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"Paul G. Wenthold" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in news:bqd568 [EMAIL PROTECTED]: > I don't get your point. The players don't dictate what their salaries > will be. They get paid what they and management agree to. So if they > decide that the want to be paid like baseball players, but the money > isn't there, then management won't agree to it. How is this a problem? That's the theory. However, it only takes one or two spend-thrift owners to "raise the bar" for everybody else, especially in the middle of the salary range. Combine that with a collective agreement that requires owners to at least match a player's previous salary in order to retain his rights (prior to his qualifying for unrestricted free agency at 31), and you wind up with a pyramid scheme. A player who has a career year at 24 or 25, signs a big deal with his owner or another, now has that salary locked-in until he hits 31, unless the team wants to risk his walking away as a UFA. The next player who hits those numbers or similar says, "I'm as good or better than he was," and raises the bar a little more. And so on and so on. This system was best demonstrated by Paul Kariya; he signed a 5-year, $50 million contract with Anaheim, but his production numbers never seemed to justify that contract, especially last season when the Ducks moved toward a defense-oriented style. The Ducks had to either match Kariya's salary to retain his rights in the offseason or he would become a UFA; they gambled, cut Kariya loose, and Kariya went to Colorado. (Then the Ducks turned around and signed Sergei Fedorov to $40 million over 5 years.) -- Ian Merrithew - ADM Systems Engineering ian.merrithew "at" ieee.org
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