TSN: Arbitrator Richard Bloch sided with the NHL, rejecting Ilya Kovalchuk the 17 year, $102 million contract with the New Jersey Devils. Kovalchuk is now an unrestricted free agent again. The Devils still hope to sign Kovalchuk.
“While we do not currently have a contract with Ilya Kovalchuk, discussions have resumed and we are hopeful that a contract will be reached that meets with the principles in arbitrator Bloch’s award and the NHL’s approval,” said Devils president and general manager Lou Lamoriello.
The NHLPA said they were disappointed with the ruling.
Deputy commissioner Bill Daly said the ruling is “consistent with the league’s view of the manner in which the collective bargaining agreement should deal with contracts that circumvent the salary cap.”
Let the Kovalchuk rumors begin again. The Kings, Rangers, Islanders and Devils may take a run at signing him. My guess is that Kovalchuk will sign again with the Devils, maybe a 12-15 year deal this time. The Kings could get close again. The Rangers would be a long shot since they don’t have a lot of cap room and still need to re-sign Marc Staal.
Nick Kypreos via twitter: At this point, the NHL doesn’t have any plans to penalize the Devils for circumventing the CBA. They could have received a fine between $1 and $5 million.
Craig Custance of the Sporting News: Excerpts from ruling obtained by the Sporting News …
“In this case, the record strongly supports the claim this contract is ‘intended to, or has the effect’ of defeating or circumventing the Salary Cap provisions of the CBA. The overall structure of this SPC reflects not so much the hope that Mr. Kovalchuk will be playing in those advanced years, but rather the expectation that he will not. This is a long contract –17 years — the longest in NHL history. That, in itself, poses no contractual problem, for the reasons discussed above. But Kovalchuk is 27 years old, and the agreement contemplates his playing until just short of his 44th birthday. That is not impossible, but it is, at the least, markedly rare. Currently, only one player in the League has played past 43 and, over the past 20 years only 6 of some 3400 players have played to 42. …”
“…The dynamics of this SPC, with particular reference to its final six years, are such that there is scarce reason for either Player or Club to continue the relationship. The incentives are strongly to the contrary. By year 11, the Player will have received $98,000,000 of his $102,000,000 contract, constituting some 97% of the bargain. One may reasonably ask, as the League does, whether a player who had been averaging some $9,000,000 a year will be satisfied to continue the rigors of an NHL season for a salary that (1) will average slightly more than $550,000 a year, (2) will represent a 95% reduction against previous average earnings and (3) will undoubtedly constitute compensation well below the then-applicable major league minimum. The economic incentives are not limited to issues of the Player’s preferences, alone. During the final six years, the comprehensive “No Move” restriction will have been reduced to a “No Trade” clause. This additional flexibility will allow the Club to, for example, place the Player on waivers or send him to the minors. Here again, one may reasonably ask whether this Player would, at that point, accept such repositioning as an alternative to seeking continued employment outside the League or simply retiring.”