Skip navigation

 Login or Register | Member Centre

NHL/NHLPA competition committee gets new faces

Canadian Press

TORONTO — The NHL's competition committee got a face lift Monday.

Brian Campbell of the San Jose Sharks, Jeff Halpern of the Tampa Bay Lightning, Ryan Miller of the Buffalo Sabres, Mathieu Schneider of the Anaheim Ducks and Jason Spezza of the Ottawa Senators have been selected by the executive board of the NHL Players' Association as the new player representatives on the committee.

They replace Rob Blake of the Los Angeles Kings, Jarome Iginla of the Calgary Flames, Trevor Linden of the Vancouver Canucks and Brendan Shanahan of the New York Rangers — who had served since the committee's inception after the NHL lockout. Martin Brodeur of the New Jersey Devils was also an original member but quit last year and was never replaced.

The five new players on the committee will serve two-year terms.

"The outgoing players on the committee deserve a great deal of gratitude for the work they have done to improve our game over the last three seasons," Paul Kelly, the NHLPA's executive director, said in a statement. "The NHLPA is looking forward to our newest members representing their fellow players on this important committee."

The NHL's representatives on the committee remain the same at this point: GMs Bob Gainey of the Montreal Canadiens, Kevin Lowe of the Edmonton Oilers, David Poile of the Nashville Predators, Don Waddell of the Atlanta Thrashers and owner Ed Snider of the Philadelphia Flyers.

The next competition committee meeting will take place June 13 in Toronto. By then it's possible the NHL will have new members as well.

"We will review our present status with our group before the next competition committee meeting in June," Colin Campbell, the NHL's executive vice-president and director of hockey operations, told The Canadian Press on Monday.

Campbell and NHLPA ombudsman Eric Lindros participate in the competition committee meetings but do not have voting rights.

The committee was formed in the new collective bargaining agreement as a joint effort to come up with recommendations to improve the game. The committee's findings get sent to the NHL's board of governors (owners).

Recommend this article? 1 votes

Travel

travel

Alt and Main: an insider's take on Vancouver

Blog: Driving It Home

Jeremy Cato: Driving It Home

Ford claims there is no future in diesel cars

Real Estate

Real Estate

Design with a West Coast edge

Business incubator

cooper

Sherry Cooper on the bottom-line basics

Personal Technology

bioware

Is PC gaming dead?

Back to top