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Archives for February 2017

New York Islanders May Be Buyers At Deadline

February 18, 2017 at 8:09 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

If Garth Snow had told the New York Islanders fans a couple of months ago that they might be buyers at the deadline, he’d likely be laughed out of the building. The early season struggles of the Islanders had people talking about their decisions to let Frans Nielsen and Kyle Okposo walk in the offseason, only to give a huge contract to Andrew Ladd. Through December 18th, the $38.5MM man had just seven points and looked like one of the biggest busts of the 2016 free agent class. The team was floundering near the bottom of the conference, and it looked like a lost season for the Islanders. Garth Snow

In the 20 games since, Ladd has 10 goals and 13 points, looking more like the consistent goal-scoring threat he has been throughout his career. The team has turned it around as well, and climbed right back into the East playoff race. At 62 points they’ve hopped over the Philadelphia Flyers and are just one behind the Maple Leafs for the final playoff spot.

That’s what has new head coach Doug Weight and Snow looking at possibly adding at the deadline instead of selling, according to Arthur Staple of Newsday. Weight—who is still an assistant GM after moving from the front office to the bench when the Isles fired Jack Capuano—especially seems to think they can do something, telling Staple “we’re in a position where we can really do something.”

Staple lists Patrick Sharp, Radim Vrbata and Martin Hanzal as rentals that could help the Islanders over the last third of the season and all three would be solid additions. Lacking secondary scoring after John Tavares and whoever he ends up playing with on a nightly basis, Sharp and Vrbata would add some ability on the wings. Hanzal, a much discussed target heading into the deadline, would solidify the center ice position and allow Casey Cizikas to move back down into a more familiar role.

Whether the Islanders decide to buy will likely depend on the next five games (one of which they’re losing 2-0 at the time of this writing) and where they sit when they shut down between February 26-March 1. If they can keep pace with the rest of the conference, they will likely decide that the window is now with Tavares and end up adding for the short or mid term. It seems unlikely that they would get into the Matt Duchene sweepstakes, but it is definitely a possibility. They do have a solid group of young defenders, the thing the Avalanche seem to covet most.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Colorado Avalanche| Doug Weight| Garth Snow| Jack Capuano| New York Islanders| Philadelphia Flyers| Toronto Maple Leafs Andrew Ladd| Frans Nielsen| Frans Nielsen| John Tavares| Kyle Okposo| Martin Hanzal| Matt Duchene| Patrick Sharp| Radim Vrbata

1 comment

Snapshots: Memorial Cup, Rozsival, Brodin

February 18, 2017 at 7:00 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Maple Leafs announced the four additions to their Legends Row tonight before the start of their game against the Ottawa Senators. Charlie Conacher, Red Kelly, Frank Mahovlich and Wendel Clark will all have statues revealed in the fall alongside the other 10 players.

Brendan Shanahan (via James Mirtle of The Athletic) spoke at the ceremony, saying “it is our sincere hope that we will soon have reason to expand this bench to recognize future Leafs heroes.” One player Leaf fans are hoping will be in that group one day, Mitch Marner, is out tonight and tomorrow with a shoulder injury, forcing the Maple Leafs to shake up their lines. William Nylander is back skating with Auston Matthews, while Connor Brown has been dropped into Marner’s spot.

  • Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet tells us that the 2018 Memorial Cup will be held in Regina, Saskatchewan. The CHL tournament is a huge stage for young players to showcase their skills, and the host city is entered automatically. Hopefully for the Regina Pats, Sam Steel will still be with them next season. The 30th-overall pick by Anaheim at the most recent draft has 103 points in 50 games and is still only 18 years old.
  • According to Chris Hine of the Chicago Tribune, Chicago will be getting a little veteran depth back on the blueline as early as tomorrow. Michal Rozsival, who hasn’t played since January 15th due to a foot injury is set to return to the lineup Sunday against the Buffalo Sabres. The veteran of 955 games gives the Hawks an extra body that can be trusted in a limited role. With the team on their way back to the playoffs, they’ll need all the health they can get.
  • Just before their game started, Michael Russo of the Star Tribune told us the Minnesota Wild activated Jonas Brodin from injured reserve. Brodin hasn’t played since January 17th, and will be a big addition to the Wild as they look to continue their dominance in the Western Conference. The team has 82 points already, easily pacing the west and seven points ahead of the Blackhawks for first in the Central Division.
  • Lou Korac of NHL.com adds that the St. Louis Blues have sent Kenny Agostino back down to the Chicago Wolves of the AHL, despite playing well in his short stint. The Blues have Paul Stastny returning and had a roster crunch up front. Agostino will head back to the AHL where he was the league’s top scorer at the time of his call up—and still is. 60 points in 48 games for the former fifth-round pick, who has turned into an excellent playmaker at the age of 24.

AHL| Brendan Shanahan| CHL| Chicago Blackhawks| Injury| Minnesota Wild| Players| Snapshots| St. Louis Blues| Toronto Maple Leafs Auston Matthews| Elliotte Friedman| Jonas Brodin| Michal Rozsival| Mitch Marner| Paul Stastny

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Pittsburgh Penguins Looking To Add Defense

February 18, 2017 at 6:02 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 3 Comments

With Olli Maatta (hand surgery) and Justin Schultz (concussion) out for the Pittsburgh Penguins, the next few weeks will test their defensive depth unless they can make a move to bring in someone at the deadline. That’s exactly what Jim Rutherford is trying to do, according to Jonathan Bombulie of TribLIVE, who spoke with the Pittsburgh GM earlier today.

We’re going to have to go through these next two weeks and go along on the time frame of everyone else. We’ll be looking at adding one or two more defensemen.

Rutherford has been on the phones already trying to add to his blueline, but with the market not having quite materialized just yet, it’s been tough sledding. Just finding one defenseman on the market that doesn’t come with red flags is difficult, acquiring two seems almost impossible. The Penguins don’t exactly need all-stars on the back end, but if they don’t want to see Kris Letang have to log 30 minutes a night (like he did yesterday against the Columbus Blue Jackets) for the rest of the season they need capable defenders.

The Penguins’ GM goes on to say that his search won’t be focused entirely on defense at the deadline and is open to anything. It does sound like he will be an active participant on March 1st, hoping to propel his group to another Stanley Cup. Last season he acquired Schultz, Trevor Daley and Carl Hagelin in-season, though all three came before deadline day (with Daley and Hagelin well before).

Look for them to target rentals mostly, as they are already going to have some tough decisions heading into the expansion draft. Anyone under contract for more than this year would likely be at risk in the Vegas draft.

For now, they will turn to the group of Steve Oleksy, Chad Ruhwedel and Cameron Gaunce to fill the holes, though the former two only got 14 minutes each yesterday. The pairing of Letang and Brian Dumoulin were leaned on heavily, something that will be interesting to follow down the stretch.

Expansion| Pittsburgh Penguins Brian Dumoulin| Cameron Gaunce| Carl Hagelin| Chad Ruhwedel| Justin Schultz| Kris Letang| Trevor Daley

3 comments

Snapshots: Ratelle, Crouse, Fiala

February 18, 2017 at 5:00 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

While the Toronto Maple Leafs will reveal some new additions to their Legends Row tonight as part of Hockey Day In Canada, the New York Rangers have also announced that they will raise Jean Ratelle’s #19 to the rafters next season. The Rangers great is 37th all-time in points in the NHL and spent his best years in New York, scoring 109 points in 1971-72.

He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1985 and recently was honored among the NHL’s Top 100 list. It’ll be hard to watch for Boston fans, as some still likely consider him a Bruins legend as well. Ratelle played six seasons at the end of his career for the black and yellow, including five straight 25+ goal seasons from 1975-80. He also spent four seasons as an assistant coach there after his retirement.

  • According to Sarah McLellan of AZCentral Sports, the Arizona Coyotes will move Lawson Crouse to injured reserve prior to their game tonight. Crouse has missed the last three games with a lower-body injury. The 19-year old Crouse has stuck around all season in Arizona despite not getting that much ice time. After coming over from the Florida Panthers in the deal that saw Arizona take on Dave Bolland’s contract, Crouse has just eight points in 49 games this season.
  • McLellan also reports that Brad Richardson skated Saturday, and is getting closer to a return. Richardson broke two bones in his leg back in November, and after undergoing surgery has continued to rehab through the season. It looks like he will make it back before the end of the season, though the team would be wrong to rush him as they are already well back of the playoff race.
  • The Nashville Predators have brought Kevin Fiala back up from the AHL, where he has 19 points in 22 games. After making short appearances in the NHL the past two seasons, the former 11th-overall pick will try to make an impact this time around. The Swiss-born Fiala is still just 20-years old and has all the tools to make an impact at the NHL level at some point.

AHL| Boston Bruins| Injury| Nashville Predators| New York Rangers| Snapshots| Utah Mammoth Brad Richards| Brad Richardson| Dave Bolland| Hall of Fame| Kevin Fiala| Lawson Crouse

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Sabres Notes: Playoffs, Reinhart, Kane

February 18, 2017 at 4:00 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

After defeating the St. Louis Blues today 3-2, the Buffalo Sabres have now won three in a row and four out of five games. After struggling with injuries all season long, the team is getting healthy and starting to show that they shouldn’t be considered straight sellers at the deadline. Now just one point out of a playoff spot—though further by point percentage—the Sabres are legitimately in the race down the stretch. A month ago, you might not have been able to say that about a team that has floundered at the bottom of the league standings for years now.

While the playoffs will still be a tough goal, the Jack Eichel-led Sabres don’t look like they’ll be hard sellers at the deadline. While they might not buy, the team showed it was ready to call the rebuild finished when they signed Kyle Okposo this summer. Now they try to improve incrementally each season and get back to the playoffs for the first time since 2011.

  • John Vogl of the Buffalo News reports that Sam Reinhart will still be a game time decision tomorrow against the Chicago Blackhawks. The team is hoping his flu will subside in time to try and make if four in a row.
  • Vogl also has a quote from Evander Kane, speaking about getting his 20th goal this season. “I’m not interested in the 20-goal mark, to be honest. I’d like to go past that,” Kane said, after his two point game. He now has his third 20-goal season and is on a better points pace than we’ve seen in years from the big forward. At just 25-years old and after a summer filled with off-ice incidents, Kane was considered on his way out from Buffalo, with many believing his hometown Vancouver Canucks would be interested. The rumors are quieting though, as he continues to play well for the surging Sabres. If they did put him into play, he would likely cost considerably more than six months ago.
  • Joe Yerdon of NHL.com adds that the team will not skate tomorrow before they take on the Blackhawks. After the game the Sabres will go into their mandated bye-week, and will get a chance to recharge for the final stretch run. They’ll come out of the break against some weak competition, facing the Arizona Coyotes (twice) and Colorado Avalanche in their first four games after the break.

Buffalo Sabres Evander Kane| Jack Eichel| Kyle Okposo| Sam Reinhart

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Ryan Carter Signs PTO With AHL’s Iowa Wild

February 18, 2017 at 2:53 pm CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

Ryan Carter’s comeback continues. After the report last week that Carter had begun practicing with the Minnesota Wild in an attempt to return to the NHL, he has taken another step toward that goal today by inking a professional tryout agreement with the Wild’s AHL affiliate in Iowa. The Iowa Wild announced the deal today, and Carter is expected to see his first ice time of the 2016-17 season in their next two games.

It’s been a long, strange road for Carter to get back to the NHL, and it’s not over yet. The Minnesota native played for the Wild for the past two years, recording 25 points in 113 games in a bottom-six role. However, when his contract expired at the end of last season and he hit free agency this summer, he made the executive decision that he would either sign with his hometown team or hang up his skates for good. The Wild were unable to commit to a contract for the 33-year-old, but didn’t want to rule out a return for the hard-working forward who grew up in White Bear Lake and played college hockey for Minnesota State – Mankato. They decided to invite Carter to camp this fall, giving him a chance to earn a contract instead. However, he was released not long after the action began due to issues with a lingering shoulder injury. Carter underwent a procedure on a torn labrum in his right shoulder four months ago, and many expected that to be the end of his career. Carter was not ready to call it quits just yet though, and rehabbed and work his way back into game shape, before going to the Wild brass with hopes of rejoining the team.

He’s well on his way, now. After more than a week of practicing with the NHL Wild, this PTO gives Carter the chance to finally see some game action with the AHL Wild. If the coaches and executives like what they see, expect Carter’s hard work to pay off in a contract by the end of the month. As long as he is signed by March 1st, the NHL Trade Deadline, Carter will be eligible to play in the postseason for the West-leading Wild. With Tyler Graovac recently clearing waivers and being demoted to the AHL and the utter lack of production from Kurtis Gabriel and Zack Mitchell, the need for another reliable player on Minnesota’s fourth line is more apparent now than ever. Carter gives them an option that costs nothing in trade capital, is familiar with the team, and can be counted on for hard work and dedicated play.

AHL| Injury| Minnesota Wild Ryan Carter| Tyler Graovac| Zack Mitchell

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Devils Trade Kalinin To Leafs For Loov

February 18, 2017 at 2:21 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 2 Comments

The New Jersey Devils had lost faith in Russian center Sergey Kalinin and had not been able to trade him, so they placed him on waivers yesterday. Not long after it was announced he had cleared this afternoon, the trade they were looking for came together. The New Jersey Devils announced that they had found a trade partner in former GM Lou Lamoriello and the Toronto Maple Leafs and that Kalinin had been exchanged for defenseman Viktor Loov. 

A new home for Kalinin is very unsurprising, and in fact was predicted in the Devils’ Deadline Primer. After showing some promise in the KHL at a young age and in his rookie year in North America in 2015-16, Kalinin seemingly hit a wall in his development this year. Kalinin has just four points in 42 games this season, and his valuable two-way game has disappeared. Kalinin was providing no value to a struggling New Jersey squad that would be better served to play younger players that actually have some potential. It was predictable that Kalinin would clear waivers, but also a shrewd move by GM Ray Shero to still get something for him.

By trading for Kalinin after he had cleared waivers, the Maple Leafs no longer have to worry about keeping him in the NHL. Kalinin is expected to report to the AHL’s Toronto Marlies, and may not even see action with the Leafs before his contract expires at the end of the year. Kalinin gives Toronto a player who can be physical and has some big-league experience, but his numbers in 2016-17 inspire little confidence to give him substantial ice time down the stretch or in the postseason. The Maple Leafs’ fourth-line center Ben Smith hasn’t been much better this season, but he is just six games away from becoming Expansion Draft eligible and will likely hold on to his spot, at least for the time being. Kalinin will be a restricted free agent at year’s end and the Leafs could retain his services if they so choose.

And what of the return? Loov was a seventh-round pick of the Maple Leafs in 2012 and has exceeded his low expectations thus far in his pro career. The 24-year-old Swedish defenseman is having a down season though, after admirable efforts with the AHL’s Marlies in each of the past two years. Loov even skated in four games with Toronto in 2015-16, contributing two assists and a +4 rating. However, any defenseman unable to supplant the likes of Matt Hunwick and Roman Polak, even for just a few games, has a questionable future at best. Loov is a physical player who skates pretty well, but is a ways off from an NHL gig if he doesn’t work on his vision and puck-moving. Loov is a restricted free agent at the end of the season and New Jersey will use his performance from here on out with the AHL’s Albany Devils as a tryout to gauge if he warrants another contract.

AHL| KHL| New Jersey Devils| Ray Shero| Toronto Maple Leafs| Waivers Ben Smith| Matt Hunwick

2 comments

Canucks Notes: Virtanen, Miller, Burrows, Hansen

February 18, 2017 at 12:44 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 1 Comment

Although Canucks right winger Jake Virtanen has struggled once again this season, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman noted in an interview with Sportsnet 960 in Calgary (audio link) that he doesn’t expect the team to give up on the former first rounder just yet (transcription via Fan Rag’s Chris Nichols):

“But it’s looking to me right now that the Vancouver Canucks and Jake Virtanen – for whatever reason it’s oil and water right now. It’s not a mix. They probably should have sent him down last year. But you’re not giving up on a guy who is a first-round pick after two years. You’re still going to keep it, even though he’s devalued a bit.”

Virtanen made the NHL roster out of training camp but struggled early on, collecting just a single assist in ten games.  He was then sent to the minors in November in the hopes that he would rediscover his scoring touch but that has yet to happen as well as he has just five goals and five assists in 39 minor league contests.  However, he’s still just 20 years old so it’s far too early to sell low on him (which they would be doing by moving him now) just yet.

Other notes out of Vancouver:

  • While the team remains within striking distance of a playoff spot (they’re just five points out of a Wild Card position), Sportsnet’s Mark Spector argues that the Canucks need to be in full seller mode. He cautions about what goaltender Ryan Miller would fetch in a possible trade as many playoff-bound teams already have their goaltending in place and that he’d be more of an insurance policy than an upgrade.  He also notes Alex Burrows as someone who would be attractive to teams and suggests that New Jersey’s return for Vernon Fiddler from the Predators (a fourth round pick) could be around what they should expect to get for him.
  • Ben Kuzma of the Vancouver Province notes that GM Jim Benning will talk to some of the players with some form of no-trade protection about potentially waiving those clauses as the team gets set to begin their CBA-mandated bye week on Monday. That list is a long one as Daniel Sedin, Henrik Sedin and Loui Eriksson all have no-move clauses, Burrows, Miller, Brandon Sutter, and Alex Edler all have full no-trade clauses while Jannik Hansen can block a trade to 21 teams.  Kuzma also suggests that the Canucks may have some extra motivation to try and move Hansen in particular as he may be a player the team considers leaving unprotected in June’s expansion draft.

Jim Benning| Vancouver Canucks Alex Burrows| Jake Virtanen| Jannik Hansen| Ryan Miller

1 comment

Ty Rattie And Taylor Fedun Placed On Waivers

February 18, 2017 at 11:30 am CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Right winger Ty Rattie finds himself back on the wire as the Hurricanes announced Saturday that they have placed him on waivers.  It’s the second time he has been waived in 2017 as Carolina picked him up via waivers from St.  Louis back in early January.

Since being claimed on January 4th, the 24 year old played in just five games with Carolina, picking up two assists while averaging 13:28 per game.  However, he was also a healthy scratch 12 times in that span.  On the season between the Blues and Hurricanes, he has two assists in nine games while logging 10:44 per game in ice time.  In his career, he has five goals and five assists in 35 games.  Rattie is making $650K this season and will be a restricted free agent this summer with arbitration eligibility.

Rattie wasn’t the only player put on waivers on Saturday as the Sabres placed blueliner Taylor Fedun on the wire per Sportsnet’s Chris Johnston (Twitter link).  The defenseman has played in 25 games with Buffalo this season, picking up seven assists while playing a little under 14 minutes per night.  He has been a much bigger offensive threat at the minor league level, recording 17 points (4-13-17) in just 20 games with Buffalo’s AHL affiliate, the Rochester Americans.  Buffalo activated fellow rearguard Cody Franson off of injured reserve earlier today, leaving Buffalo with eight defensemen in the active roster.  Fedun carries a cap hit of just $600K and is slated to be an unrestricted free agent in July.

Still with the waiver wire, Devils center Sergey Kalinin cleared, reports Andrew Gross of the North Jersey Record (Twitter link).  He has been assigned to their AHL affiliate in Albany.

Buffalo Sabres| Carolina Hurricanes| New Jersey Devils| Waivers Sergei Kalinin| Taylor Fedun| Ty Rattie

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Could Corey Perry and Ryan Getzlaf Test Free Agency This Year?

February 18, 2017 at 10:32 am CDT | by Mike Furlano 8 Comments

On January 4th, 2017, legal professor and noted sports law scholar Nathaniel Grow wrote about a relatively obscure section of California labor law that purportedly gave Major League Baseball’s Mike Trout the ability to become a free agent in 2017 despite a contract extending until 2020. The law in question—California Labor Code § 2855—does not limit itself to baseball, and would apply to the NHL as well. The potential for players to become free agents after seven years would temporarily upend the NHL as elite franchise players hit the market years earlier than expected.

Section 2855 of the California Labor Code—more commonly known as the De Havilland Law—prevents the enforcement of an exclusive personal service contract after seven years, regardless of contract length. That means that after the seventh year of a contract, an employee may opt-out without repercussion. Personal service contracts include athletic contracts, so any California-employed NHL player with a contract longer than seven years could use the De Havilland law to enter into free agency after seven years.

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An even broader interpretation says that the seven consecutive years of employment can come from both one long contract or multiple extensions. A California court ruled that numerous contract extensions did not reset the clock for the law’s purposes. This interpretation greatly expands the player pool eligible for earlier free agency. An 18 year old NHL player who first signs a three-year entry level contract (ELC) before signing an extension could potentially reach free agency as early as 25—two years earlier than most players. Under this liberal interpretation, a contract extension would extends the original contract rather than create a new contract, even if the material terms change.

Who is Affected?

Because De Havilland’s law is a California statute, it only applies to California-based employees and employers. Assuming the NHL’s California-based teams are considered California-based employers and subject to California labor laws (more on that later), the three NHL teams affected are the Anaheim Ducks, the Los Angeles Kings, and the San Jose Sharks. The AHL teams potentially affected are the Ontario Reign, San Jose Barracuda, San Diego Gulls, and Bakersfield Condors. Most AHL players with AHL-only contracts, however, sign one- or two-year contracts and are not affected.

I have laid out which players could take advantage of De Havilland’s law below, divided into the conservative and liberal code interpretations discussed above. The liberal interpretation will include more players by default because it expands the pool of players eligible to take advantage of its opt-out provisions. You may notice that I have omitted players that have played with an organization for more than seven years. Many of those omissions stem from extensions signed after the player’s contract expired. Any RFA that signs after July 1st should reset the clock even with a more liberal interpretation of De Havilland’s law. Because there is a period of time that the player was without contract, any subsequent signing creates a second distinct employment period rather than continuous employment. [note: this point isn’t guaranteed. A court could rule that because the RFA process restricts a player’s movement by forcing teams to compensate former teams when they sign RFAs away, it doesn’t constitute full free agency under the statute.]

Finally, two players—Jeff Carter and Brent Burns—were traded midway through one of their contracts. To take advantage of De Havilland’s law, however, you must start counting from the player’s first full season playing in California.

Team Affected

Anaheim Ducks


Anaheim Chart

Under the conservative interpretation of the De Havilland Law, both Corey Perry and Ryan Getzlaf could opt out of their contracts at the end of the 2019-20 season—one year before the contracts expire. Under the more liberal interpretation, Perry, Getzlaf, and Cam Fowler could all become free agents at the end of this year. The Ducks have the least number of players potentially eligible to take advantage of the De Havilland law, but all players eligible are core guys.

Los Angeles Kings

Kings Chart

The Kings have the most players potentially eligible to use the De Havilland law to opt-out of their NHL contracts early. Five players, including Anze Kopitar, Dustin Brown, Jonathan Quick, Jeff Carter, and Drew Doughty, could all opt-out in the future under the law’s conservative interpretation. Doughty could opt-out as early as next year, and Carter as early as the end of the 2018-19 season. A broader reading would include defensemen Alec Martinez and Matt Greene.

San Jose Sharks

Sharks Chart

Under the law’s conservative interpretation, the Sharks have little to worry about for the foreseeable future. Only Brent Burns could opt-out of his contract under the conservative interpretation, and even then not until the end of the 2023-24 offseason. If courts accept the liberal interpretation, however, the Sharks could lose their core. Logan Couture, Joe Pavelski, Marc-Edouard Vlasic, and Justin Braun would all be eligible to opt-out this summer, and Brent Burns could follow next summer.

Overall eight players in the entire league could potentially opt out of their contracts under the labor code’s conservative interpretation, and an additional seven could opt out under a more liberal interpretation. And while we assume each player becomes a free agent at the end of a particular season, a strict reading of the law could allow a player to opt-out midseason as soon as he hits seven calendar years into his contract.

Barriers

De Havilland’s law seems to work—in theory. In practice, however, NHL players face numerous barriers to early free agency. First, the law has never been used by a labor union, making it unclear whether the law trumps a collectively-bargained employment agreement such as the NHL CBA. Second, it is unclear whether California law applies—even in the context of California-based players. Third, the costly and lengthy litigation required to resolve the expected legal dispute make the law impractical for most NHL players. Fourth, it is unclear if any team would—or could—sign a player who successfully opts out of his contract under § 2855. Finally, a player risks harming his reputation by unilaterally breaking his contract for more money.

The first barrier is whether a collectively-bargained agreement overrides state labor laws. The lawyerly answer is “maybe.” De Havilland’s law has never been challenged by a union, so no court has ever attempted to rule on that issue. Both sides would have to look to how courts treat CBAs in conjunction with other labor laws, and the answer varies. Without getting into the legal nitty-gritty—which is outside the scope of this article—the law is muddled and no clear answer exists. It would be one of many issues litigated by both parties.

The second barrier is whether California law even applies at all. De Havilland law’s applicability depends on whether California law applies. Many non-hockey contracts have what’s called the “choice-of-law” provision that specifies which State’s (or Province’s) laws apply to the parties. Thus, even though both sides do business in one State, a contract can dictate that another State’s laws would apply. The CBA and the included example SPC, however, are silent as to choice-of-law. That means that it is up to a Court to decide if California law applies. Now, it may seem obvious that California law binds California teams, but the NHL would have some cognizable legal defenses, including the fact that because the NHL is headquartered in New York, New York law should apply.

The differing legal arguments foreshadow the third barrier—litigation takes a long time. Because this issue is a novel one for courts, and both parties have much at stake, a final determination may take a while as the litigation winds itself through the various court levels. One saving grace for players, however, is that the contentious issue is purely legal. A decision resting on legal argument rather than a drawn out trial alone should significantly hasten the litigation pace.

Assuming that the law applies to California-based athletes—and a player becomes a free agent—the NHL might bar another NHL team from signing the new free agent. The CBA dictates what a free agent is, and dictates how long a team holds a players right. The NHL could refuse to approve any contract with the quasi-free agent because while California law says a player is a free agent, he is not eligible to join another team under the CBA. The CBA does something similar with free agents playing overseas. When an overseas free agent attempts to join the NHL after January 1st, the player must clear waivers.

The player would remain a free agent, but he’d have to find employment outside the NHL. Because the NHL represents the pinnacle of hockey for most players, any move outside the league would be lateral at best. And while refusing to sign free agents would constitute an antitrust violation, league employment action is usually exempt from antitrust laws because they do not usually apply to collective bargaining agreements.

Finally, this analysis cannot ignore the human element. The NHL remains one of the more traditional sports leagues. Players do not like to rock the boat for fear of being labeled a “troublemaker.” So in a league where flashy goal celebrations cause mass hand-wringing, a player unilaterally becoming a free-agent outside the CBA rules would draw ire across North America. Players waiting for better contracts as RFAs already garner criticism from all corners, even though they are well within their rights. Imagine the reaction by certain fans and media if a player goes one step farther to secure a more favorable contract.

Ideal Candidates

The narrow scope of the law coupled with the above barriers creates a very small pool of ideal candidates. Not only candidates, however, but narrow scenarios where using the De Havilland law makes sense. For example, declaring free agency during a lockout or after a CBA expires could avoid the issues the CBA poses to this law because the CBA no longer applies. A Restricted Free Agent could also be a good test case if the RFA was earning drastically less than his market value. The significant increase in salary could serve as motivation to overcome the above-mentioned barriers. Finally, a player languishing in the minors near the end of his career—or a goalie relegated to a backup role—could seek a new locale elsewhere.

Final Thoughts

Maybe the De Havilland law is just a legal curiosity. Player relations in professional sports right now are more harmonious then ever as both players and owners are flush with new TV money. The NBA and MLB just negotiated new CBAs without threatening any lockouts or strikes. The NHL looks to follow suit if they can settle their escrow disagreements amicably. Basically, this may not be the right time to test out De Havilland’s law in the NHL. But all it takes is one disgruntled NHL player on a California-based team to potentially upend the NHL. One underpaid RFA with no legitimate offers on the table. One breakout player in the midst of a long-term deal.

We may never see an NHL player test De Havilland’s law, but the thought of many skilled players immediately reaching free agency all at once is enough to make any fan salivate at the possibilities. Who wouldn’t want to imagine Brent Burns in their favorite team’s colors?

Anaheim Ducks| Los Angeles Kings| Newsstand| San Jose Sharks

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