The funniest part about this whole debate is the "7 of the last 10" stat that keeps getting cited. It's worded in such a way that one might think that of 10 distinctly different teams, 7 were from tax free states. Of course, it's not 7 distinct teams, it's only 4: Tampa (3x), Florida (2x), Dallas (1x), and Vegas (1x). How exactly were those teams built?
Tampa: Through the draft (high lottery picks and hit on some really good later round picks).
Florida: Some of the above, plus two years ago the immediate consensus was that they massively lost the Tkachuk trade.
Dallas: Won a lottery pick (Miro) and had an amazing 2017 draft with Oettinger (26OA) and Robertson (2nd round). Continued to draft exceptionally well without high picks (Harley, Wyatt, Stankoven, Bourque). Benn (5th round) and Seguin are never accused of taking discount contracts.
Vegas: Came into the league with fans wondering if they would break the record for most losses ever, only to develop a winning culture from day one which made them a competitive team that players wanted to sign with. They also were quick to trade players at the height of their value after short term success, but now they're having the same cyclical cap issues that competitive teams inevitably end up with.
At the end of the 2012-13 season, the Lightning, Panthers, and Stars were all dead last in their respective divisions. All of those teams slowly built up their teams through drafts and trades; free agent signings and discount contract extensions didn't just magically turn them into contenders over that time period.
Instead of just throwing those teams out there as evidence, I want to hear what *specific* tax beneficial contracts those teams signed while the team was still non-competitive that suddenly turned them into Cup finalists?