Re: The League Needs to Contract
by
A_Noid
05/09/2008, 11:04 AM #
It always amazes me that the first people to complain about the NHL's place in the sports world are the first to propose contraction.
Let's assume the league contracts and moves most teams to the Northeast and Canada. What do you think ESPN (or Versus, for that matter) is going to offer for the TV rights for a "regional" sport? You could also kiss the handful of games on NBC goodbye too.
Frankly, I couldn't care less if the owners of hockey teams make money or not. I just want competitive teams. I seem to remember a strike that was supposed to bring parity to the team salaries. That lasted about a year.
To me, the NHL's biggest mistake is the failure of the salary cap. It is hard to build a following when a team is a perennial bottom dweller (see Phoenix). Conversely, it's hard to spend money on making a team better when you don't have much of a following (and it is all about money - All conference final teams this year have a salary of at least $45 mil). If each team was capped at 35 or 40 million, nearly every team could spend enough to compete with the big boys and keep their franchise players.
See how Philly (big market team) poached former Predators and Sabers (previously successful small market teams) and almost overnight went from the cellar to the conference finals. It's laughable to think of Edmonton, who couldn't hold on to Ryan Smyth, Florida who couldn't hold onto Roberto Luongo, or Washington, who had to have a firesale a few years back, doing that.
The unpredictability of hockey teams is one of the reasons I love the sport. The most entertaining playoff runs I've seen in the past few years have involved teams from Buffalo, Minnesota, and Edmonton, not Detroit, New York, or Ottawa.
Anyway, the author makes some good points about the futility of selling a specific player. However, I'd like to see what he thinks about selling player rivalries (ie. the Crosby/Ovechkin commercial from a couple years ago with Crosby doing his best Seinfeld impression). I've got to think some ad agency can come up with an entertaining way to spin the Brodeur/Avery "controversy".