Mod note: Hey Catchup--Hope you don't mind, changed the topic title to reflect where it has gone in the thread since the confirmation of the change in cap.
Now back to the topic. I am not going to argue with you Bruins. Maybe it is because living in Canada I am yet to meet a person who if they were not a hockey fan back in 1990 are now a hockey fan, and I have yet to meet a person who was a fan in 1990 who is not one now. Maybe different here. I dunno. I know some people's passion for the game has waivered and changed since 1990, mainly based on getting older and having different responsibilities in life. Someday, maybe I should grow up too?

Cause that is what those people say to me as their reason for dropping being a fan. Ugh.
Anyway, got an interesting thought about the cap from another board.
2006 free agents who signed big contracts: Kubina, McCabe, Chara, Jovo, Gonchar,Richards,Rob Blake, Havlat signed by Toronto, Boston, Phoenix, Pittsburgh, Tampa Bay, LA Kings, Chicago....what do those teams have in common?
1. They all either missed the playoffs, or did not go anywhere.
2. They all did not sign a big name Free Agent for big dollars this season.
Interesting is it not? Blew their wad last year...no success. Now in difficulty (with the exception that proves the rule clearly being Pittsburgh). LA could be an exception as well, with Handzus, Nagy, Preissing...they are starting to look good, but they blew up their team at the end of last season to start over. Now they still need goaltending.
Could it be that even though we see some guys going nutso this year (philly, NYR,LA as examples only) that these teams will not be able to do it every year, like in the past where two or three teams just kept reloading every season? Too short a sample pool maybe.
Also if the NHL is becoming less popular (not remaining stagnant, or increasing), you can only raise ticket, merchandise prices so much...so the revenues should drop off...
Which means maybe, just maybe these teams are going to be in a cap issue if it goes down in the near future. So far, it looks great for players but in the future if revenues drop...it may not be so great.
Just random thoughts.
Also these front loaded contracts are clearly the way around the cap.
Year 1 9 mill
Year 2 9 mil
Year 3 8 mill
Year 4 5 mill
Year 5 3 mill
Year 6 2 mill
Year 7 2 mill
Year 8 2 mill
40 mill/8 years: adds up to a 5 mill cap hit, over the course of the contract. Pretty good deal for both the team and the player. Get a huge $ player (Briere) and still leave yourself alot of room under the cap.
Plus if he sucks in year 5 You buy out the last 3 years at 2 mill each. Cheapo. Still have the cap hit but it is then spread over 6 years instead of three. 5 mill per year cap hit, 3 years 15 mill. Instead of this, take 2.5 mill per year cap hit for 6 years. Whup de doo....Especially if the cap rises.
The players are benefitting, and the big guy capologists are figuring out how to make this work for teams who have money now, and how to make it work 7 years down the road when a player like Briere is getting really old.
The cap is becoming a non issue for some teams. OThers have to figure out how to get to the floor.
Anyone get any of this???
Edit: Holy rubbish, that was long. Anyone read all of that? I sure don't want too...