Gregor Samsa
Registered User
- Sep 5, 2020
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Aren’t they between different leagues? Not sure how it would work in the NHL and what purpose it would serve
Basically, Team A has a player under contract that they want to keep in future years, but for whatever reason they are OK with loaning him out for a certain period of time to Team B.
Team B is on the hook for whatever salary is owed to the player for the remainder of that time period, as well as the pro rated cap hit.
Team A and Team B negotiate a price for the swap, which may include picks, players or even a swap of loans.
At the end of the time period all loaned players, salaries and cap hits return to their original teams. Maybe in certain cases there can be clauses that can make a loan move permanent for the duration of the contract.
Would this work in the NHL? Would it help with teams trying to manage the cap? Would the players be on board?
I mean, it's pretty obvious why soccer/futbol is the #1 sport in the world. There is a massive cost of entry for many other sports. Most families in canada can't afford hockey these days.Last time I checked football was the number one sport in the world.
Even if you check only countries that have ice hockey, then football is still ahead everywhere except Canada and Finland.
Actually, ice hockey does something wrong if it can't beat football even in winter countries like Russia, Sweden and Norway.
No and there's no need for it. There's a loan system in European hockey but it's only used for young players that are either too good or too old for the U20 team but needs to play senior hockey, so these kind of players gets loaned to lower leagues. Since the NHL doesn't have promotion/relegation no such system is needed since young players can be sent to the AHL if they're not good enough for the NHL.Would a soccer style loan system work in the NHL?
There's money in soccer, so I expect it to become unaffordable in NA in a decade too.I mean, it's pretty obvious why soccer/futbol is the #1 sport in the world. There is a massive cost of entry for many other sports. Most families in canada can't afford hockey these days.
Last time I checked football was the number one sport in the world.
Even if you check only countries that have ice hockey, then football is still ahead everywhere except Canada and Finland.
Actually, ice hockey does something wrong if it can't beat football even in winter countries like Russia, Sweden and Norway.