NHL and NHLPA close to agreeing on
4-year CBA extension including an 84-game season, AP sources say
[June 27, 2025]
By STEPHEN WHYNO and JOHN WAWROW
The NHL and NHL Players' Association are on the verge of extending
the collective bargaining agreement more than a year before it
expires and expanding the regular season to 84 games.
The league and union have been in talks since April and are closing
in on a memorandum of understanding addressing a number of
high-profile topics long before the current agreement runs out in
September 2026. The four-year extension that could be announced as
soon as Friday at the draft in Los Angeles would provide extended
labor peace in a sport that has had multiple work stoppages,
including the 2004-05 lockout that wiped out an entire season.
The league and union closing in on a deal was confirmed Thursday by
three people familiar with the negotiations who spoke with The
Associated Press on condition on anonymity because the deal had not
yet been finalized. It was first reported by Daily Faceoff.
Two of the people said the new CBA will increase the regular season
to 84 games from 82, shorten the maximum length of contracts and add
a playoff salary cap for the first time. Extending the regular
season from a total of 1,312 games to 1,344 would also come with
curtailing exhibition play.
Since 2013, players have been able to re-sign with their own team
for up to eight years and sign with another for up to seven years.
Under the new CBA terms, each would be reduced by a year, to seven
for re-signing and six for changing teams.

[to top of second column] |

NHL commissioner Gary Bettman, left, hands the Stanley Cup to
Florida Panthers captain Aleksander Barkov (16) after defeating the
Edmonton Oilers in Game 6 of the NHL hockey Stanley Cup Final
Tuesday, June 17, 2025, in Sunrise, Fla. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

A salary cap in the postseason would prevent teams
from using long-term injured reserve rules to load up their rosters.
Currently, teams with players on LTIR can exceed the cap by roughly
the amount of the players' salaries until the playoffs begin. The
option has been used, for example, by Chicago (Patrick Kane in
2015), Tampa Bay (Nikita Kucherov in 2021) and the Vegas Golden
Knights (Mark Stone in multiple seasons) during their playoff runs.
NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman and NHLPA executive director Marty
Walsh foreshadowed a quick conclusion to labor talks speaking at the
Stanley Cup Final earlier in June. Bettman said the sides were “in
really good shape, having really good discussions,” and Walsh added
that talks were “moving forward, and I feel good with where we are.”
A full, new CBA would be the first since 2013. The league and the
union have been working on the memorandum negotiated in 2020 to
finish that season during the pandemic and would meld that agreement
with the framework from 12 years ago.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |