Multiple firsts depending how my teams can’t hit the floorTrue.
Easy - sign a random bum to a 1 year $20m contract. Problem solved.
If an owner is that cheap, there are still players who can count against the cap but are paid by the insurance company. See Ryan EllisMontreal may be coming around but they would be the exception considering their cap situation but the other four recent major rebuilds taking place in Anaheim, Chicago, Columbus, and San Jose may face an interesting challenge going into next year. This is going to sound odd but: They might have trouble reaching the floor.
I know anything can happen between now and the beginning of next season but assuming the cap goes up to $95M next season, the floor would be at about ~$71M. Then look at the contracts each of the 4 teams ALREADY have allocated for next year with available roster spots.
View attachment 954491
Seems like a good problem to have right?
But then consider the ELC's these teams may want to add or players due for raises. I made assumptions on who the teams would like to add for next year.
View attachment 954492
Now if you add those contracts to what is already in place, this would be the cap situation going into next season for these four teams.
View attachment 954493
So if nothing changes, Anaheim would have to spend $13.4M between 2 players just to reach the floor!
None of these teams would likely attract top free agents and probably wouldn't want to give players term as they're going to have to give their own players raises in the years to come. Plus with a stacked draft in 26, more teams may be joining the rebuild club leading to an interesting offseason ahead. You might be seeing teams delaying prospects on ELCs or even competing to acquire bad contracts just to reach the floor. I think it will be a great summer to be a free agent or to unload a bad contract.
You're wrong. It IS simple. Sign hockey player(s) for more than they are worth in free agency. You are now compliant.I think the majority of commenters here so far have perhaps failed to grasp the severity of the problem.
There are not infinite nhlers. Every team does not have a giant Ltir contract to move, let alone a contract without move protection. The splintering of contracts due to low tax states amplifies the problem, complicates solutions, and is a major source of movement clauses, the final headwind.
The league is in the middle of an expansionary phase however the talent pool recently experienced a pandemic and likely will cause a predictable lull in nhl talent.
We have left a phase of one extreme: where a stagnant cap forced every contending team to employ acuaries to be cap compliant highlighted by Edmonton ending exactly at 0 last year iirc.
And now we have rapidly entered another. A short squeeze of sorts. On player contracts. There is no bad contract. There are only ones that can be moved. Trouba shows that bidding wars will occur for these contracts and that the market is hungry for more. Somebody(ies) will be left without a chair when the music stops.
You're wrong. It IS simple. Sign hockey player(s) for more than they are worth in free agency. You are now compliant.
It's just not a great place to be, as a manager, if you have let yourself ride the floor with so little margin that you now find yourself in that position with a cap spike coming. Yet it is simple to become compliant. Someone will take your money if you have to spend it.
An NHL player is whatever the teams say it is, and if for 18 months the teams say that an NHL player description now includes some AHL/NHL tweeners that help us become cap compliant, or overpaid role players, then the definition will flex to accommodate that, before regressing to the mean before long.
You're wrong. It IS simple. Sign hockey player(s) for more than they are worth in free agency. You are now compliant.
It's just not a great place to be, as a manager, if you have let yourself ride the floor with so little margin that you now find yourself in that position with a cap spike coming. Yet it is simple to become compliant. Someone will take your money if you have to spend it.
*the sens lose a 1st round pick.Can't reach the floor, then you lose your 1st round pick. That simple.
It's definitely not a good place to be, and it's not a decision that will be free of future consequences, but one way or another the 32 GMs need to be compliant on day one of the season. Be it via trades, free agency signings, re-upping a star RFA to a rich deal, or giving a variety of your current RFAs smaller bumps to acknowledge the new cap reality, the teams now riding the current floor are going to have to choose the least damaging option to get to that new floor.It can also set weak standards for performance for your own internal cap structure.
If you overpay someone to hit the floor, it can cascade into overpaying everyone as they exceed that player in performance.
A short term solution can result in a longer term headache.
Biggest thing with that would be if he got injured severely (*knock on wood*) and lost X guaranteed dollars of a multi year contract vs that one year, safety net and all thatLow-key though if you’re Bedard do you just sign 1 year extensions for the max cap hit until the Blackhawks actually need the cap space to be competitive
You're wrong. It IS simple. Sign hockey player(s) for more than they are worth in free agency. You are now compliant.
It's just not a great place to be, as a manager, if you have let yourself ride the floor with so little margin that you now find yourself in that position with a cap spike coming. Yet it is simple to become compliant. Someone will take your money if you have to spend it.
An NHL player is whatever the teams say it is, and if for 18 months the teams say that an NHL player description now includes some AHL/NHL tweeners that help us become cap compliant, or overpaid role players, then the definition will flex to accommodate that, before regressing to the mean before long.
Montreal may be coming around but they would be the exception considering their cap situation but the other four recent major rebuilds taking place in Anaheim, Chicago, Columbus, and San Jose may face an interesting challenge going into next year. This is going to sound odd but: They might have trouble reaching the floor.
I know anything can happen between now and the beginning of next season but assuming the cap goes up to $95M next season, the floor would be at about ~$71M. Then look at the contracts each of the 4 teams ALREADY have allocated for next year with available roster spots.
View attachment 954491
Seems like a good problem to have right?
But then consider the ELC's these teams may want to add or players due for raises. I made assumptions on who the teams would like to add for next year.
View attachment 954492
Now if you add those contracts to what is already in place, this would be the cap situation going into next season for these four teams.
View attachment 954493
So if nothing changes, Anaheim would have to spend $13.4M between 2 players just to reach the floor!
None of these teams would likely attract top free agents and probably wouldn't want to give players term as they're going to have to give their own players raises in the years to come. Plus with a stacked draft in 26, more teams may be joining the rebuild club leading to an interesting offseason ahead. You might be seeing teams delaying prospects on ELCs or even competing to acquire bad contracts just to reach the floor. I think it will be a great summer to be a free agent or to unload a bad contract.
Can't have your cake and eat it too. If the goal is to "tank" for higher draft picks, you can't then expect to see a 56 pace point season result in being able to convince free agents to sign with you. Tried with Guentzal last off-season, but 52 points and 40 points out of WC2 is a tough sell even for what is considered a destination city.LTIR contracts that are insured could actually save the owner real cash, the team can get to the cap floor but the real cash paid out is less. I'm sure that will be a consideration if the FA market doesn't make sense (CHI has already trying overpaying veteran players with not great results).