to meet again on Monday, according to TSN. Still, there has still been no official confirmation of reports that a salary cap system has been agreed on. According to NHLA senior director Ted Saskin:

“We spent the last four days in small group meetings continuing to review and negotiate various systemic and economic issues. The two sides will resume small group discussions on Monday in Toronto.”

NHL Executive Vice President and Chief Legal Officer Bill Daly on the talks and progress:

“There was healthy dialogue, and progress continued to be made on many operational issues relating to a new collective bargaining agreement. We will resume meeting early next week [Monday].”

Revealing a bit more information than Ted. If you read into Daly’s quote, it could mean that a cap system has been agreed on and only “operational issues” remain. Or not. Quoting an unidentified GM, the Toronto Sun had this exclusive dialogue:

“I asked him quite clearly is (the cap), in fact, true? He said: ‘No.’ I asked ‘Is there any kind of team-by-team cap?’ Again, he said ‘No.’”

Even if the cap issue is behind us, the sides still have to agree on free agency, player rights, salary arbitration, drug testing, Olympic participation, proposed rule changes, etc. Hopefully they have a good start on those issues or will just call back on a previous proposal and agree to it for those points.

6/5 Notes

Greg Wyshynski of SportsFan Magazine ponders the possibility that the NHL lockout could continue endlessly, or at least until the sun explodes. If you like Jes Golbez type material, this article is definitely a must-read. Among the gems in his satirical piece:

“I know the lockout is going to end because, alas, all things must end. If there isn’t a settlement, the NHL might just fold. Or the players will start their own league, playing in American bingo halls and on the backyard ponds of selected farms in Manitoba. (“The New WHA: Watch Out for That Cow Pie, Hoser!”)

Or the sun will one day explode, casting the Earth into darkness and ending civilization as we know it; turning the surface of our once-great planet into a giant graveyard populated only by cockroaches, stinkweed, and the indestructible Dave Andreychuk. ”

He then goes on to make a lockout timeline for the distant future:

“August 11, 2005: Brendan Shanahan convenes yet another meeting of hockey progressives seeking to increase scoring and make the game more exciting. Proposals include instituting a “three-goal arc,” playing each period one-on-one and restricting goalies to using only one skate.

November 2005: To protest the ongoing labor dispute, Eric Lindros goes on a hunger strike, throwing an entire two-month supply of Gerber’s Soft Carrots in the trash…

January 25, 2006: Scott Stevens is found in his living room, sitting on a coffee table in full pads and jersey, rocking back and forth while muttering, “Put me in coach, put me in coach, put me in coach…”

February 1, 2006: Brendan Shanahan convenes yet another meeting of hockey progressives seeking to increase scoring and make the game more exciting. Proposals include making each goal worth 87 points. For example: “The Avalanche defeated the Blue Jackets 261-174, on goals by Sakic, Forsberg and Blake…”

September 2006: ESPN announces that not only will it not broadcast the NHL, it will refuse to acknowledge the sport ever existed in the first place by replacing all “SportsCentury” hockey episodes with reruns of “The Fabulous Sports Babe.”

December 10, 2006: Noted hockey columnist Stan Fischler makes journalism history by sourcing an article entirely with anonymous bloggers who make predictions that never come to pass and then erase their archives in order to not be exposed for the frauds they are. [Eklund]

July 14, 2007: In an opium bar somewhere in the Far East, Brendan Shanahan convenes yet another meeting of hockey progressives seeking to increase scoring and make the game more exciting. Proposals include having players grow wings and play in the sky, and deciding overtime ties by having teams fight a large dragon.

September 29, 2007: The NHL and the NHLPA finally come to a new collective bargaining agreement, with a $38 million salary cap and linkage between revenue and salaries. But then, at a press conference, Bettman rips off some white tape that had been placed on the CBA, revealing that he tricked the NHLPA into signing on for an $18 million cap instead! Goodenow smirks, and reveals he had signed the deal in disappearing ink! He then throws a smoke bomb, and the players association disappears through a trap door! Bettman: “You’ve won this round Goodenow…but there will be a next time…”

August 2025: Gary Bettman, Jr. and Bob Goodenow III sit down at the bargaining table, offering hope to long-suffering Red Wings fans that Stevie Y might finally be back on the ice shortly. ”

Some are optimistic that a deal can get done in the next couple weeks, some aren’t, and some are just Larry Brooks. The New York Post writer went from calling the lockout over on Sunday to downright pessimism later in the week. Brooks cited “reliable sources” in both stories. Hopefully he doesn’t use their insight for future stories…but his reputation tells me otherwise.

And what are they smoking over at the Winnipeg Sun? Ted Wyman thinks the NHL will be much better off because of the lockout:

“A season will almost certainly be played in 2005-’06, and it looks like the NHL will be much, much better off than it was a year ago. There will be a strong drag on salaries, significantly lower payrolls and quite possibly positive rule changes that improve the flow of an increasingly-boring game. It will be an affordable league, the kind of financially-responsible loop people hoped for a decade ago when the Winnipeg Jets were getting set to fly south. “

I hate to shoot down optimism but that kind of rhetoric reminds me of the hippies who will protest all war in the name of “Peace.” I’m sorry to say, but Wyman and his hippy buddies are out-of-touch with the world. There is going to be serious damage from this lockout and there will be war whether or not you dance in fields and set doves free and sing “Give Peace a Chance.”

And yes, the NHL lost its TV deal with ESPN, which said the league isn’t worth half the $60 million option for next season. The previous deal was for 5 years, $600 million. While this won’t affect fans in the Hockey Belt (including Detroit), this could mean a blackout for fans in the South/West. And with national coverage gone, who’s to say we might not lose Fox Sports Detroit and end up with a pay-per-view channel like PASS Sports again? That would truly be the end of this league.

Where has Dave Lewis been for the past 13 months? Most of the time on his 10-acre farm in northern Oakland County or running his bar “Joe & Lewie’s Penalty Box” Sports Tavern and Eatery in Fenton (which he co-owns with Joey Kocur). With his contract up on July 1st, Lewie has got to be a bit nervous as he tends to his horses.

Another thing for Lewie to worry about: a Russian newspaper reported that Pavel Datsyuk has signed a one-year, $2.5 million contract with Moscow Dynamo, and that it does not include an escape clause if the lockout ends. GM Ken Holland made calls to Datsyuk and his agent, leaving messages, and has not heard back from them. But he does not believe the report. And we’ve gotten these reports from Russian newspapers before, only to have them prove inaccurate in the end. My only worry is that Datsyuk might take the money and stay in Russia post-lockout. He made $1.5 million with the Wings last season and the Wings might not have room in their wallet to compete with the Russian oil-money under the new CBA.

It’s good to hear from Mickey Redmond via the Detroit News. Mick expressed his sadness and shock that the season wasn’t saved last winter. Of all the things about hockey I miss, Mickey Redmond and Ken Daniels are definitely near the top of my list. It’s a shock not to hear their voices after spending 8 years, 300+ hours / year enjoying their hockey analysis.

UPDATE 6/14

Assistant GM Jim Nill on Datsyuk:

“We’ve talked to Datsyuk and his agent about the rumor of him not coming back, but it’s not true. That was in the media. When we get a new CBA done and a new IIHF deal done, an NHL contract will always override an IIHF contract. It won’t be an issue. It’s not a concern.”