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Kovalchuk in limbo as contract rejected
ILYA Kovalchuk is no closer to figuring out his future than he was when National Hockey League free agency opened three weeks ago.
Kovalchuk's landmark 17-year, US$102 million contract with the New Jersey Devils was rejected by the NHL, which ruled that the longest deal in league history violated its salary cap.
Where the high-scoring forward - the biggest prize on the free-agent market - will land now is anyone's guess.
NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly said in a statement on Wednesday that the Devils, Kovalchuk and the players' association still have several options if they choose to restructure the deal.
Until then, Daly said, "The player is not entitled to play under the contract."
The union has a few days to decide if it will file a grievance to try to have this contract approved; Kovalchuk and the Devils could return to the bargaining table to work out a new deal; or the All-Star forward could go back into free agency and find a new home in the NHL or in his native Russia with the rival KHL.
Red flags were raised even before the Devils held a news conference on Tuesday to formally announce what appeared to be Kovalchuk's final NHL contract.
Past his prime
By tacking on years of low salary at the end of the deal when Kovalchuk would be well past his prime - if he was even still playing - the Devils lowered their salary-cap hit to US$6 million per season.
The NHL wants to eliminate such "retirement contracts" and challenged this one after allowing others to stand.
Kovalchuk's deal was likely rejected because he was slated to earn only US$550,000 in each of the last five seasons of the contract that was to run through the 2026-27 season, when he would be 44. Kovalchuk was to earn US$98.5 million in the first 11 years of the deal.
Such long-term deals that have become popular for star players since the salary-cap era began following the NHL lockout in 2005 could become a thing of the past when the next collective bargaining agreement is negotiated.
Deals given last year by Chicago to free-agent forward Marian Hossa, and by Philadelphia to 35-year-old defenseman Chris Pronger were reviewed by the NHL and approved.
Kovalchuk's landmark 17-year, US$102 million contract with the New Jersey Devils was rejected by the NHL, which ruled that the longest deal in league history violated its salary cap.
Where the high-scoring forward - the biggest prize on the free-agent market - will land now is anyone's guess.
NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly said in a statement on Wednesday that the Devils, Kovalchuk and the players' association still have several options if they choose to restructure the deal.
Until then, Daly said, "The player is not entitled to play under the contract."
The union has a few days to decide if it will file a grievance to try to have this contract approved; Kovalchuk and the Devils could return to the bargaining table to work out a new deal; or the All-Star forward could go back into free agency and find a new home in the NHL or in his native Russia with the rival KHL.
Red flags were raised even before the Devils held a news conference on Tuesday to formally announce what appeared to be Kovalchuk's final NHL contract.
Past his prime
By tacking on years of low salary at the end of the deal when Kovalchuk would be well past his prime - if he was even still playing - the Devils lowered their salary-cap hit to US$6 million per season.
The NHL wants to eliminate such "retirement contracts" and challenged this one after allowing others to stand.
Kovalchuk's deal was likely rejected because he was slated to earn only US$550,000 in each of the last five seasons of the contract that was to run through the 2026-27 season, when he would be 44. Kovalchuk was to earn US$98.5 million in the first 11 years of the deal.
Such long-term deals that have become popular for star players since the salary-cap era began following the NHL lockout in 2005 could become a thing of the past when the next collective bargaining agreement is negotiated.
Deals given last year by Chicago to free-agent forward Marian Hossa, and by Philadelphia to 35-year-old defenseman Chris Pronger were reviewed by the NHL and approved.
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