Toronto Star

Players expect full pay for 2021 season

Some owners pushing for pro rata payments if virus cuts number of games

- KEVIN MCGRAN SPORTS REPORTER

The NHL Players’ Associatio­n believes players will be paid in full — which is actually 72 per cent of their salaries — when the 2021 NHL season gets underway, regardless of how many games constitute the season.

There has been a push by some owners to have the players paid on a pro rata basis if a full season is not played. The league’s governors met Thursday for an update from commission­er Gary Bettman.The players believe the memorandum of understand­ing they signed in the summer, one that extended the current collective bargaining agreement by six years, included the concession­s necessary to get owners through the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The players agreed to giving owners back 20 per cent of their salaries this season through escrow, and deferred payment for10 per cent of the remainder. So a player with a $1 million salary would draw $720,000. The first $200,000 would go back to the owners; the next $80,000 (10 per cent of the remaining $800,000) would be paid back to the players over time.

While there’s no mention of pro rata payments, the players believe the memorandum of understand­ing addressed the issue and they were hoping Bettman was making that point to his owners, some of whom have grumbled that they’d be better off financiall­y by not playing at all.

A source said the NHL understood the grim realities of the coronaviru­s — that the next season might start without fans in the stands — when it agreed to terms with the players.

The league is still targeting a Jan. 1 opening. That date is dear to the NHL, with its history of outdoor games on that day, though no outdoor games are planned this year. There will be no all-star game, either. And the season could still start later. The lockout-shortened, 48game season in 2013 started Jan. 20.

The conversati­ons between the NHL and the NHLPA have been productive and collaborat­ive, by all accounts.

The Star has confirmed the NHLPA has a 16-player returnto-play committee that includes Maple Leafs forward Zach Hyman. Two Leafs, John Tavares and Jason Spezza, were on the five-member committee that helped prepare for the two bubbles that saw a two-month, 24-team post-season that ended without a single case of COVID transmitte­d to the players, coaches and officials involved.

The new return-to-play committee has not yet met with representa­tives of the league, though the leadership of the NHLPA and the league meet regularly. The league needs the players’ associatio­n to ratify any changes, including the length of the season, the length of the playoffs and the sites for games

The league is keen to get going, wanting to award the Stanley Cup by mid-July and return to a regular hockey schedule for 2021-22, when the Seattle Kraken begin play and the league will be the beneficiar­y of a new national U.S. TV contract. The coming season will be the final one of a 10-year, $2-billion (U.S.) deal with NBC.

Multiple ideas for 2021 have been floated, including: á Seasons of anywhere from 48 games to 72.

Realigned divisions to cut on travel and take into account pandemic restrictio­ns, including a Canadian division.

Teams playing baseball-style series, perhaps three games over four days against the same team, to cut down on travel costs.

The NHL relies on revenue from ticket sales more than the other profession­al sports, which enjoy far more generous national TV deals. Statista.com estimates that NHL teams will lose an average of $1.3 million for every home game played in an empty arena. A further $215,000 is lost per game on food and beverage.

The league may be prepared to start the season without fans in most rinks. Some jurisdicti­ons in states like Florida, Texas and Arizona may allow some fans, but the hope is fans may pack the arenas by the end of the season, or maybe the playoffs.

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