Ok, boys... simmer down.
Let's take a step back here and remind ourselves what the argument is about... I feel like we could all use that.
The original argument, several pages back, was that the NHLPA would be unhappy if McDavid "took less" than he could in order to (preserve cap for his teammates and) win.
I think
@Fishy McScales main point here is that the NHLPA would have zero (economic) motivation to take such a position, since salaries are capped globally at 50% of revenue, and any one salary, even at the extreme limits will not influence the available pool of money. It's a macro point.
@WhiskeyYerTheDevils you seem to be arguing that pushing the upper limits of the salary cap max (which determines only the distribution of the pool, not the value of the pool) would have a positive 'optics' to members of the NHLPA. That's a micro point.
I mean... I can kind of see how a progression of ultra-high end salaries has a positive influence on me (micro) if I'm in that next tier down, and so-on-and-so-fourth, as the comparable guy beside me gets a raise, I feel a raise is something possible and I have agency to earn one... but 1) doesn't that happen anyway since players come in on ELC and as they establish themselves, upward trajectory is generally positive and 2) all of that upward mobility inevitably comes at a cost, which is born (and likely felt) by other members of the NHLPA.
It's' important to realize that for every extra $1M a McDavid earns, 10 other guys are actually going to be earning $100K less. I suppose
@WhiskeyYerTheDevils your point would be that the for every ten guys actually making less, there are fifty to one hundred looking at McDavid driving up toward the max and licking their chops for their next contract? Thus NHLPA has a happier constituency when upward mobility is more visible?
But even if we accept that point... that the NHLPA would care, even though economically they shouldn't, since it creates more harmony in the ranks...
@WhiskeyYerTheDevils you haven't addressed the original argument... McDavid is an individual, he's going to do what he perceives to be in his best interest. How on earth is the NHLPA
actually going to influence his decision?
Is there any evidence they have ever done this with any other star player? Ovie, Crosby, anyone? We've certainly always had guys who
could ask for the max, but nobody ever does and NHLPA never gives even a peep on the matter.