A closer look at what is ahead for the National Hockey League salary cap after expansion …

The NHL’s expansion plans are hardly a secret to the hockey world. Expansion applications were sent out just recently, and the NHL has received two submissions: one from Quebec City and one from Las Vegas. They’ve done this before, so most people are semi-familiar with expansion drafts and the implications of expansion on scoring. More teams means talent gets more spread out, and the expansion teams get bullied into oblivion by other, better teams. At least for the first few seasons post-expansion. Scoring goes up a tick, everyone’s happy. Well, almost everyone.

However, this is the first time in 15 years that the NHL has done this and the first time in the salary cap era. The implications of expansion on the cap have yet to be observed, but that doesn’t mean we can’t predict them.

To begin, we’ll need to look at how the cap is currently calculated.

The Formula



The league throws a bunch of really good guesses together of how much hockey-related revenue (HRR) they’re expecting to expect to generate in the coming season and then takes the “midpoint” of these projections for cap calculation. The owners receive 50% of HRR and the players receive the other 50%, as per the CBA, so right away, let’s cut that number in half. The players’ share then gets split between all the teams. The NHLPA can raise this number by 5%, and the cap is set 15% above that number after all these calculations.

Whew. What a mouthful. I’ve put together a formula to make it easier to visualize.

For example, given these 3 projections of HRR:

1)$3.8B

2)$3.2B

3)$3.6B

The average is $3.53B, which we can put through our formula and…

The important part here is for every team to contribute to HRR equally. If a team doesn’t, the cap will fall. Each team is responsible for generating 1/30th of the projected HRR in order to maintain the cap. Any more, and the cap goes up. Any less, and the cap goes down. In our example, that means about $117 million.

This formula has only two variables: the salary cap and HRR. If we have one, we can calculate the other. Using the salary cap data from the past (I’ve done that already), here are the results:

What does this mean for the cap?



Well for one, the earliest time the NHL will be ready for expansion, according to NHL Assistant Commissioner Bill Daly, is the 2017-18 season. Using the average rate of increase for the past three years, I’ve predicted a total HRR of approximately $3.86 billion for that season. Because each team must contribute 1/30th of the $3.86B HRR, this means each team should be generating about $128,740,000 in 2017-18.

If the NHLPA uses their 5% escalator, this would mean the cap in 2018 will be about $77,726,775. That’s a lot higher than what it is now, enough to fit in a Vladimir Tarasenko or Phil Kessel! NHL General Managers love to sign players to pretty expensive deals with the hopes that this exact situation happens. This would mean that those big cap hits take up a smaller percentage of the cap as time goes on.

For example, Toews and Kane’s $10.5M cap hit represents 14.7% of the 2016 cap, but will only represent 13.5% of my projected 2017-18 cap, and 13% of the 2018-19 cap. These deals become much less painful as time goes on. For example, in 2015-16, 13% would be a cap hit of just $8,958,120, over $1.5M in savings.

This is how the cap projects, over the same time period. The big drop is when the players’ share of HRR dropped from 57% to 50% as part of the new CBA:

The Problem



Once expansion rolls around (we’ll use 2017-18 for our example), the NHL needs an additional $257,480,000 in revenue to maintain that cap. After all, HRR will now be split 32 ways, instead of just 30. Can the expansion teams provide that? The only two locations that submitted applications are Quebec City and Las Vegas. The best comparable franchises, in my opinion, are Winnipeg (a returning Canadian franchise) and Arizona (a desert-based non-traditional market without a large ticket-holding fanbase).

Finding the NHL’s real HRR statistics is next to impossible (otherwise I wouldn’t have to calculate it for previous years), but Tyler Dellow of mc79hockey.com released numbers for the Blue Jackets’ 2006 HRR ($57.4M), which represented 82% of their total revenue ($66M, as listed by Forbes). Together, Arizona and Winnipeg made $182 million last year, so 82% (the ratio of revenue that is hockey related, for the Blue Jackets at least) of that is $150,839,393.

This means that the Quebec Nordiques and the Las Vegas Mumps are likely to raise about that much if they hit the ground running. Very bad news. They’re almost $100 million short of their target, and that’s without considering growing pains! If they generate ¾ of the revenue of the Jets/Coyotes, it’ll be just $113,129,544. Even worse news! But let’s assume best-case scenario, because optimism!

Here’s what the cap will look like in the coming expansion years, given the numbers we’ve used so far:

The Bottom Line



Expansion is going to drag the cap down like crazy. In 2017-18, it could be lowered as much as $2,000,000! Well, maybe not lowered, but it’ll certainly prevent it from growing by very much at all. And the bad news doesn’t end there. The longer the NHL delays expansion, the more that HRR grows, which means each team is responsible for generating more and more money. This in turn means that Quebec and Las Vegas will need to generate even more, just to keep the “salary cap drop” at $2,000,000. General Managers who are expecting the cap to grow and signing players with that in mind will be taken by surprise, just like in the 2014-15 season, where the cap was expected to be north of $71M, but only grew to $69M.

Which GMs? That’ll depend on the capologist they’ve got on payroll. You better hope your team’s got a good one.