@Ducks d'Anaheim

ANAHEIM VIENT DE SIGNER LE CONTRAT LNH LE PLUS BIZARRE QUE NOUS AVONS JAMAIS VU… (Frank Vatrano)



RESTEZ EN SÉCURITÉ EN LIGNE avec ExpressVPN, le réseau privé virtuel de confiance n°1 sur Internet ! Obtenez 3 MOIS GRATUITS @ https://www.expressvpn.com/legorocks99 #ad SOUTENEZ la chaîne avec SUPER MERCI ! Les contributeurs seront récompensés par des commentaires personnalisés et ma plus sincère gratitude. CLIQUEZ sur le bouton « $ MERCI » pour commencer ! Nous revenons sur la prolongation de contrat extrêmement bizarre de Frank Vatrano avec les Ducks d’Anaheim. Cette vidéo se déroule après le repêchage de la LNH 2024 et après les séries éliminatoires de la Coupe Stanley 2024. Le premier tour du repêchage 2024 de la LNH s’est déroulé comme suit : 1er) Sharks de San Jose, Macklin Celebrini 2e) Blackhawks de Chicago, Artyom Levshunov 3e) Ducks d’Anaheim, Beckett Sennecke 4e) Blue Jackets de Columbus, Cayden Lindstrom, 5e) Canadiens de Montréal, Ivan Demidov 6e) Club de hockey de l’Utah, Tij Iginla 7e) Sénateurs d’Ottawa, Carter Yakemchuk 8e) Seattle Kraken, Berkly Catton 9e) Flames de Calgary, Zayne Parekh 10e) Devils du New Jersey, Anton Silayev 11e) Sharks de San Jose (des Sabres de Buffalo), Sam Dickinson 12e) Wild du Minnesota (des Flyers de Philadelphie), Zeev Buium 13e) Philadelphie Flyers (du Wild du Minnesota), Jett Luchanko 14e) Sabres de Buffalo (des Penguins de Pittsburgh via les Sharks de San Jose), Konsta Helenius 15e) Red Wings de Détroit, Michael Brandsegg-Nygard 16e) Blues de St. Louis, Adam Jiricek 17e) Capitals de Washington, Terik Parascak 18e) Blackhawks de Chicago (des Islanders de New York), Sacha Boisvert 19e) Golden Knights de Vegas, Trevor Connelly 20e) Nouveau Islanders de York (du Lightning de Tampa Bay via les Blackhawks de Chicago), Cole Eiserman 21e) Canadiens de Montréal (de Los Angeles Angeles Kings), Michael Hage 22e) Predators de Nashville, Yegor Surin 23e) Anaheim Ducks (des Maple Leafs de Toronto), Stian Solberg 24e) Utah Hockey Club (de l’Avalanche du Colorado), Cole Beaudoin 25e) Bruins de Boston (des Bruins de Boston via Detroit Red Wings et Sénateurs d’Ottawa), Dean Letourneau 26e) Kings de Los Angeles (des Jets de Winnipeg via Canadiens de Montréal), Liam Greentree 27e) Blackhawks de Chicago (des Hurricanes de la Caroline), Marek Vanacker 28e) Flames de Calgary (des Canucks de Vancouver), Matvei Gridin 29e) Stars de Dallas, Emil Hemming 30e) Rangers de New York, EJ Emery 31e) Maple Leafs de Toronto (des Oilers d’Edmonton via les Ducks d’Anaheim) , Ben Danford 32e) Edmonton Oilers (des Florida Panthers via Philadelphia Flyers), Sam O’Reilly Cette vidéo est également ayant lieu après la saison 2024 de la LNH et après les séries éliminatoires de la Coupe Stanley 2024, où les Panthers de la Floride ont battu les Oilers d’Edmonton en finale. Twitter : @LR99Gaming Portfolio : http://giopalermo.ca/ Twitch : legorocks99 #NHL #NHLNews #NHLTrade #NHLTrades #NHLTradeRumours #NHLNewsToday #NHLDraft #NHLProspects #FlyTogether #AnaheimDucks #Ducks #Anaheim Salut. Je m’appelle « Gio Palermo », également connu sous le nom de « legorocks99 » (« legorocks99Gaming », « LR99Gaming » ou « LR99 »). Je publie sur YouTube des commentaires de jeux vidéo autour du « hockey », en mettant l’accent principalement sur les « Canucks de Vancouver », les « Canadiens de Montréal », les « Red Wings de Détroit » et les principaux sujets « espoirs de la LNH ». Ces vidéos sont mises en ligne avec le gameplay de « NHL 25 » en arrière-plan. J’aime faire ces vidéos et j’espère que vous apprécierez les regarder ! legorocks99 et toutes ses dénominations fonctionnent sous « Gio Palermo Media Inc. »

32 Comments

  1. From trade rumors Frank Vatrano is still available via trade from trade rumor that teams that didn’t want to give assets for rentals now have more interest in Frank vatrano and with an extension his trade value has gone up if true or not we will see?

  2. Deferred Compensation Contracts
    In the cap-strapped NHL where every dollar under the salary cap can make or break a team's season, front offices are constantly searching for innovative ways to structure contracts. One such strategy is deferred compensation, a financial maneuver that can subtly but significantly alter a team’s cap hit. But how does deferred compensation actually work, and why isn’t it more common in the NHL? Here are the intricacies of this contract strategy and examine how teams like the Carolina Hurricanes are leveraging it to their advantage.

    Teams and players can include deferred compensation in a contract as outlined in the Collective Bargaining Agreement. Some key notes:

    The compensation needs to be tied to a season in the contract when it is earned. A portion of the contract cannot be just generally deferred; it needs to be a portion of the payment earned during a specific season that is deferred.
    The deferred compensation needs to be paid after the contract expires for it to be considered deferred

  3. California did this to themselves. Shohei Ohtani structured his contract like this. Make all his money when he's back in Japan, or a resident of a zero tax state. California is a hellhole and is sinking fast. Good riddance woke communists.

  4. Sweet, let's have all Canadian teams do that. You can also think of the deferred salary as a pension. He'll get paid while retired

  5. I thought that this used to be legal and was the only way the Canadiens were able to attract players unwilling to be taxed in Quebec. However, I thought that the NHL closed that loophole.

  6. The Dodgers did differed payments for Ohtani and now Teoscar Hernandez. It's the way of the future for teams to afford a star studded roster to win championships I leagues with salary caps. It works for the players too since they still get their bag and now have a better chance of getting their rings too.

  7. California will still try to get their claws on that money. California actually taxes satellites in space! Yes, IN SPACE!!!!

  8. You need to look up the deal signed with the Dodgers and Shohei Ohtani. The difference between 9M/year and the 6 is that the one that will count on the cap is in today's value… and as someone with a bit of an accounting background… that's NOT tax evasion… that's tax avoidence… the difference being.. the former is a crime.. the latter perfectly legal.

  9. California may go after him for taxes of the work done for the payment was in California.

    He is a probably going to make way less then if he just paid the taxes and earned interest on the money

  10. not sure why more players do not do this. especially those playing in new york/california and even americans playing in canada.

  11. tax law in the united states is you pay tax on income in the year it is received. it is simply the same as placing money ina retirement account/ira. at the the time you take the $$ you are making less for athletes you will still be paying the max federal rate but if you live in a no tax state like florida you can save up to 14 percent. look up the bobby bonilia (not sure of spelling) he gets like 1 mil a year from the Mets in defered comp and has not played in 20 years.

  12. Sounds like an awesome deal for the Ducks, they can pay in future dollars that will be greatly diminished in value due to the loss in value of the currency, they save cap space because of that diminished value as well. Franky is taking a big risk since he will be taking payment in a dollar that is worth far less. This is a tax strategy that is created by someone who doesn't know anything about taxes or estate planning but it is much better than letting the state take half your money. Taxes are voluntary and have always been so. Better to know about taxes and estate planning than to sell your services short.

  13. Marginal income tax rates (MITR) are an interesting topic including that they vary by Canadian province and US stage among those that have NHL teams. Of those Canadian provinces that have NHL teams, going from east to west, for the 2024 fiscal year, the highest MITR was:
    – 25.75% for Quebec
    – 13.16% for Ontario
    – 17.4% for Manitoba
    – 15% for Alberta
    – 20.5% for BC

    Last June the Oilers came closer to winning a Stanley Cup than any Canadian team since the Canucks to end their 2010–11 season (the Habs’ having lost the 2021 Stanley Cup final in five games, two fewer than the Oilers would lose their 2024 one). Yet last year, Alberta, among those Canadian provinces, with NHL teams, had only the second-lowest MITR on the highest income earners. Could it be that, even with the lowest MITRs applicable to the highest income earners (before factoring in whatever federal income tax rates there are), limited playoff success, following the 2016-17 NHL season, has been why quite a number of players who they didn’t draft, but are still on those teams, are already in their 30s? I may have more to say a little bit later.

  14. This isn’t a bad deal. Cap going way up. This is peanuts. But you’re just click baiting like a good little YouTuber

  15. This would help so many athletes if they did this. Think of all the young athletes that go bankrupt after their career ends.

    Come to think of it i think you can get bank loans on gauerenteed future earnings, so essentially you can go out and spend that money on a house and it should appreciate over 10 years in value therefore the 900k in the future will grow and not depreciate, this is smart af.

  16. California taxes its residents to death. It's disgusting. Vatrano is an awesome player! He is also a fan favorite! Glad to see he got an extension!

  17. I love this contract

    It screws Cali a bit and I’m all for it

Write A Comment

Pin