Potvin29 said:Significantly Insignificant said:Potvin29 said:Significantly Insignificant said:sneakyray said:Significantly Insignificant said:Highlander said:I don't see the league stopping it. If you overegulate the game then teams would be stuck with these horrible contracts (Clarksons) forever and the teams would be saddled in relation to their caps without relief.
Sort of like trying to close every loophole for the rich.
That's the point of the cap though, to stop the rich from spending with a free will. It's supposed to level the playing field and normalize player contracts. So if a rich team does destroy their cap because of a bad signing, that's on the team. It means that rich team can't go out and sign another bad contract, and another bad contract and so on and so forth. The cap won't work if the rich teams can get out of their bad decisions.
I thought the cap was to link on ice spending with league revenues so that even the poor teams can survive in the cap business environment. The cap has less to do with parity and more to do with allowing the poor teams to survive and hopefully thrive. If it was only to keep the rich teams from gaining a competitive advantage than there would only be an upper limit and no lower limit.
in any case this example benefits both the rich and poorer team. The rich team takes the dead money and the poor team takes the more useful contract.
But it's a cap circumvention that can cause the cap to get out of whack because as long as the bad contract is with Blue Jackets they are not going to go out and sign another player to a 5 million dollar contract. Now that that the Leafs have 5 million more to go over the cap, they could conceivably go out and sign another player to 5 million. That's an extra 5 million dollar contract that would not have existed if Clarkson had stayed in Toronto.
How is it cap circumvention? If the Blue Jackets don't make the deal they still have a bad contract (Horton's) but are unable to spend to improve their team because they can't afford it like the Leafs can. How are you circumventing the cap to swap contracts? Just because one is on LTIR? The Blue Jackets accepted that it was worth more to have Clarkson in the lineup with his hit rather than Horton out of it without the hit. What's being circumvented?
You are giving the Leafs the ability to spend over the cap. They did not have the ability to do so before the trade. Through the use of their extra revenue, they have bought the ability to spend more money on players. The Leafs cap is now essentially 75 million as opposed to 70 million, which it wasn't before. It's the same situation as how some people complain about the fact that Pronger hasn't retired yet because if he does, then that puts the Flyers in cap hell.
But how is that cap circumvention if the CBA allows for that to happen? That would seem to be the opposite of cap circumvention and instead be using the cap and the CBA rules to your advantage.
I think you have to look at what is driving the deal. Did the Leafs trade Tyler Bozak for Nathan Horton's contract? If David Clarkson had been scoring at a 30 goal clip, would this deal have happened? These things can't be proved in a court of law, but the result of this deal gives the Leafs cap relief.
How were the back diving contracts cap circumvention? There was nothing in the CBA that prevented them at first either. It was a loophole that was exposed through an ingenious signing. Once more teams started to take advantage of that loophole, the league stepped in and closed the loophole.
I will admit that the use of this loophole will probably be lessened because the variables that need to occur in order for it to happen are greater, but that doesn't mean it's not a loophole.