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    NHL, Russia “respect” each other (but…)

    До тех пор, suckers!

    До тех пор, suckers!

    Around mid-afternoon yesterday, it was announced that the NHL and the new Kontinental Hockey League (the expanded former Russian Super League) would both “respect” the other league’s contracts and agree not to poach players from one league or the other.

    The NHL had grown increasingly concerned with several Russian clubs’ desire to lure the dynamic Evgeni Malkin back to his homeland with big, tax-free contracts. There hasn’t been a transfer agreement between the leagues in three years, but that’s all been sorted out now, and everyone’s just fine with the agreement.

    “Everyone in the room agreed that for the foreseeable future everyone will respect everybody’s contracts,” NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly said.

    Players’ union director Paul Kelly said all parties recognized the need for “clear respect between leagues.”

    “There is no sense to make a war,” IIHF president Rene Fasel said. “Everyone agrees we could make a war very easily, but with no winner. The loser will be the game.

    “Even if we don’t have a transfer agreement today we have a very good understanding of each other.”

    But then later in the night, word got out that Predators forward Alexander Radulov had signed a deal with Russian team Ufa despite still being under contract in Nashville. Here are some highlights from an interview with the Russian paper Sport Express (click only if you can read Cyrillic moon writing).

    “I have told them several times that I have an offer from Ufa and a great desire to play in Russia. I told them that what Ufa offered was much better than there in Nashville. They listened to me and said they would call back. Up until now I have received no call. Looks like they did not want to keep me that much, or maybe thought I would not dare take such a step.”

    Or MAYBE it’s because you’re still currently under contract with them and they couldn’t just renegotiate a new contract in the middle of an existing one, and certainly not one that could come close to matching the $13 million over three years in tax-free cash the Russian team offered.

    The IIHF has since demanded that the Ufa contract be voided, but KHL president Alexander Medvedev has since said that the transfer agreement doesn’t take effect until July 14, so no big deal (again, moon language).

    Frankly this all seems a little fishy to me. If you take a look at his player history, Radulov has been committed to the North American development process since being drafted, playing full seasons for the QMJHL’s Quebec Ramparts and then even playing in the AHL for Milwaukee, the concept of which causes so many players to balk and head back to Mother Russia rather than face the indignity of playing hockey in Iowa.

    If Radulov is forced to come back, that will be the most awkward moment in the NHL since Mark Messier met Gary Coleman.

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