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bustaheims said:Will be interesting to see if he actually files his retirement papers, or if he decides to let to Canucks off the hook, and pulls a Hossa and goes LTIR for the rest of his deal.-
CarltonTheBear said:Genuinely surprised that he would do this with 3 years left on his contract instead of just LTIR'ing it like others have. If Hossa can get away with it because of a rash then Lu's hip problems definitely would have passed the smell test in that regard.
Nik the Trik said:In a way, but also he's made 90+ million already so I'm not that surprised he'd not want to have the legitimacy of his decision questioned for a couple million more.
CarltonTheBear said:https://twitter.com/frank_seravalli/status/1143946867467804673
This is something that I didn't actually consider I guess. As we've learned LTIR isn't an absolute perfect solution for many teams, especially cap teams, so this makes sense. Vancouver is the team that gets screwed more and obviously Florida doesn't care about their concerns.
Deebo said:Vancouver is actually lucky it happened this year, if it happened two years from now, it would have been something like 9M in that year.
herman said:Cap implication conversation aside, Luongo was a great goalie, and by all accounts a wonderful person. I hope he can enjoy his retirement with reasonably good health.
My understanding is after which is really stupid when you thing about it. Contract was signed in good faith and under the rules. NHL introduces new rules in cba after, that effect contracts signed under old cba.cabber24 said:Great goalie, glad he's got that Olympic gold in his back pocket so no one can say he didn't win anything. Wonderful guy, remembering when addressed Florida shooting victims in such an articulate way.
Was this recapture rule put in place before or after he signed the contract?
Guilt Trip said:My understanding is after which is really stupid when you thing about it. Contract was signed in good faith and under the rules. NHL introduces new rules in cba after, that effect contracts signed under old cba.
CarltonTheBear said:The contracts were legal at the time but I'd have a hard time saying they were signed in good faith. It's no coincidence that virtually all of them have essentially ended exactly at the time the tacked on cheap years kicked in. It was a form of cap circumvention that the league foolishly didn't see coming. I do agree that penalizing teams after the fact is dumb though.
Nik the Trik said:CarltonTheBear said:The contracts were legal at the time but I'd have a hard time saying they were signed in good faith. It's no coincidence that virtually all of them have essentially ended exactly at the time the tacked on cheap years kicked in. It was a form of cap circumvention that the league foolishly didn't see coming. I do agree that penalizing teams after the fact is dumb though.
They were signed in good faith between the players and the teams. Doing things that live up to the letter of a CBA but are designed to give your team an advantage is basically just modern pro sports GM'ing. There was really nothing "bad faith" about those deals that couldn't be said of the recent signing bonus boom.
Nik the Trik said:CarltonTheBear said:The contracts were legal at the time but I'd have a hard time saying they were signed in good faith. It's no coincidence that virtually all of them have essentially ended exactly at the time the tacked on cheap years kicked in. It was a form of cap circumvention that the league foolishly didn't see coming. I do agree that penalizing teams after the fact is dumb though.
They were signed in good faith between the players and the teams. Doing things that live up to the letter of a CBA but are designed to give your team an advantage is basically just modern pro sports GM'ing. There was really nothing "bad faith" about those deals that couldn't be said of the recent signing bonus boom.