Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Isles Contracts & The Salary Cap



With quite a few player contracts ending this season, I asked the GM how or if the salary cap would affect his negotiations. Always the stickler for details, he corrected my question when I incorrectly used the word “renegotiate” because I was thinking of those who already had contracts expiring. The Islanders have six RFAs that need to be dealt with: Moulson, Bergenheim, Schremp, Tambellini, Reese and Kohn. They have five UFAs: Sim, Park, Weight, Jackman and Meyer. Six if you add in Marty Biron and the Goalie Trifecta question. (Although Biron is doing so well as an announcer during these playoffs that he may want to think about changing careers.)


“We can’t RE-negotiate contracts,” he chuckled. “It’s negotiate.” The voice in my head said we were pressed for time, so I blew right over my mistake and just kept going, “So how will the salary cap affect your upcoming contract negotiations?” I repeated.


“It won’t really have any effect. We don’t find out what the cap is going to be until June. But for the situation we’re in, it won’t have any bearing on what we’re going to do, whether it’s signing restricted free agents or signing unrestricted free agents.”

While the NY Islanders are currently sitting at the salary cap floor, the NHL may increase or decrease the salary cap. (Rumor has it, it will go up by about $900,000.) The regular season numbers showed only a small decrease in average attendance this past season but growth in other areas. However, with the NHL still looking for a new owner for the Coyotes, and other clubs requiring revenue sharing, who can be sure where the cap will go?



“That being said, we will be fiscally responsible,” he continued as I was heading into another question. The Islander fan in me reared its head and I blurted out, “Yeah, when aren’t you?” I pushed my fan voice back inside quickly and tried to pretend it didn’t happen.



Even Scott Cullen of TSN ">wrote on May 3rd,
“Given the ongoing financial troubles of the organization, it's quite possible that any moves this summer will be of the tweaking variety. It's not easy to expect the Islanders to drastically increase payroll, since they have tended to linger closer to the salary floor…”


Call it “sticking to the plan.” The term “fiscally responsible” is also the answer to fans asking why the Islanders haven’t signed any big-name, high-priced free agents since the short-lived Captain Canada experiment. But adding at least ONE big-name defenseman may help the young core of Islanders immensely. The questions are WHO and HOW MUCH? If I’ve learned one thing about this team, it’s never who everyone says it should be. So prepare for a possible surprise by July.



I asked our GM how he felt about the long-term contracts, which seem to be more commonplace now in the NHL. Do their financial benefits outweigh the potential problems?


“I think it’s a case-by-case situation. My outlook on it is if you have a young player, any player for that matter, that you see as part of your core, I don’t have any problem offering a longer term contract.”


Perhaps the lesson of 15-year contracts has been learned, but certainly contracts in a 7- to 10-year range will still be offered up for key players just about coming into their prime. Think -- Kyle Okposo. Would the Islanders not want to keep him around for as long as possible?


The salary cap has done exactly what it was designed to do - create competitive balance. If it didn’t, we would not see so many teams bunched up in points fighting to make the playoffs, nor would we see the eighth seed knock off the first seed in the first round of the playoffs. So the extended contract lengths and how they affect the cap hit is a tool to keep franchise players. But should the state of the NHL take a turn for the worse, they will come back and bite them in the rear when other players can’t be signed because their payroll is being eaten up by a few star contracts. I suppose it’s a risk some general managers are willing to take.
 

The Islanders currently don’t have that problem. The fans may grumble over cap money applied to contracts that have been bought out, but that is how this business works and about the only cap issue the Islanders have to take into consideration this off season.


According to Brian Burke, anything other than making the playoffs is failure. But a rebuilding team will fail repeatedly until they get it right. It’s a hard pill to swallow for everyone involved. The usually outspoken Burke has also said if a GM really doesn’t like his team in March, he didn’t do a very good job in July. So when I read in the same TSN article,
“Owner Charles Wang has high expectations anticipating a playoff berth next year, telling Newsday, ‘Everyone in that locker room who we bring back has to be better than they were this year.’”
You better believe he means it.

In any case, Garth Snow has his work cut out for him this off season identifying the "core" and maintaining them while trying to find the right pieces that fit best to achieve the goal that he shares with Charles Wang: getting into the playoffs and ultimately the Stanley Cup.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

IBC Continues!


**Note: The IBC event last night was wonderful and enlightening as Mike Bossy confirmed that the program will continue for next season. They have taken all suggestions into consideration and it will be back and better. Full information coming within the month. Excellent program if you are a business looking to network here on Long Island. Because seriously, where else do you get to just hang out with Mike Bossy?

Also, the food is really amazing at Chateau Briand! And their patio area is breathtaking. Video of Mike Bossy to be posted later tonight.


And here it is!

Monday, May 3, 2010

Garth Snow: When The World Calls


Islanders head coach Scott Gordon will be heading to Germany for the World Championships this month to represent his country once again. Hearing that John Tavares would be on the Canadian National team seemed almost a given, but when I heard that defenseman Jack Hillen will be joining Kyle Okposo on Team USA, I was surprised and elated. I’ve come to think of Jack as one of the Islanders’ best-cultivated talents.

Continued here at HockeyBuzz.com

And more infor about the World Championship by another Islander blogger here http://www.islandershockeyblog.com/2010-articles/may/2010-iihf-world-championship-team-usa.html
Up next, contract negotiations and the salary cap.

From NBC Fail to Writer Fail!

Ugh, if I told you how many different articles I have in my little notebook here that are each only halfway completed you would probably laugh at me.

Still working on three more questions with our GM and one write up on the Flat Bottom V skate sharpening technology. Trouble is -- my own life gets in the way. Add to it the whole Casino and Mangano wants Long Island to be a 51st state thing, and the cherry on the cake would be the Stanley Cup playoffs. Something always has my attention. I really need to learn how to lock myself in a room with no TV, blank walls and just the laptop. Someplace that isn't covered in dog hair from my 105 lb shedding hairball of a Dalmatian would be nice.

Tonight I will be attending what seems to be not only the last even of the season for the Islanders Business Club, but very possibly the last event -- ever. That is one of the reasons I want to go.

There are rumors swirling that the Islanders will not be continuing the program that is run by Mike Bossy and was developed by Chris Dey. It seems it may not have turned into the business social network it was hoped to be. It's a shame. I personally thought it was a good idea.

Oh well, nothing lasts forever. And things in Islanders Country seem to last about three years maximum.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Epic Fail: NBC

I'm not even a Penguins fan, but I have to say that it is pretty foolish of NBC to once again shut down the outdoor screen for this Game 2 of the second playoff round between the Pens and Montreal.

To me, the outdoor screen in Pittsburgh is one of the most fan friendly items in sports. As someone who may never be able to afford playoff tickets, or travel to see my team play in a playoff game, the idea of being able to sit outside on a beautiful Sunday afternoon with thousands of other fans to watch a game just seems to be a worthwhile experience.

This is the second year NBC has made that screen stay dark for the playoffs. I would have hoped they learned. How much more good will they would have received from allowing it will never be known.

Sad for sure.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Calvin deHaan Now Signed


Of course, as usual, breaking news hit while I was on line at the Deli in Pathmark. Great. "Yes, I'll take a half a pound of honey smoked Turkey and, by the way, Calvin deHaan just signed a three year entry level contract with the New York Islanders."

Not exactly great impact there. Sure, I Tweeted it out from my phone but it lost something in the delay.

So after I turned into the Bruins vs Flyers I couldn't think of trying to come up with something to say about what is really not a surprise move on the Islanders part. I waited for Mark Savard to end the goalie duel that was Game one of their playoff battle and then started to look around for what I had written about Calvin previously.

With everything I have in my archives, it turns out that the thing I remember most, I can't find! Okay, maybe I didn't look that hard to begin with. It was at prospect camp in July of last year. I made a point of watching deHaan on the ice and to be sure, I too was impressed with the youngster. And he was CERTAINLY a youngster. I remember not being able to get anything out of him when I tried to interview him.

I told someone that I thought he may make it onto the Bridegport squad right out of camp and everyone told me there was no room for him in the line-up -- on any of the Isles teams. However, I knew that the powers that be were very high on Calvin.

So a year later, a few surgeries and a concussion, Calvin gets his first contract, a three year rookie contract at the tender age of eighteen. Congrats Calvin.