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Most of Snapshots blogger George James Malik's latest take on the KHLNHLPA's challenges to the current Collective Bargaining Agreement plays like Mark Warner's speech at the DNC: Informative, enlightening but also a bit exhausting for the non-wonk crowd.

The real eye-opener comes near the end of the piece, when Malik hits on something rather underplayed in this entire NHL/KHL burgeoning cold war: The new Russian league's impact on minor league hockey. From Snapshots:

The de-facto $95,000 AHL salary cap (players who are paid over $95,000 in the AHL who aren't on entry-level deals are subject to re-entry waivers both on the way up and the way down) is driving minor pro hockey's top players not just to the KHL, but also to the rest of Europe's top leagues, leaving a league that's more and more dependent upon entry-level players to carry the mail, and more and more of those players are Europeans. For every European star who makes the NHL, more end up in the AHL for a year or two, and individually-negotiated transfer fees would reduce their participation in North American hockey by a dramatic margin, because players who weren't Ovechkins-to-be could become too expensive to bring over, making the AHL's brain drain that much worse, and, ultimately, hurting NHL teams that don't want to pay, say, $800,000 because that's how much Djurgardens IF says that it will cost for them to release Dick Axelsson.

Malik's points about European talent deciding not to play in North American minor leagues is an important one. But what about locals heading overseas? Taking a gander at some of the names that have bolted from the NHL to the KHL, and you'll see what I referred to in yesterday's rumors chat as 'Tweeners: Players who may have, in the past, signed with an AHL team in the hopes of getting called back to the NHL during the season. Now they're opting for the Russian league. Two players who appeared with the Calder Cup champion Chicago Wolves went KHL: Joel Kwiatkowski and Jason Krog, although his status is obviously in doubt.

What makes this situation even more interesting are the restrictions the AHL has in place in regards to playing veteran players. Teams can only dress five (sometimes six) players who have more than 260 games played in any hockey league internationally. Limited jobs and a new potential employer throwing money and contracts around in Russia? Talk about a ‘Tweener dream.

The AHL isn't just a place for young future NHL stars to incubate. It's a business, one with its own set of attendance concerns and pressures to win. The departure of veteran minor league players to Russia or other overseas destinations could have a sever impact on the AHL; and, in many ways, its parent league as well.  

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  1. J.P.
    1. Posted by J.P. Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:42 pm EDT

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    Joel Kwiatkowski is a threat to the quality of hockey in any league in which he plays. Perhaps he's a mole sent by Gary et. al. to infiltrate the KHL and destroy it from within.
  2. J.P.
    2. Posted by J.P. Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:42 pm EDT

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    I had to immediately discredit your thinly-veiled attempt to pump up a fellow dude-with-Polish-sounding-last-name by implying that Kiwi's a decent hockey player. What's next - Don Koharski's a good ref? Don Majkowski's the best QB in Packers history? I'm on to you, Wyshynski...
  3. Wyshynski
    3. Posted by Wyshynski Thu Sep 03, 2009 8:21 pm EDT

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    This is nonsense, Japers. First of all, I'm Ukrainian, not Polish. Second of all, Oksana Baiul is the greatest figure skater of all time.
  4. # huit
    4. Posted by # huit Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:33 pm EDT

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    who would wanna play in usa anyway if u have a chance to play in zoo (=djurgården)
  5. Bubbabanjo
    5. Posted by Bubbabanjo Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:05 pm EDT

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    Oh yeah...........off to the KHL to become a political prisoner or a Gulag mop boy! Man Pooty Poot Putin (as King George calls him) is gonna wreck any chance that ever had. He wants to play army again.
    Wyshynski you stink!
  6. J.P.
    6. Posted by J.P. Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:42 pm EDT

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    I know you're Ukranian, GDub. That's why I said Polish-sounding. I'm sure you're sympathetic to people who are assumed to be Polish, so you stick up for anyone with a Polish-sounding name on the off-chance that they, like you, are Ukranian.
  7. MoltarRocks
    7. Posted by MoltarRocks Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:15 pm EDT

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    I've just figured this out. The KHL is the effective replacement for the IHL, where also-ran veterans of North America can go to play. I really don't have a problem with 2nd tier Euros going to play in the KHL. Let the KHL blow their funds on the likes of Mikko Eloranta, et al.
    Remember the 1994 season for the NHL? The IHL tried to expand, and killed themselves off in the process, dying a slow death earlier this decade.
    Besides, isn't the point of having veterans on an AHL team two-fold? (#1 being to aid the youngsters, #2 as emergency players). The typical lifespan of a veteran in the AHL isn't long, though career players do occur. I don't see that as detrimental at all. It's natural and I don't see it hurting the AHL in the long run.
  8. rtxg
    8. Posted by rtxg Thu Sep 03, 2009 8:55 pm EDT

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    Guys like Mark Hartigan, Trevor Letowski, Bryan Muir, Jeff Giuliano, Jamie Rivers, Martin Grenier, Kevin Dallman, Pierre Dagenais, Duvie Westcott, Mark Rycroft, these are the guys who are your first call-ups and the players who fill those 13th forward and 7th defenceman's spots, and they're all playing for KHL teams now. To me, that's where the KHL hits the NHL where it hurts--in the "depth player" department.
  9. MoltarRocks
    9. Posted by MoltarRocks Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:15 pm EDT

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    @ rxtg.
    While I don't totally disagree with you, I don't think having any of the players you listed not on an AHL hurts. Honestly, it does the contrary - it forces the development of younger players earlier. If I'm Hartigan, I have next to nothing of a chance of a regular spot on the Wings. Of all the ones you list, only Letwoski rings a bell in terms of serious time. Pierre Dagenais? Hasn't been in the NHL in 2 years. He sounds more like the 23rd forward than the 13th.
  10. Quebecois
    10. Posted by Quebecois Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:22 pm EDT

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    "This is nonsense, Japers. First of all, I'm Ukrainian, not Polish."
    Ohh ... it really explains your Russian fetish.
  11. scrappy
    11. Posted by scrappy Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:50 pm EDT

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    I really have to agree with MoltarRocks in how he views this. Take a guy like Kyle Wanvig who went over there to play. This guy was a 4th line player with the Wild, was a 4th liner with the Thrashers at best. He was doing nothing but taking up space in their system from some youngster that they could of been developing. Maybe with all the has-beens and never-will-be players heading over there to play, we will get a chance to see NHL teams actually develope their young players.
  12. Kohzlick
    12. Posted by Kohzlick Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:53 pm EDT

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    This is absurd...there is no way Malik is this well spoken. He looks like Herman Munster on the ice; his comments must have been taken out of context and put in somebody else's perspective...almost as if someone else is saying it...the logic is flawless.
    How can this article have any merit? The AHL is in no danger to the KHL...c'mon Wishneskovich, don't just write what you hear, have the nerve to write about your true emotions for a change.
  13. Chad C
    13. Posted by Chad C Thu Sep 03, 2009 8:34 pm EDT

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    When I first heard about the KHL, I said that the players they get would be the border-line guys like Hartigan, and the Euro players who would be on the bottom half of an NHL roster. Their choice is stay home and play on a top line for more money or come over here and make a little more than minimum salary in a limited role. The KHL is to the NHL what MLS is it the top Euro soccer leagues.
  14. cristobal
    14. Posted by cristobal Thu Sep 03, 2009 3:24 pm EDT

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    Moltar rocks - the kings and bruins "blew" their funds on Mikko Eloranta for a number of years. the jokes on us. the kings also "blew" their funds, while charging top dollar, for Giuliano and Zeiller.
    I gave up trying to change the NHL. I'm going with "5 ways I'd change the KHL." We'd totally dominate.
    http://worldhockeydaily.wordpress.com/
  15. kevin s
    15. Posted by kevin s Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:50 pm EDT

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    The AHL is better than the NHL, those guys have more love for the game!!!

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