Coming in at the top of the payroll list is SKA Saint Petersburg, and that should surprise no one after they signed Ilya Kovalchuk for nearly all the vodka in Russia. They are spending an incredible 1,271,188,649 rubles this season on their 22-man roster. With rubles being approximately 33-to-1 in exchange for US dollars, that would put SKA in at $38,520,868 US for their payroll. I believe half of that is going to Kovalchuk, but that's another discussion altogether.
While it would seem that the KHL have kept salaries relatively low based upon SKA St. Petersburg's total payroll, there is reason for concern when looking at the other side of the coin. Expansion team Medvescek Zagreb has allotted a mere 180,794,388 rubles to its players which converts to $5,882,353. Yes, you read that correctly. There are players in the NHL that make more than the entire Zagreb team does in one season!
There are four teams - Ak Bars Kazan, Metallurg Magnitogorsk, Salavat Yulaev Ufa, and the aforementioned SKA St. Peterburg - that will pay their players in excess of $30 million this season, and CSKA Moscow is a paltry $746,000 from that $30 million mark. On the flip side, there are seven teams - Admiral Vladivostok, Dinamo Minsk, Dinamo Riga, Metallurg Novokuznetsk, Slovan Bratislava, Spartak Moscow, and the aforementioned Medvescek Zagreb - that will operate below the $10 million mark with three more teams - Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg, Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod, and Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk - not paying out more than $11 million. That's more than one-third of the league that is significantly below the league average of $17,510,694 in payroll. Anyone see some disparity here?
It should be no surprise that when we look at last season's standings, we find the teams that have the highest payrolls are at or near the top of the standings.
Club | Points | Payroll | Spending |
---|---|---|---|
SKA Saint Petersburg | 115 | $38,520,868 | 1 |
Ak Bars Kazan | 104 | $32,884,463 | 2 |
Avangard Omsk | 102 | $26,121,787 | 8 |
Dynamo Moscow | 101 | $26,229,042 | 7 |
Traktor Chelyabinsk | 98 | $26,626,939 | 6 |
CSKA Moscow | 96 | $29,254,909 | 5 |
Metallurg Magnitogorsk | 93 | $31,333,182 | 3 |
Lokomotiv Yaroslavl | 92 | $21,708,470 | 10 |
Salavat Yulaev Ufa | 88 | $30,644,671 | 4 |
Barys Astana | 85 | $17,042,534 | 13 |
Severstal Cherepovets | 85 | $13,502,727 | 15 |
Sibir Novosibirsk | 84 | $12,322,182 | 16 |
Slovan Bratislava | 78 | $5,636,864 | 27 |
Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk | 77 | $13,933,701 | 14 |
Lev Prague | 76 | $22,472,864 | 9 |
Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk | 74 | $10,540,000 | 21 |
Atlant Moscow | 73 | $18,578,939 | 12 |
Donbass Donetsk | 72 | $21,689,923 | 11 |
Dinamo Minsk | 71 | $8,877,091 | 23 |
Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod | 69 | $10,659,706 | 20 |
Metallurg Novokuznetsk | 58 | $5,882,353 | 26 |
Vityaz Chekhov | 55 | $11,881,737 | 17 |
Spartak Moscow | 52 | $9,831,515 | 22 |
Dinamo Riga | 51 | $8,105,264 | 25 |
Amur Khabarovsk | 44 | $11,161,418 | 18 |
Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg | 35 | $10,661,758 | 19 |
Admiral Vladivostok | NR* | $8,715,893 | 24 |
Medvescak Zagreb | NR* | $5,478,618 | 28 |
Now we'll always see one or two exceptions work their way to the upper echelon of teams simply because they work hard, they catch a few breaks, and the players on the ice as a whole are greater than their individual parts. But it's hard to ignore the six teams that pay out less than $10 million occupying six of the bottom-ten spots. Granted, the last two - Admiral Vladivostok and Medvescak Zagreb - are expansion teams this season, but is there any reason to believe they'll get into a playoff spot with a combined payout that is less than 14 other individual teams?
While I appreciate the large markets in the KHL spending money freely, there may have to be some sort of cap placed upon these teams at some point so some of the smaller markets can remain competitive with the big boys in Russia. No one likes losing, and missing the playoffs year after year is a recipe for fan apathy in those cities. It happens here in North America, and I'm pretty sure it happens in Russia as well.
Of course, when you factor in that seven former NHL stars would make up the sixth-highest payroll in Russia at $29,119,985, that also doesn't help. Those seven players include Anton Babchuk (Salavat Yulaev), Alexander Burmistrov (Ak Bars), Ilya Kovalchuk (SKA), Leonid Komarov (Dynamo Moscow), Sergei Kostitsyn (Avangard), Alexander Radulov (CSKA), and Ruslan Fedotenko (Donbass). Not ironically, those teams sit fourth, second, first, seventh, eighth, fifth, and eleventh in payrolls.
Good teams with lots of money attract good players. It's a simple equation. But the KHL may want to look at distributing talent a little more evenly to keep the competitiveness alive between the majority of teams.
Until next time, keep your sticks on the ice!
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