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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 3:23 PM

Trying to make sense of Sens' grievance

Eric Duhatschek

Just when you thought that Dany Heatley’s dispute with the Ottawa Senators had faded mercifully into the history books comes the news that his ex-team now wants their former star forward to repay the $4-million (all currency U.S.) bonus they paid him back on July 1.

Not sure how this grievance is winnable from the Senators’ perspective, on any level.

Yes, they can argue that they paid a lot of money to Heatley on that $45-million contract he'd signed two years previously and weren’t duly compensated by his performance on the ice. Yes, they can complain that it was Heatley’s intransigence – refusing to waive his no-movement clause to accept a trade to the Edmonton Oilers – that left the Senators on the hook for that bonus payment, because of the way they'd originally worded the contract.

Though both positions are eminently defensible, legally, they sound like wobbly starting points.

If Ottawa had wanted to desperately to recoup that $4-million before they traded him, they should have made the San Jose Sharks absorb a contract they wanted to unload. Every team has them these days; and often, the willingness of a trading partner to take on an unattractive contract is the tipping point in a deal. Why do you think Tom Preissing gets traded so often? Or Brad Lukowich?

Given how difficult it was for the Senators to get value back for Heatley because of his $7.5-million annual salary-cap charge, an arbitrator would look at the deal and say the dollars the Sharks saved on the contract might have been the reason they went forward on the trade that sent Milan Michalek and Jonathan Cheechoo to Ottawa. One way or another, Heatley was going to get his money from somebody.

Naturally, the larger issue is the timing of the grievance. Originally the Senators filed the complaint against Heatley in the summer and asked for an expedited hearing. That was turned down. So now, here is the NHL Players’ Association, likely at rock bottom in terms of its strength as a union because of another round of resignations and departures, and the Senators brightly determine that they want to continue the fight. Well, why not? Kick 'me where they're down, right?

Publicly, the NHL’s position – on the rare occasions when commissioner Gary Bettman will discuss the NHLPA’s trials and tribulations – is that the league believes a strong union is good for business.

Deep down, it is hard to imagine they truly believe that. Otherwise, would they have not have discouraged Sens owner Eugene Melnyk from filing a complaint that seems like a sure-fire loser, given that Heatley – whatever you may think about him asking for a trade after negotiating a no-movement clause - did not technically breach his contract.

In the end, all these grievances go before an independent arbitrator. The NHLPA has appointed as interim legal counsel, long-time association attorney Roland Lee to handle matters in the short term.

Even as the union self destructs, the one thing you can be sure of is that even if they need to look outside their ranks for help, they can always find a sharp lawyer somewhere willing to mount a defence on Heatley’s behalf.

In some ways, the NHL has inadvertently done the players a favour by heading down this path. Just in case the players association required further evidence of the need for strong leadership heading into the next CBA talks, this pre-emptive shot across the union's bow can only reinforce that belief.

And the NHLPA does have one card to play – the option of extending the CBA to 2012, or for an extra year beyond the original six-year term, to prepare for the battle that lies ahead.

That extension, you’d think, is as good as done – or it will be, as soon as they put someone in charge who is actually empowered to make a decision.

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Globe On Hockey Contributors

David Shoalts

David Shoalts, a native of Wainfleet, Ont., joined The Globe in 1984 as a layout and copy editor in the sports section. He attended the University of Waterloo and Conestoga College. After graduating from Conestoga with a journalism diploma in 1978, Shoalts worked at the Calgary Herald and the Calgary Sun, and later the Toronto Sun.

In 1986, Shoalts went back to the writing side of the business. He was the CFL reporter for The Globe for four years and then switched to hockey. He has covered the Toronto Maple Leafs and the NHL ever since and became a hockey columnist in 2003. Among the most memorable events Shoalts has covered are the final hockey game at the old Chicago Stadium (between the Maple Leafs and Blackhawks) and the men's and women's gold-medal hockey games at the 2002 Winter Olympics. He is also the author of a book of humour, Tales From The Toronto Maple Leafs, and co-author with retired Globe columnist William Houston of Greed and Glory, The Fall of Hockey Czar Alan Eagleson.

 
Allan Maki

Allan Maki

Allan Maki joined the Globe in 1997, after spending 19 years as a reporter and columnist at the Calgary Herald. Born in Thunder Bay, Ont., Maki graduated from the Ryerson School of Journalism in 1977.

A past president of the Football Writers of Canada, Maki has covered every Grey Cup since 1980. He's been to seven Olympic Games and covered everything from rodeos to the World Series to the Super Bowl.

A regular commentator on radio and television, Maki hosted a sports program for two years on CBC Newsworld. He has won several awards for his writing and was nominated for a National Newspaper Award in 1995.

 
Eric Duhatschek

Eric Duhatschek

Eric Duhatschek was the winner of the Hockey Hall Of Fame's Elmer Ferguson award for "distinguished contributions to hockey writing" in 2001. A graduate of the University of Western Ontario's grad school of journalism, he began covering hockey in 1978 and after spending 20 years covering the NHL and the Calgary Flames, joined globeandmail.com in September, 2000, where he writes a five-time-a-week NHL column.

A frequent contributor to Hockey Night in Canada's Satellite Hot Stove segment, he has covered four Winter Olympics, 19 Stanley Cup finals, every Canada Cup and World Cup since 1981, plus two world championships. Most recently, he was appointed as the newest member of the Hockey Hall Of Fame's annual Selection Committee.