The collective bargaining agreementThe NHL's changing salary structure... and what it all means
| KK Hockey found this 8/20/2007 on mirtle.blogspot.com [flag] |
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The NHL Salary Structure
Published 8/20/2007 by Paul at KK Hockey
... read on ...
Building The Pipeline
Published 9/11/2007 by hoopsjunky at CANUCKS HOCKEY BLOG
... 20 years and the former NHLer has been entrusted with their development. That means the Moose, who won the AHL's North Division pennant in Arniel's first year behind the bench, will be young enough to qualify for day-care subsidies in Manitoba. And that means Arniel has to find the delicate balance between moulding the Canucks' youngsters into professionals while maintaining the Moose's success which is one of the trickiest jobs in hockey. "We talked about this when I got hired two years ago," said Arniel, the former Moose captain and assistant coach who returned to Winnipeg last season after four years as an assistant with the Buffalo Sabres. "With the NHL the way it is now, you have to build from within. Your future depends on your young guys. It does. Arniel mentioned the Sabres, but obviously, look at the Ducks as well. Both teams had young players step up and play key roles last season. With a salary cap, teams needs to get the most out of those on entry-level contracts ...
Potpourri for 10 games please, Alex
Published 9/27/2007 by Matt at The Battle of Alberta
... He was on XM (a few weeks ago) to discuss his piece on changes in NHL teams' salary structures under the new CBA, and it was an excellent bit of radio. The hosts were clearly interested in what he had to say (his work was quite original and insightful), and asked some good questions. Even though I had read James' post, the segment was entertaining and informative. ...
