Photo credit: Walter Tychnowicz-Imagn Image
If you were hoping the NHL would finally reward winning and punish coasting, Gary Bettman just poured a bucket of ice water on your dreams.
The Commissioner spoke to the media recently, and his comments were exactly what you’d expect. Dismissive. Arrogant. Completely out of touch with the product on the ice.
When asked by reporter Luke Fox about adopting the international 3-2-1 point system—a format that actually encourages teams to win in regulation—Bettman didn’t just say no. He pretended the question didn’t even make sense.
“We like what we have,” Bettman said. “We’re not in search of a problem to fix.”
Read that again. He isn’t searching for a problem.
Anyone watching a tie game in the final five minutes of the third period can see the problem. The puck freezes. Offense dies. Both teams stop skating because they know a “loser point” is guaranteed if they just kill the clock.
It’s boring. It’s bad entertainment. And the fans hate it.
Bettman is choosing stubbornness over the integrity of the game
This is the Bettman playbook. Deny, deflect, and pretend everything is perfect while the house burns down.
It’s the same attitude he takes toward the salary cap disparity. We all know teams in tax-free states like Florida, Texas, and Nevada have a massive advantage.
They can sign stars for millions less than Toronto, Montreal, or Vancouver because the take-home pay is higher.
Does the league address it? No. Bettman acts like a hard cap in a league with vastly different tax laws is a level playing field. It isn’t.
Canadian teams are fighting with one hand tied behind their backs, bleeding talent to the Sun Belt, and the Commissioner just shrugs. It’s becoming more clear by the year that this current regime is attempting to give American teams an advantage in a twisted attempt to “grow the game”.
The 3-2-1 system works everywhere else. The PWHL uses it. Europe uses it. It makes every minute of the third period matter because a regulation win is worth more than an OT win.
But Bettman claims he likes what he has. He claims there are no issues.
What he has is a league where mediocrity is rewarded and teams are incentivized not to lose rather than to win.
As long as he’s in charge, don’t expect common sense to win out. He’s comfortable. And clearly, he doesn’t care if you aren’t.
Previously on Toronto Hockey Daily
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Bettman’s latest announcement leaves NHL fans livid: ‘We’re not in search of a problem to fix’
Is the 3-2-1 point system better than what the NHL currently uses?