Karlsson salary arbitration hearing exception for NHL
On the excitement scale, salary arbitration cases tend to fall somewhere between watching water boil and an Ed Sheeran album.
William Karlsson’s is the exception to the rule.
Of all the arbitration cases in the NHL this summer, none is more compelling than the one involving Karlsson and the Golden Knights.
The two sides remain at a standstill on a new contract for the restricted free agent who scored 43 goals last season and are scheduled for a hearing Satur
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we created for the fans, workers and anyone else who may have been affected by tonight’s cancellation.
“Given the travel issues we faced over the past two days — 25-plus hours spent in airports and airplanes, in cramped quarters and having not slept in a bed since Wednesday night — and after consulting with Players Association leadership and medical professionals, we concluded that playing tonight’s game would put us at too great a risk for injury.”
The cancellation was the first in WNBA history.
The WNBA did not provide any additional information. A league source with direct knowledge of the situation indicated that there are no
plans to reschedule the game.
Teams are required to fly commercially to ensure no competitive advantage for organizations that can afford to charter, but the source said the WNBA approved on Thursday night the use of charter aircraft for the Aces.
An MGM employee confirmed that use of a private plane was approved but that one wasn’t available.
MGM Resorts International, which owns the Aces, and coach Bill Laimbeer did not respond to requests for comment.
The Aces did not leave Las Vegas until Friday morning, and players were scattered on four planes that left between 12:30 and 1:30 a.m. They flew into Dallas, where they experienced more delays, and did not land in Washington until about 2:30 p.m. Eastern time — 4½ hours before the originally scheduled start
of their game. They did not go to Capital One Arena.
Delays were mechanical, the MGM employee said, and Aces players used Twitter to voice their displeasure with the situation.
“No shoot around. No night of sleep. No beds. No food,” guard Kayla Mcbride wrote. “Right now we will land in DC at 245pm that has us going straight to the gym bc of traffic and bags…and you want us to play? Oh ok.”
“We can’t control the weather, but league can control whether or not player health will be put at risk tomorrow,” center Carolyn Swords wrote. “Delays, cancelations & now taking a red-eye to get to DC @ 1pm. Aces will have been traveling for 24 hrs by the time we land. It takes less time to get to Sydney, AUS.”
The Mystics delayed tipoff until 8 p.m. Eastern time to better accommodate
the Aces, who began a three-game trip 1½ games behind the Dallas Wings for the eighth and final playoff spot.
Washington coach Mike Thibault told The Associated Press that he was disappointed the Aces “didn’t come to compete.
“If you’re there and in the city and can play, you should show up and play,” he said.
Thibault said Friday was Breast Cancer Awareness night and the team expected a crowd of at least 5,000.
The Aces play at Connecticut on Sunday and at Atlanta on Tuesday before returning home for a threegame homestand.
Contact reporter Sam Gordon at sgordon@reviewjournal.com. Follow @Bysamgordon on Twitter.