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Money Players
How Hockey's Greatest Stars Beat The NHL At It's
Own Game
Incredibly,
the legacy of one-time hockey czar Alan Eagleson still poisons professional
hockey. The generation of players that “the Eagle” systematically
abused, misled, and defrauded continues to take its revenge on his
successors. When a former Boston player, Mike Gillis, suffered a
career-ending injury, Eagleson, his agent, bilked him out of some
$40,000 in insurance money. Gillis sued and won. What Gillis learned
from the episode is that players need hard-nosed and honest representation
and that no quarter needs to be given in encounters with the good
old boys who run the game.
Gillis is an
agent now – one of the best. The players he and other trained
agents represent routinely get contracts worth tens of millions
of dollars. Over the past ten years, the NHL’s payroll has
shot up from nearly $200 million to more than $1 billion. Around
350 players make more than a million dollars per annum. And the
league’s owners are crying the blues.
But
these owners often buy up sports teams for reasons of ego and for
kicks. And the general managers often are former players who like
to shoot the breeze with old friends and do deals on the strength
of a handshake. Neither is a match for the new breed of agent or
for the players’ association president Bob Goodenow. Something’s
got to give. Bruce Dowbiggin’s eye-opening report takes readers
from the locker rooms to the board rooms. His inside view makes
sense of the seemingly crazy labour conflict that is about to batter
the NHL.
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