Is Buzz behind it, in order to get some full-time employment? They might not like his style. Friendly with the bosses (well, having to associate with Gary Bettman might be all that attractive) but he's bossy, something the prima donnas called hockey players might not like. But he does know how to negotiate a contract.
Kelly departure a palace coup Sometimes, the NHL Players' Association makes a change at the top because of outright malfeasance – the Alan Eagleson era, as a case in point.
Sometimes, it is about personal style and a fractious leadership style that rubbed too many people the wrong way – Bob Goodenow step to the front of the line.
Sometimes, it is about process and the failure to follow it properly – hello Ted Saskin.
But on Sunday night/Monday morning when the NHLPA's executive board dismissed Paul Kelly as executive director, it is hard to see the move as anything except a palace coup – a grab for power, fought between two factions within the organization that had been an odds since this past February, or where Eric Lindros resigned as ombudsman, reportedly because there weren't enough contentious issues to arbitrate.
In one corner of this fight, you'll find Lindros – who currently has no official standing in the organization – plus his replacement as “interim ombudsman”, Buzz Hargrove, along with Halifax labour lawyer Ron Pink, and lawyer Ian Penny, a holdover from the Goodenow era who'd received a lucrative multi-year contract extension from the NHLPA executive board during last June's meetings in Las Vegas.
In the other corner, there was Kelly, Glenn Healy, the director of player affairs and Patrick Flatley, assistant director of player affairs. With Kelly out and Flatley reportedly having resigned on the heels of the Kelly firing, it is hard to imagine Healy staying on beyond the day – or week.
And to what end are these changes coming now, with the 2009-10 season just around the corner and players muddling along just fine, thank you?
Is it because Kelly had dinner one too many times with commissioner Gary Bettman? Is it because Kelly tried to make a flawed document – the new collective bargaining agreement, negotiated at the cost of the 2004-05 NHL season – work as well as it could for the players....
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