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Ice Chips

  • A farewell raspberry from the CHL
    The championship Komets came up with a big goose egg at the CHL Awards banquet.
  • Lots to share, K's readers
    The Florida Everblades, the team with the best name and logo in the league, wrapped up the ECHL's Kelly Cup on Wednesday night.
  • Ah, the memories
    First off, I neglected the other day to post this story -- click here -- about the Komets' using the move to the ECHL as
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Looking at CBA between CHL, players' union

Komets general manager David Franke never doubted a collective bargaining agreement between the Central Hockey League and the Professional Hockey Players' Association would be ratified.

He just worried it would come later rather than sooner.

So it was with a measure of relief that a two-year CBA was finalized Tuesday.

"I think the biggest thing is that it's done now, there's a two-year deal in place, and we don't have to wait until the night before the first game or anything," Franke said. "We don't have to keep wondering."

Because they didn't join the CHL until June, the Komets and the three other teams that were part of the IHL last season -- Dayton, Quad City and Bloomington -- largely remained outside of the negotiations, Fort Wayne president Michael Franke said.

However, David Franke said, "We really didn't see anything that surprised us."

CHL teams will work with a salary cap approximate to $11,000 per week, about $1,000 less than it would have been in the IHL. The $11,000 figure isn't fixed since there are allowances teams can take advantage of to pay their players.

For example, teams can have two players deemed offseason employees, and they can be paid outside of the salary cap. One of the Komets' such players, David Franke confirmed, is goaltender Nick Boucher.

Team can also get a credit against their highest paid player, David Franke said, so that only half his salary counts against the cap.

CHL teams can carry 19 players on their active rosters and dress 18 for games.

Teams can have five veteran players with 301 or more games on their record at the beginning of the season, though that number can actually be ballooned to eight. Goaltenders don't count on your veteran limit, and an extra veteran can be added if he was on the roster in 2009-10.

Not including goalies, the Komets have three veterans -- forwards P.C. Drouin and Leo Thomas, and defenseman Guy Dupuis.

"Having the ability to reach this agreement and continue to operate under stable labor/management relations was an opportunity that could not be overlooked," PHPA executive director Larry Landon said in a statement. "Both sides worked tirelessly to come to terms on an agreement, which built upon the existing framework negotiated in the inaugural CBA."

  • According to Michael Franke, season-ticket sales will be about the same as last season. There were 3,506 last season, and this season he expects between 3,400 and 3,600. "It's going better than I expected," he said, "given the economy."
  • Though they wanted to have a third exhibition game, the Komets couldn't find an opponent and will stick with a home-and-home series with Dayton on Oct. 7, at Memorial Coliseum, and Oct. 9, at Hara Arena.
  • The Komets may look to Konstantin Shafranov as a player to fill in from time to time, if they need him. The 41-year-old left wing played 58 games with them last season.

Justin A. Cohn, pro sports coordinator for The Journal Gazette, has been covering the Fort Wayne Komets since 1997. His reporting includes game stories from home and away, features about the players and personalities associated with the Komets, plus coverage of issues affecting hockey at all levels. A native of Bloomfield Hills, Mich., Cohn graduated from Emory University in Atlanta. He can be reached at 260-461-8429 or by email at jcohn@jg.net.