The Province

Sens ‘more sensationa­lized than anything else:’ Bettman

NHL commission­er not concerned with direction of franchise

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

LAS VEGAS — Despite a rash of recent negative headlines suggesting otherwise, NHL commission­er Gary Bettman says there is “no issue” with the Ottawa Senators.

Speaking after the NHL board of governors met ahead of the league’s awards show in Las Vegas on Wednesday, Bettman told reporters he isn’t concerned with the direction of the franchise.

This comes after a threeweek stretch that saw the club’s assistant general manager charged with harassment and the wife of Ottawa captain Erik Karlsson allege she and her husband were the victims of cyberbully­ing by the fiancee of a now-former teammate.

Owner Eugene Melnyk also threatened in December to move the Senators if ticket sales didn’t improve before eventually backing down, the plan to build a new downtown arena remains very much up in the air and a club icon was quoted saying he hopes the team is sold.

“There’s always going to be some issue somewhere that has to be dealt with,” Bettman said. “The headstone has been written over the years for many franchises under a variety of circumstan­ces and none of the burials ever took place. “It’s a moment in time.” Reminded that he’s stepped into revive failing franchises in the past, Bettman insisted that’s not required in the nation’s capital.

“We don’t think the club is anywhere close to cardiac arrest ... there’s no issue up there,” he said. “I think it’s more sensationa­lized than anything else.”

Melnyk, meanwhile, avoided speaking with reporters after the board of governors meeting broke at the posh Encore hotel.

The Senators suspended assistant GM Randy Lee last week after he was charged with harassment stemming from an alleged incident at the NHL combine in Buffalo, N.Y. Lee has a court date next month and will miss the upcoming draft in Dallas.

News then broke that Melinda Karlsson, Erik’s wife, filed a peace bond in May alleging Monika Caryk, the fiancee of winger Mike Hoffman, posted hundreds of derogatory and harassing online messages aimed at her and her husband.

In the sworn statement, Melinda Karlsson alleged Caryk “uttered numerous statements wishing my unborn child dead.” The Karlssons’ first child, a son named Axel, was stillborn in March.

In an interview with Postmedia Ottawa last week, Caryk and Hoffman both denied they had anything to do with the cyberbully­ing of Melinda Karlsson.

Hoffman was traded to San Jose on Tuesday in a deal, far below market value for a firstline sniper, before the Sharks then flipped him to the Florida Panthers, the Senators’ Atlantic Division rival, hours later.

The past 12 months have not been kind to Ottawa, which finished 30th in the 31-team league this season after losing in double overtime in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference final last spring.

In other news to come out of the board of governors meeting, Bettman said that while the final numbers still have to be agreed on with the NHL Players’ Associatio­n, the salary cap will jump from $75 million US this past season to between $79.5 million and $80 million in 2018-19.

“Revenues were robust,” Bettman said. “Business is growing.”

The cap increase marks the biggest jump since it went from $64.3 million in 2013-14 to $69 million in 2014-15.

The cap was $73 million in 2015-16.

Bettman said owners also touched on sports betting, goalie chest protectors, esports, and received an update on the league’s potential expansion into Seattle.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? “There’s always going to be some issue somewhere that has to be dealt with,” says NHL Commission­er Gary Bettman.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS “There’s always going to be some issue somewhere that has to be dealt with,” says NHL Commission­er Gary Bettman.

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