Several important factors you may be overlooking:
A) The # of NHL teams increased from 31 to 32. Assuming an average revenue for Seattle that’s an “artificial 3.2%” revenue bump which doesn’t change the cap.
B) The players were routinely losing 10-12% of their paychecks to Escrow prior to Covid. The MOU instituted the cap lag formula to reduce Escrow. If the NHL and PA are successful in their goal to effectively eliminate Escrow that would essentially “remove” 10-12% of the revenue growth from the cap, instead purposing it to fix Escrow.
C) The non-salary benefits players receive has increased substantially with the 2020 MOU. The exact numbers aren’t public but I’d estimate 2-3% of additional HRR is now going towards those benefits vs pre-2020. Theses benefits count towards the players’ 50% share of HRR.
Those three categories tally up to 15-18% of the 32% NHL revenue growth you cite being eaten up, leaving a net 14-17% of revenue growth to increase the salary cap.
Yeah I looked at the Seattle difference, the cap should still be over $100 million even now, just not quite as high (I believe the Reddit poster states it should be $104 mill cap or something against 6.6 billion project revenue). My estimate was around 102 million minus Seattle.
I don't think C is going to sway players on a lower cap.
B being the escrow that will be an issue but even on that I don't agree that the players are going to handcuff themselves to a massive lower cap ceiling for half a decade more.
Probably I can see something like the NHL allowing a 5.75% increase next year (they allowed 5.38% last year) and then the players agreeing to some setup where they get about 8% rise from there on for another two years.
That would bring them to $108 million, still likely below what the cap should be as revenue could likely be over $7 billion.
The NHL and players honestly deserve some props here for amount of revenue. $6.4+ billion for a league that doesn't have a huge US TV deal is really quite strong. The NBA is only $10.58 billion or thereabouts, the way people talk about the NBA you would think it's 3-4x the size of the NHL in revenue when that's not the case at all.
NBA players get paid so much more than NHL players too, now yes I recognize the NBA rosters are smaller (12 players generally) and it's a soft cap league, but still with the disparity in star salaries you would think the NBA was making 3-5x the NHL.
I think COVID actually helped the NHL, lol, the rampant inflation basically has cornered the NHL market to its premium customer base who are fairly wealthy and/or simply willing to spend a lot of money particularly for gate revenue.