Not at all.Cost of living is higher in Canada than the United States...
Not at all.Cost of living is higher in Canada than the United States...
True, we lack the economy of scale and a lot of taxes are embedded in our product prices. I noticed that years ago when I drove a car in the U.S. and had to gas up. Also why some Canadians cross border shop (before the lockdown.Cost of living is higher in Canada than the United States...
You gotta to be kidding... Look up the price to have a kid in the US. To put that kid in daycare. Look at rental/housing marking in major area. And in many states they pay same tax as us but without major benefit we have here. I have been working with work colleagues everywhere in the US for the last 20 years and they truly envy us (except for our weather... And that I understand them).True, we lack the economy of scale and a lot of taxes are embedded in our product prices. I noticed that years ago when I drove a car in the U.S. and had to gas up. Also why some Canadians cross border shop (before the lockdown.
True it used to be like that. And Canadian team were doing great because of that!"Can the Montreal Canadiens take two players from Quebec?
So they decided that the Montreal Canadiens could take any two players from the province of Quebec in a special draft. There was one rider however. None of these players could have already been previously signed which in those days meant to an A, B or C form."
The U.S. is a big country so it is better to compare specific locations rather than a macro country comparison. We have an office in Buffalo so let's compare cost of living there vs Toronto.You gotta to be kidding... Look up the price to have a kid in the US. To put that kid in daycare. Look at rental/housing marking in major area. And in many states they pay same tax as us but without major benefit we have here. I have been working with work colleagues everywhere in the US for the last 20 years and they truly envy us (except for our weather... And that I understand them).
That's true but who in hell would want to go to live if fucking BuffaloThe U.S. is a big country so it is better to compare specific locations rather than a macro country comparison. We have an office in Buffalo so let's compare cost of living there vs Toronto.
Cost of Living Comparison Between Buffalo, NY and Toronto You would need around 5,124.23$ (6,545.34C$) in Toronto to maintain the same standard of life that you can have with 4,100.00 $ in Buffalo, NY (assuming you rent in both cities). This calculation uses our Cost of Living Plus Rent Index to compare cost of living.
Yes but it may be Carey price, I believe he's 35th in goaltending stats approximately. Everyone thinks he's going to return to form but there's no evidence he ever will. The odd part is they chose him over halak and he's lights out now 10 years later. However skinner is an awful contract.Current contracts the first one that popped into my mind is Jeff Skinner's. He's been a healthy scratch for 3 straight games and he's making $9mil per year until 2026. Just gross.
Even grosser if you are the one that has to pay it. And grosser yet if you are the GM who gave it to him.Current contracts the first one that popped into my mind is Jeff Skinner's. He's been a healthy scratch for 3 straight games and he's making $9mil per year until 2026. Just gross.
TBH, I've never heard that term before. Whatever it means, it has a pretty good ring to it.You just reminded me of Lupul's snorty contract
He was overpaid because he had one good year and was a horrible skater. The snorty part I'm sure you could figure out with a google search.TBH, I've never heard that term before. Whatever it means, it has a pretty good ring to it.
Not an issue in a non cap world which is the context of this discussion.Players would not chose Montreal due to cost of living...
What does make a difference for a big market in a cap world is the ancillary income a star can make via endorsements and notoriety. Nobody can compete with NYC in that regard, but I'd say that Toronto has an advantage over Montreal for grabbing Canadian corporate dollars.Not an issue in a non cap world which is the context of this discussion.
This is only an issue in a cap world. Montreal or any of the three clear revenue top teams (Toronto and NYR) which also have tax issues relative to other markets, cannot outspend people in this enveonment. As we have seen when a team like Toronto has a bunch of talent the cap crunch eventually comes.
When you have to ensure your contracts are in line with the rest of the league, yes things like taxes matter and make you less attractive.
But in cap free world, Montreal make up for this because of their high revenue levels. They could make up by paying more to players for their extra taxes.
Once local TV deals really started to get monetized about 15 years ago due to competing sports networks in Canada and the US the revenue distortion amongst teams got even bigger in sports leagues. In hockey Montreal was one of the big winners and the level of revenue they have over the average American market is huge. Toronto would have the same and probably bigger advantage.
Of course the cap world I doubt is changing anytime soon and that will make it difficult for Montreal especially when they have a massive contract to an above average goalie but not much more then that right now. And who could be worse than that.
Wrong, hockey players aren't even on the radar in NYC. Lunquist had a moderate head and shoulders endorsement. Once again you're IGNORING (all caps) facts. Top players make ok endorsements but diddly compared to other sports figures.What does make a difference for a big market in a cap world is the ancillary income a star can make via endorsements and notoriety. Nobody can compete with NYC in that regard, but I'd say that Toronto has an advantage over Montreal for grabbing Canadian corporate dollars.
31 teams in the NHL...It is arrogant to think that Montreal, the city, province, and team, has more to offer than the rest of cities in the league.Not an issue in a non cap world which is the context of this discussion.
This is only an issue in a cap world. Montreal or any of the three clear revenue top teams (Toronto and NYR) which also have tax issues relative to other markets, cannot outspend people in this enveonment. As we have seen when a team like Toronto has a bunch of talent the cap crunch eventually comes.
When you have to ensure your contracts are in line with the rest of the league, yes things like taxes matter and make you less attractive.
But in cap free world, Montreal make up for this because of their high revenue levels. They could make up by paying more to players for their extra taxes.
Once local TV deals really started to get monetized about 15 years ago due to competing sports networks in Canada and the US the revenue distortion amongst teams got even bigger in sports leagues. In hockey Montreal was one of the big winners and the level of revenue they have over the average American market is huge. Toronto would have the same and probably bigger advantage.
Of course the cap world I doubt is changing anytime soon and that will make it difficult for Montreal especially when they have a massive contract to an above average goalie but not much more then that right now. And who could be worse than that.
I am always amused when leafs fans bring this up as some massive loophole that led to a huge advantage for Montreal... and worse than that get many (perhaps not Shack) who extrapolate that advantage to Montreal across the two dynasties.Mo. Could you please refresh my memory. Wasn't there some kind of deal where the Habs could claim any 2 players from the Quebec junior league before they were available to rest of the clubs? IIRC, the last time that they could do this they selected Marc Tardif and Rejean Houle. If so, that would have been a huge advantage. Or am I mistaken?
How many times are you going to move the goalposts?31 teams in the NHL...It is arrogant to think that Montreal, the city, province, and team, has more to offer than the rest of cities in the league.
They overpay for players they have and have no chance at signing free agents in a reasonable fair competition.
I'm not moving them...reality is.How many times are you going to move the goalposts?
Shack I’m not going to argue with you that in a non cap world that Toronto would not have some spending power over Montreal.. They certainly would. But the point that was made was that Montreal would suffer to American markets in a non cap world which is blatantly false.What does make a difference for a big market in a cap world is the ancillary income a star can make via endorsements and notoriety. Nobody can compete with NYC in that regard, but I'd say that Toronto has an advantage over Montreal for grabbing Canadian corporate dollars.
No goalie is worth that much money. You can't win when your paying that much to a goalie.I was just going to bring up Carey Price. Can you even say right now he's a 10.5 million goalie? 9 games 5 wins 4 losses .901 SV% when his career is .917 SV%