Quote:
Originally Posted by Strange Brew
I just haven’t researched this, as I fundamentally don’t understand how you have true revenue sharing with a hard cap on escrow.
If there is a shortfall on revenue in excess of the escrow cap does that get funded by the owners? I thought there was talk about a mechanism to somehow recover over time through future escrow, which means future players would be funding a current year shortfall. Although any future recovery, if such a thing exists, likely wouldn’t extend beyond currently negotiated CBA.
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Revenue is 50-50, if owners pay more than 50%, there is escrow payments, if owners pay less than 50%, there is equalization payments.
The reason escrow/equalization payments can happen is the cap is based on the previous season's revenue and that is only used to determine the mid-point of the cap. There was also an escalator the NHLPA could use to artificially raise the salary cap by up to 5% (I think it was 5%), and they used it to the maximum almost every single year. There is also the impact of front and black loaded contracts, but for the sake of simplicity, lets say they balance out.
So, with the combination of an artificially inflated salary cap and most teams spending to the limit, near the limit or even over (due to LTIR), it is resulting in players making more than 50% of revenue.
With the CBA extension they have capped how much players will have to repay in each of the first couple/few years, however the remaining balance will be deferred and the cap will remain flat until the outstanding escrow payments are paid back. I also believe it all has to be paid back by the end of the new extension.