The Niagara Falls Review

Security or big paydays?

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stars played not in one place for most of their career, but two, three or four? Considerth­eexcitemen­tandintrig­ue generated if Crosby, McDavid or Alex Ovechkin were to ever hit the open market in their prime.

There was palpable excitement last summer when Steven Stamkos nearly became an unrestrict­ed free agent.

In the NBA, stars are there for the taking every summer.

Paul, arguably the finest point guard of his generation and a pending free agent, was traded to the Houston Rockets on Wednesday, his third team in a Hall of Fame career. Last summer, former MVP Kevin Durant left the Oklahoma City Thunder to hook up with the Golden State Warriors and two years before that, LeBron James left Miami to rejoin the Cleveland Cavaliers.

The top available free agent in the NHL this summer is arguably Kevin Shattenkir­k, a 28-year-old point-piling defenceman. Next to no available stars exist beyond that — other than those restricted free agents whom teams almost never try to poach.

Shorter contracts in the NBA — five years maximum — mean top players are far more likely to shuffle around and, of course, disappoint their teams and fanbases with quicker exits.

The NHL pushed for and ultimately got term limits on contracts during the last lockout — shortening them to a max of eight years.

“If you have a salary cap, which artificial­ly limits what you can pay a player during a given year, the only way you can get to his market value is to extend a contract which is guaranteed,” NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr said, when asked about the advantages and disadvanta­ges of shorter contracts.

“So if you shorten them, then maybe what you have to do is loosen the strings on what can be paid. Otherwise, all you’re doing is depriving players of the opportunit­y to get closer to whatever their market value is.”

Fehr said the players would evaluate the prospect of shorter contracts when the next round of collective bargaining negotiatio­ns rolls around — the prospect of which would surely result in more NBA-like movement among stars.

Perhaps for good reason, given the higher risk of injury, the biggest stars in the NHL have typically shown themselves to be more risk-averse than those in the NBA, more willing to take the security of a long-term deal for the bigger rewards, potentiall­y, of multiple short-term pacts.

Most have shown loyalty to the teams that drafted them and sacrificed money themselves for potential betterment of the team, including Crosby, who took a relatively tame $8.7 million cap hit in 2012, and Stamkos, who was days away from unrestrict­ed free agency when he decided to re-up for eight years with Tampa.

“I felt kind of in my heart that that was always the place I wanted to stay,” Stamkos said after deciding to remain for less money with the Lightning.

There have been rare instances of grade-A stars changing teams at their own discretion, including Marian Hossa and Chris Pronger in 2009, Zach Parise and Ryan Suter in 2012 and Zdeno Chara way before that in 2006. P.K. Subban switched squads last summer, but that was through trade and after he signed an eightyear deal to stay in Montreal.

Tyler Seguin and Phil Kessel, likewise, both left Boston early in their careers, but that was without the full choice of unrestrict­ed free agency.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? On the same day that Connor McDavid was nearing agreement on an eight-year extension with the Edmonton Oilers, another star, Chris Paul, was moving elsewhere in the National Basketball Associatio­n.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES On the same day that Connor McDavid was nearing agreement on an eight-year extension with the Edmonton Oilers, another star, Chris Paul, was moving elsewhere in the National Basketball Associatio­n.

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