Posts Tagged ‘Ilya Kovalchuk

NHLHS New York Rangers Correspondent Jason Arbeitman discusses the New York Rangers off-season to date. After falling to the Philadelphia Flyers in a shootout on the final day of the regular season the Rangers missed the playoffs by a single point for the first time since the 2003-04 season. As expected with the Rangers cap [...]

My apologies for the technical difficulties that delayed the launch of this show, but hope you enjoy it!

Jessie and Julie discuss the Stanley Cup’s travels this summer with the Chicago Blackhawks, tattoos, Ilya Kovalchuck – his decision, the contract and the implications – and finally, NHL players on Twitter and what we’ve learned about them including a plea for PaulBizNasty to return to…

Roundup from around the league.

Frolov Finds a Home?

26, Jul 2010

Alexander Frolov and the New York Rangers are “close” according to reports.

According to TSN, the Toronto Maple Leafs are going to turn on the Tomas Kaberle pressure cooker on August 1. That is the day Brian Burke is expected to make calls to the teams that have made offers to acquire Tomas Kaberle and see if they will up the ante. It begs the question though, why is he waiting so long?

Last week he was on his annual fishing trip and, because he does not like it to be interrupted the delay made sense. However, now that the trip is over why is he still waiting. Perhaps he thinks people will start offering him more when he only has 2 weeks left to deal. As such he can get a bidding war going.

The next issue would be the strange free agency we have had so far. Teams may sign a stud forward (ie. Kovalchuk) and then they would be free to deal their forwards for a defenceman. Since there are so many stud forwards left, okay only one, Brian Burke expects the offers to get better once he is signed.

Another reason might be that he has a trade to beat, but by not contacting the team that made the offer that team might be tricked into offering something better. This is a negotiating ploy that has been used many times. It normally works, and in this case it will work even better as there clearly is a deadline.

Another reason is that the best offer right now may come from the Sharks or maybe another Western Conference team. As such you do not expect Kaberle to sign an extension with them, so they should be offering less than Eastern Conference teams. So Burke may just be waiting for an offer from an eastern team, possibly Boston.

Another thing that can occur is the Blake Wheeler arbitration. If the Bruins decide to give him the arbitration money and then deal him it could work out in Burke’s favour. Also if they let him go as a UFA then Burke can just sign him outright cheaply while dealing Kaberle for a cheaper forward. Maybe he will just bury Finger in the minors and sign Kaberle to an extension.

Wheeler and Kovalchuk are the two main things stopping a deal now. Personally I think Burke will get a good shot at Wheeler. If he can deal Grabovski as well, the cap space really gets freed up, unfortunately Grabovski is a solid goal scorer, hence dealing him to create the cap space needed to get Wheeler and maybe Clowe seems like adding by subtraction.

Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com

Last week, the New Jersey Devils signed Ilya Kovalchuk to a 17-year contract worth $102 million.

A day later, the NHL rejected the contract, saying that it did not comply with the NHL’s salary cap.

Kovalchuk has expressed his desire to play with New Jersey for the remainder of his career, so it’s likely that the Devils would try to re-negotiate a new contract with him.

But in all honesty, this situation has many wondering of the Devils would be better off without Kovalchuk.

Here are some reasons why the Devils really don’t need him.

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For the past couple of months people have been wondering where Ilya Kovalchuk would end up when he finally made his decision for next season. When his 17 year deal with the New Jersey Devils was announced everyone thought that that would be the end of this whole ordeal. But that was not the case.

With the rejection of Kovalchuk’s new deal, he is once again a free agent unless a new agreement can be reached. What this could also mean is that maybe Kovalchuk will indeed head back to Russia which was much speculated before this recent signing. Here are five reasons why we could see Ilya Kovalchuk pack up his bags and head back to Russia.

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This sounds like it could be a busy week in the NHL. Here are the latest rumors that I have been hearing in the past few days.

Brian Burke is coming home from his fishing trip today, which means he will focus on moving Kaberle before August 15 when Kaberle’s NTC kicks in. Brian Burke will be looking for a top-six forward for sure, anything extra is just a bonus. Rumor has it up to 10 teams are interested in Kaberle.

According to Dmitry Chesnokov of Yahoo! Sports, the Rangers are very interested in Alex Frolov. He also stated that the Kings have some interest in bringing him back.

St. Petersburg of the KHL could become a big time player for some NHL free agents. Rumor has it that they have sent offers out to Maxim Afinogenov, Alex Frolov, and Ilya Kovalchuk. Kovalchuk’s goal is obviously to stay in New Jersey, and chances are that happens. However, if Frolov and Afinogenov don’t get the money they are asking for, they could find themselves in Russia next season.

Things with Blake Wheeler and the Bruins could get sour in a hurry since rumor has it they are not close to a deal. Wheeler’s arbitration hearing is coming up soon and it is expected he will get more money then the Bruins will pay. If that is the case he will become a UFA.

Even with Sami Salo’s injury, it is expected the Canucks will move Kevin Bieksa. As it sits right now, the Canucks are over the cap and still hope to acquire another forward. Bieksa is the guy to get them that.

 

This concludes today’s edition of NHL Buzz, enjoy.

 

This blog and more can be found at MTRMedia.com

For the latest news and rumors follow me on twitter @ToddNHL

Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com

New Jersey Devils fans need not worry about the speculation that Ilya Kovalchuk would consider re-opening negotiations with the Los Angles Kings or possibly turning to the tax-free millions offered by the KHL.  Eventually one way or another, he will be remain in New Jersey whether through a successful fight by the NHL Players’ Union or if Lou Lamoriello has to re-work the deal from scratch.

If the latter is the case, the Devils’ GM may have to deal veterans such as Brian Rolston, Danius Zubrus, or possibly even their captain, Jamie Langenbrunner, to accommodate Kovalchuk’s rewritten contract.  Rolston may be more difficult to trade as he earns $5 million, but either Langenbrunner, at a very affordable $2.8 million, or Zubrus’ $3.4 million salary could be easier to move.

Lamoriello is desperate to get his man no matter the consequences as Kovalchuk gives the Devils a much-needed legitimate 40-goal-type scorer.  With Martin Brodeur’s continued stellar play in net and the Devils’ reputation for being a solid defensive team, all that is needed is that elite forward to give New Jersey that extra offensive production.

Kovalchuk seems dead-set on being a Devil as he was impressed by the organization’s commitment to building a winning team.  Brodeur, even at 38, shows little sign of decline and could give the Russian winger plenty of opportunities to contend for the Stanley Cup throughout the remainder of legendary netminder’s career. 

When Brodeur does decide to hang up his goalie mask for good, the Devils have the sort of savvy front office personnel to figure out a way of finding an adequate replacement.  By then, impressive Albany prospect Jeff Frazee might be ready to step in or 17-year-old 2010 third-round draft pick Scott Wedgewood could be seasoned enough from playing in the minors.

The Los Angeles Kings still maintain an interest in Kovalchuk and would try to tempt the winger with a fresh offer if the union’s fight for the original deal with the Devils becomes unsuccessful.  A host of Russian clubs would also be ready to pounce on the 27-year-old with their tax-free millions. 

Unlike Evgeni Nabokov, who rejected the defending Eastern Conference Champion Philadelphia Flyers for the KHL, Kovalchuk’s motivation is more about winning than money.  Devils fans have little to fear as he will most definitely be an official member of their team long before they open their preseason schedule in Philadelphia on September 21.

Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com

The Show

24, Jul 2010

The boys in The Hockey Guys are back tomorrow afternoon with a fantastic show prepared just for you, the fan of the NHL. Back from a summer hiatus. We will not be going weekly just yet, but we have one hell of a show lined up for you that will be broadcast live, Sunday July [...]

The 10 Million Dollar Man…By Default?

Not wanting to stir the pot too much…oh, who am I kidding? Let’s be honest, all this talk over Kovalchuk’s fantastic contract and all the possibly harmful ramifications it may hold for the future of the CBA seems to be getting a tad bit out of hand.

Let’s put a little perspective on the situation.

What if Ovechkin and Crosby were UFA’s this summ…

Seriously? The Ilya Kovalchuk saga was supposed to be over.

Now it just gets weirder and weirder.

It’s quite unfortunately really: With the official signing of Kovalchuk, it was expected that the moratorium on a lot of NHL movement was going to be lifted. People thought that it was Kovalchuk holding things back.

So what does it mean now? With Kovalchuk potentially heading back to free agency, do the teams wait another 20 days? Or do they just start making moves and Kovalchuk becomes an unfortunate bystander?

Not only that, but a bystander who may have to settle for a LEGAL contract with a $6-million cap hit.

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NHLHS Montreal Canadiens Correspondent Christopher Nardi presents his Habs Summer Recap. A summary of the major news out of Montreal so far this off-seasons. From boom to bust, the Habs off-season started with a bang and has since calmed. So we’re in mid-July and Ilya Kovalchuk FINALLY sighed with someone, more “the salary cap has [...]

The NHL was up against the wall headed into the 2004-05 season. Only three or four teams made money the previous year. 

 

Some had lost more than $25 million. 

 

Projections were that nobody would make money two years hence. Seeing a desperate situation for what it was, the league took desperate action and chained the doors shut until the players agreed to a deal that returned fiscal sanity to the ice.

 

Fast forward to the summer of 2010, and we see that fiscal sanity remains in place, but suddenly cracks had begun to show through the façade.   

 

The Washington Capitals have Alex Ovechkin under contract until he turns 36. Not unreasonable to expect that he’ll still be in uniform then. But then, Detroit signs Henrik Zetterberg through 2021 and Johan Franzen through 2020, and Chicago inks Marian Hossa through 2021, and the league is suddenly headed for big trouble again.

 

With those contracts in mind, commissioner Gary Bettman had no choice but to blow up the Ilya Kovalchuck deal. One goofy contract was an aberration, the second and third were the beginning of a trend. This one was the beginning of the end of the cap. 

 

Had Bettman stood back and done nothing the NHL would have turned into the NBA overnight. If Kovalchuck is worth over $100 million, what would Sidney Crosby be worth when he becomes a free agent in a couple of years? Or Steven Stamkos? Or Jonathan Toews? Who would have been the first to sign a 30-year contract worth $300 million?

 

That the NHLPA has been so quiet on the matter so far tells you everything you need to know about the situation - that there wasn’t a three page press release full of venom and outrage tells you everything you need to know. The players might eventually file a grievance to save some face, but so far they have left one of their own twisting in the wind. 

 

Bettman has drawn a line in the sand and now appears to be ready to back it up. The league wanted to reopen part of the CBA to end these end around of the cap, but the NHLPA’s new buddy, Donald Fehr, wants the players to exercise their option to extend the present CBA another two years. Fehr was counting on Bettman having the same feet of clay that MLB owners and Bud Selig had. 

 

So far, he has guessed wrong. 

 

The salary cap is the only reason the NHL is still in existence. Without it, the NHL would be a 10-12 team big market entity that would make the MLS look like the NFL. 

 

Big market owners time and time again proved that they could not be entrusted with the future of the game. The present CBA and its cap was the way to wrest the future from their hands. So far, it has worked beyond anyone’s expectations. That’s why Bettman had no choice.

 

The Devils and Kovalchuck’s agent are back at the drawing board trying to find something that will work for both parties and this time the league. They may try something stupid and submit a slightly altered version of the first contract, but they are already on notice that Bettman and the league are ready to blow that up too. 

 

The league has made steady progress even through the present economic state on and off of the ice. The men in charge risked too much not that many years ago to make sure they had a chance at a future this bright. It’s good and refreshing to see that their commissioner hadn’t forgotten that when he fed the Kovalchuck deal into his shredder. 

Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com

With the NHL rejecting the 17-year, $102 million contract that Ilya Kovalchuk signed with New Jersey, one thing should be clear to Kovalchuk: He is never going to get the money he wants playing in the NHL.

Kovalchuk should go play in Russia for two reasons: the money and the Olympics.

First is the money. If Kovalchuk wants to be making that much money a year, the only option he has is the KHL. Not to mention the money he’d get there is tax-free.

Second is the 2014 Sochi Olympics. NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman has already said that he’s not sure if he’ll allow NHL players to play in those games. While I believe this is just a ploy for the next round of the Collective Bargaining Agreement talks, Russians like Kovy can force Bettman’s hand and sign with the KHL. Not long-term, just for the next four years so Bettman knows that they’re just playing there so they can play for their homeland in 2014. No politics involved.

While it would certainly hurt the NHL to lose a player of Kovalchuk’s calibre, it is the only way that Bettman will realize that the Olympics should not be used as a bargaining chip.

If Bettman truly wants to grow the game of hockey in the US, then he should let the best American players play in the Olympics. There’s no chance that amateur American players can beat the pros that Russia has in the KHL. This isn’t 1980 anymore.

So Kovy, please do what’s best for American hockey and go play in Russia.

Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com

Kovalchuk-Gate

So, Lou Lamoriello is fallible after all!

In what is quickly becoming the Matt Sundin story of this offseason, super sniper Ilya Kovalchuk still remains unsigned.

Well, that is not exactly the case, since he did have a deal with the Devils which was quickly rejected by the NHL.

This has been discussed ad infinitum, but in case you’ve been hiding under a rock, Lou Lamariello—the Devils GM—signed Ilya Kovalchuk to a $102 million, 17-year contract.

The contract was done-in by the last five years of the deal, which saw Kovalchuk paid $500K per season taking him from age 39 to 44.

The combination of salary and age range of the last five years made it pretty clear to the league that neither side had any intention of Kovalchuk actually playing out the term of his deal. As such, the NHL deemed their move was circumventing the CBA and rejected the deal on that basis.

So what now?

Well, there are two well-talked about options: The Devils and Kovalchuk can file a grievance with the NHLPA to try an dispute the rejection, or they can try to rewrite the contract.

I spokw with with my colleague Michelle Kenneth (@MichelleKenneth)—the Devils beat writer—on Inside Hockey, she tells me that the Devils and Kovalchuk camps have always wanted to make a deal.

Moreover, she believes that they will rewrite the contract to something more palatable for the league.

If I were a betting man, I’d say there should be a new Kovalchuk announcement within the next week.

What is the right Price?

In other news, Habs goaltender Carey Price still remains unsigned. This is puzzling to a lot of people since it is pretty clear that he is the Canadiens No. 1 goaltender going forward.

As such, I think people are starting to get impatient and perhaps even a little nervous.

As a restricted free agent, Price could be tabled an offer sheet, but I think that is an unlikely scenario.

No, I think that GM Pierre Gauthier simply wanted to get all his other ducks in a row before really getting down to business with the Price negotiations.

Right now, Price is the only player left for Gauthier to sign before training camp and he has approximately $4.7 million left to sign him. That should be plenty of room.

I think part of the hold up is likely term versus dollars i.e. Price likely wants more term and more dollars, whereas I wouldn’t be surprised if the Canadiens want the opposite.

At the end of the day, the deal will get done because it has to. I could very easily see a one to three year deal at around $2 or 3 million a season.

That being said, Arpon Basu (@ArponBasu), of the Daily Hab-It, makes a great case for Price on a one-year deal.

Hard to argue with his logic.

The Two Randys

This week, Canadiens GM Pierre Gauthier announced the hiring of Randy Cunneyworth and Randy Ladouceur as head and assistant coach of the Hamilton Bulldogs.

For those who don’t know these guys, get ready to be surprised. Cunneyworth has been an assistant coach—to the Thrashers—and has spent the last nine seasons coaching in the AHL, including seven seasons with Rochester where he put up some impressive numbers and even won AHL coach of the year.

While most were upset with the departure of Guy Boucher form Hamilton, I can tell you that Cunneyworth will be a worthy replacement for him—no pun intended—and should do a good job of developing the Canadiens’ prospects.

Cunneyworth knows what it takes to win and has an excellent track record of developing young, raw talent in the AHL. His presence should help the likes of Danny Kristo, Louis Leblanc, Jarred Tinordi, and others.

For people who are still upset about Boucher leaving for Tampa, know this: Cunneyworth is not a step down in coaching for the Bulldogs.

The other Randy that came on board with Cunneyworth, is Randy Ladouceur. Older Habs addicts will remember him from his playing days with the Hartford Whalers in the ’80s.

More recently, however, Ladouceur has spent a truckload of time as an assistant coach in the NHL with Carolina and Toronto, as well as plying his trade in the OHL.

A seasoned assistant, Ladouceur has seen a ton of game situations, both as a player and a coach, and his experience should prove invaluable for the young Habs prospects.

The combination of these two Randys should help the Canadiens player development train to roll in the right direction.

Follow Kamal on Facebook , Twitter , and HabsAddict.com

Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com

There was an uproar this week due to the massive contract signed by Ilya Kovalchuk with the New Jersey Devils.  Not only is it the longest contract in NHL history, but it immediately raised eyebrows due to the obvious attempt to cheat the salary cap.  Kovalchuk would be paid market value of $9.5 million a year for the first 10 years of the deal, but the team would only take a salary cap hit of $6 million a year during that time.

How does that work, and what’s a fair way to deal with this situation?

The solution to the fiasco surrounding the league rejecting the Kovalchuk deal is simple.  The league just has to follow their own example of how buyouts work.  When a player is bought out, the team’s cap hit for the buyout period is calculated to ensure that the total money paid by the team to the player is exactly equal to the total cap hit incurred by the team.  See NHL Offseason: What’s the Cap Hit For A Buyout? for an explanation of how this works.

Similar to a buyout, if a player retires before his contract has expired, the team should have to suffer a cap hit penalty if the contract is front loaded, or a cap hit rebate if the contract is back loaded.  The way this would work is to figure out what the total the player had been paid during the contract, and what the total cap hit was during this time.  If the amounts aren’t equal, the difference is spread out over the years remaining on the deal and applied to the team cap total for those years. 

In the case of the 17 year, $102 million Kovalchuk deal, Kovalchuk would have earned $95 million in the first 10 years of the deal, but only $7 million in the last seven years.  The average cap hit is only $6 million, even though Kovalchuk would be paid an average of $9.5 million until he turns 37.  If he decided to retire at that time, the team would be off the hook for the $6 million a year cap hit for the remained of the deal when Kovalchuk would be paid an average of $1 million a year.

The league correctly assessed that the deal was designed to circumvent the salary cap because there is very little chance that Kovalchuk would play out the last years of the deal when he would be paid so little.

The Kovalchuk Rule.

The rule I am proposing would require the team to square up how much it has paid the player and how much of a cap hit they took.  In Kovalchuk’s case, the team would have paid him $95 million in the 10 years that he played, but only took a cap hit of $60 million during that time.  So, the team owes a cap hit of $35 million.  This would be spread out over the seven years that would have remained on Kovalchuk’s deal.  That would work out to $5 million a year.  With this rule in place, teams would still be able to sign players to ridiculously long deals.  There would just be no way of cheating the cap.

Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com

When a player is asking for a large portion of the cap space, it’s not hard to see why owners and general managers want to work the cap hit in a favorable way.

While there are players out there taking long term deals and making them top heavy, there is a line that shouldn’t be crossed. Ilya Kovalchuk’s deal with the New Jersey Devils was such the case.

It wasn’t so much the amount of money that was involved per say.  It was the combination of the contract’s total and the term it carried.  The deal was for $102 million over 17 years.

17 years is a long time and would end the contract at the NHL senior citizen age of 44 for the superstar.

This prompted the league to deem the contract null and void citing circumventions of the CBA.

On nhl.com , the Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly issued the following statement:

“The contract has been rejected by the League as a circumvention of the Collective Bargaining Agreement. Under the CBA, the contract rejection triggers a number of possible next steps that may be elected by any or each of the NHLPA, the Player and/or the Club. In the interim, the player is not entitled to play under the contract, nor is he entitled to any of the rights and benefits that are provided for thereunder. The League will have no further comment on this matter pending further developments.”

The New Jersey Devils President and General manager Lou Lamoriello responded :

“We are extremely disappointed that the NHL has decided to reject the contract of Ilya
Kovalchuk. The contract complies with the terms of the Collective Bargaining
Agreement. We will have no further comment until the process outlined in the CBA is
complete.”

It seems that both sides are playing it safe careful not to fuel a fire into a massive blowup of name calling and allegations even though the mud was tossed instead of flung.

Now we beg to ask the question: What about the other contracts that are formulated in similar fashion?

Chicago Blackhawks’ Marian Hossa has a 12-year deal worth $62.8 million that will put him past 40 by the time the contract expires. This puts the cap hit at $5.233 million.

Vancouver Canucks’ Roberto Luongo’s contact is the same term worth $64 million and that puts him past 40 by the time it expires as well.  His cap hit is $5.333 million.

Boston Bruins’ Marc Savard signed a seven year deal and puts him at 39 years old by the time it is up. The Cap hit?  $4.007 million.

Here’s my take.

I don’t have a problem with front loaded contracts. They do help getting players the team wants while making the player happy during their prime and it adds some stability to where they will most likely be in the long term or the twilight of their career.

Here is my problem:

A contract that places an NHL player well into his 40’s does not place him at the twilight, but in the geriatrics of his career. You might get the odd iron men in Chris Chelios, Mark Recchi, Teemu Selanne, Nicklas Lindstrom or Mick Modano, most of these players JUST hit 40 and some will most likely retire in the very near future.

Well…except for Chelios.  He’s too stubborn to retire…

Realistically, unless the player is on his game in his 40’s, there really isn’t much need for such a contract.  This type of contract’s purpose does end up diluting the cap space numbers to a fault.  While it may technically not violate the current CBA, it does violate the purpose of the cap system.

I believe there was a line drawn and Kovalchuk and Friends, while not leaving well enough alone, decided to test the waters and see what happens rather than playing it safe, and keeping everything at it’s status quo. Who knows? May a similar deal like Hossa’s or Luongo’s might have been the cusp of what was allowable.

Kovalchuk and the New Jersey Devils wanted their cake and eat it too. While they cut out the piece that they wanted, the league decided to take it away thinking enough is enough.

While nothing is perfect, the CBA, when used correctly, can make both sides of the equation happy.  Unfortunately, there are some players that want to squeeze every million they can in the self interest of earning more money that they will ever need. The next round of the CBA should be interesting indeed.

 

This is Cory Ducey saying “Hit Hard, But Keep It Clean

Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com

On the surface, they are all ridiculous. Marian Hossa at 42? Henrik Zetterberg at 40? While recent contracts may make it look normal, few players are on the ice during their life’s fourth decade.

Still, long term deals in the new NHL are becoming a trend—an often used loophole to keep cap hits down and top talent in town.

There is no doubt that these contracts can go wrong quickly. Just ask the New York Islanders. Rick DiPietro is having a hard time making it to the fifth year of his mega deal, never mind the 15th. Alexi Yashin was the definition of what can go wrong with a healthy player as he became complacent and ineffective.

The rejection of Ilya Kovalchuk’s 17-year contract with the New Jersey Devils draws the line in the sand. GM’s are now, we can assume, on notice. Obviously, the league believes that deals such as this that circumvent the cap hurt the game.

The thing is, they don’t.

Let’s begin by looking to the most popular league in the world, the NFL.

NFL teams have made a living off of cap circumvention by using performance bonuses to spread out cap hits over future seasons and minimize the current impact. This allows for better planning while keeping a team together. This is how the New England Patriots and Indianapolis Colts have had winning teams for years.

There is, however, a more important aspect to cap circumvention which the league needs to realize. When you think of the Colts and Patriots, you think of winning teams and two of the most recognizable faces in sports—Peyton Manning and Tom Brady.

The main complaint about the NFL is that players switch teams to often. Yet, the most marketable players stay in place for the majority of their careers.

Let’s look at the NHL. Why wouldn’t you want Sidney Crosby and Alexander Ovechkin to sign lifetime contracts? If either of these players pulled a LeBron James and left in their prime, that market would be destroyed (similarly to what can happen in Cleveland with the NBA). A life-time deal guarantees revenue and marketing for that team in that city.

Here’s where the NHL’s biggest problem hurts them at a time they are trying to flex some muscle. If the league understood how to market itself and its players, this contract wouldn’t be an issue.

What would happen to the league if Ilya Kovalchuk signed for 17 years in New Jersey? You would have an elite player in his prime on a winning team within marketing distance of the biggest city in the world, a city that also happens to have a heavy Russian community.

The New Jersey Devils have forever been the boring, defensive hockey team that killed the NHL. This signing changes every stereotype about the organization.

Zach Parise and Martin Broudeur can’t be marketed as well as Kovalchuk because they will always be looked at as products of the system. Kovalchuk makes this team marketable and he puts people in their seats, home and away. He even helps puts them on NBC and Versus.

And do you really believe there are NYC area hockey fans that don’t want to see more of Kovalchuk versus Sean Avery? It makes those Hudson River Rivalry battles that much more entertaining.

There is literally a train under Madison Square Garden that leaves you blocks from the Prudential Center. Think having an elite player a few minutes away by public transportation would hurt attendance?

Instead, the NHL would rather make teams pay top dollar cap wise, in effect forcing them to choose one franchise player and let the rest walk. If Kovalchuk’s cap hit is above $6 million, the Devils can’t keep Brodeur and Parise, the Kings can’t keep Doughty and Johnson, the Blackhawks can’t keep Hossa, Kane and Toews, etc.

They want this loophole closed during the next CBA and they are using this contract to make poorly thought out point.

But by closing the loophole, the NHL would effectively be spreading around the wealth—athletic socialism if you will. Does forcing teams to lose a superstar player after a few seasons really make the league better,? It helps other teams, for sure, but it makes all 30 look like the old Atlanta Thrashers—Kovalchuk with Heatley/Hossa and nothing else.

If a team has two elite players with a salary and cap hit at $10 million, you’re looking at the remaining $40 million going to 21 players. All this does is force more $4-5 million players to either take pay cuts or go to the KHL. It effectively enrages the NHLPA and puts the European leagues in contention for higher caliber talent.

Neither is a good end result for the NHL.

The truth is, whether those in the leagues front office realize it or not, cap circumvention is good for the league. Fans like to know that the best players will be in one spot. Jerseys are an investment now thanks to Reebok and no one wants to waste that money on a short term player (think a Red Wings Modano jersey will be a hot seller?).

And no one likes the messy breakup that comes with talent moving on (insert favorite jersey burning ceremony here). Closing this loophole brings out all of that negative emotion year after year. It bothers fans and hurts way more than it helps.

Devils fans will never forgive Scott Gomez or Paul Martin. Seattle Mariners fans will never forgive Alex Rodriguez. Cleveland Cavaliers fans will never forgive LeBron James. Is that what the NHL wants to see?

Are there teams that, cap wise, can afford a $10 million hit? Yes. But they can’t afford it cash wise and if they can, they definitely can’t pay that salary and win.

The league needs to ask itself what it believes to be more beneficial—players bouncing around on short term contracts every few seasons or keeping the best players in one city for their careers. I would love to hear the argument for the former.

Unless Bettman and Co. want to lose talent overseas and precious fans at home, they need to realize that there is more to the job than forcing teams south of the Mason Dixon line to be competitive. When done correctly, long term contracts can be beneficial to the league. It would be helpful if they noticed that.

Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com

By now (if you wanted to or not) you have heard about Kovalchuk signing his insanely long 17-year, $102 million contract, which was denied today by the NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly:
“The contract has been rejected by the League as a circumvention of the Collective Bargaining Agreement. Under the CBA, the contract rejection triggers a number of possible next steps that may be elected by any or each of the NHLPA, the Player and/or the Club.

“In the interim, the player is not entitled to play under the contract, nor is he entitled to any of the rights and benefits that are provided for thereunder. The League will have no further comment on this matter pending further developments.”

More information can be found in the CBA, section 26.3 titled “Circumventions.”
Basically the league is saying that because NHL contracts are averaged out (ex. a 25 million contract/five years = $5 million a season) that a contract of $102 million over 17 years breaks down to less cap hit each year then a contract of a $102 million over 10 years, giving (in this case) the Devils more spending money each year.

While it is in the Devils’ power to give out 17-year contracts, the problem is that Kovalchuk is 27, meaning (27+17) Kovalchuk would be 44 when his contract expires and the likely hood that he can continue to play at that age is very slim.

Now the Devils will probably have front loaded the contract (meaning the next X amount of years they pay Y amount more then in the last few years) but the cap hit there still become reasonably less in a long term deal.
For example: $102 million over 17 years.
If you average that contract out, you would pay him $6 million a year over the course of the 17 years.
You could front-load that contract, for example, to pay him $8.5 million a season for the next 10 seasons (until he is 37) and have paid him $85 million and then lower that for the last seven years. Even though he would probably retire with some money left on the table (at that point it wouldn’t really matter), it’s all about the cap hit.
There are a few different ways they could spread this out (depending on cap space) such as $10 mil the first two seasons then drop to $8.5 or another number, but it gives flexibility to the team, I just used one number as an example.
Example two: $102 million over 10 years.
If you average that contract out, you would have to pay $10.2 million a year over the course of 10 years.
You have to pay more each season ($10.2 million) with practically no flexibility (there is a cap on how much 1 player can make each year).
You don’t get the same flexibility as example one, which is why people view example one* as a loophole in the CBA.
The league felt the Devils exploited this loophole and thus rejected the contract.
But has Kovalchuk and his camp done something that other players in the league haven’t?
Two notables…

WestCoastExpress is a Jabberhead and an SJ contributing author. Read more of WestCoastExpress at Hockey Jabber Blog .
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