First organizing efforts (1957–1959) The first NHLPA was formed in 1957, led by
Ted Lindsay of the
Detroit Red Wings and
Doug Harvey of the
Montreal Canadiens, after the league had refused to release pension plan financial information. The owners sabotaged the certification of the union by, in part, trading players involved with the association or sending them to the minor leagues. After an out-of-court settlement over several players' issues, the players disbanded the organization. Lindsay's struggle and the NHL's
union busting efforts are dramatized in the movie
Net Worth.
Alan Eagleson era (1967–1991) The association formed in June 1967, when representatives of the six
NHL teams met and elected
Bob Pulford their first president and appointed
Alan Eagleson as its executive director. To prevent the new NHLPA from suffering the fate of its predecessor, Pulford met with the owners of the NHL teams and demanded they recognize the new union or the union would seek official recognition from the Canadian Industrial Relations Board (CIRB). Additionally, the players sought guarantees where no member of the new union would be punished for being a member. The owners acceded. In return, the NHLPA agreed it should represent at least two-thirds of the active players in the NHL and that the players would refrain from striking for the duration of the agreement, so long as the owners did not contravene any terms or conditions. Eagleson stayed on until the end of 1991, when the players replaced him with
Bob Goodenow, who had served as deputy director of the NHLPA since 1990. Eagleson went on to face
criminal charges relating to his conduct during the time he worked at the NHLPA, and ultimately, on January 6, 1998, pleaded guilty in a Boston court to three counts of
fraud, agreeing also to pay a fine of CA$1,000,000. The following day in
Toronto, Eagleson pleaded guilty to another three counts of fraud and was sentenced to 18 months in jail.
Bob Goodenow era (1992–2005) Bob Goodenow served executive director of the NHLPA for 13 years. In a departure to Eagleson who had been cozy with most NHL owners, Goodenow had a more confrontational tone. He led all NHLPA members through the
strike of 1992 on the eye of the
1992 Stanley Cup Playoffs, which most notably gave players the rights to the
marketing of their own images, and fundamentally altered the relationship between the league and its players. Longtime NHL president
John Ziegler Jr. was forced out of office by the owners as a result of the settlement that resolved the ten-day strike. In 1994–95, NHL players endured
a lockout. The NHL owners were strongly in favor of a
salary cap while the players were opposed. The NHL also wanted to levy a
luxury tax, but the NHLPA viewed that as a variation on a salary cap and refused to accept it. The NHL wanted to tie salaries to revenue in order to subsidize the operation of weaker teams, while the NHLPA sought revenue sharing to help the smaller market teams. After the lockout had dragged on, the talk of salary cap faded and new items entered the debate, including a rookie salary cap, changes to the arbitration system, and loosened free agency. Ultimately, large market teams such as
Toronto,
Detroit, the
New York Rangers,
Dallas, and
Philadelphia eventually broke with the league, as they feared that an extended lockout would outweigh the benefits from getting a salary cap or implementing a luxury tax and didn't want to be the first league in North America to forfeit an entire season just to help out their small-market colleagues. A decade later, in 2004–05, the owners
locked out the players again, becoming the first professional sports league to cancel an entire season. The NHLPA disputed the league's financial claims that most owners lost money, and Goodenow's mistrust of the league was supported by a November 2004
Forbes report that estimated the NHL's losses were less than half the amounts claimed by the league. The NHLPA suggested that the NHL's goal of "cost certainty" was little more than a
euphemism for a salary cap, which the NHLPA had vowed never to accept. The union rejected each of the six concepts presented by the NHL, claiming they all contained some form of salary cap. The NHLPA preferred to retain the existing "
marketplace" system where players individually negotiate contracts with teams, and teams have complete control of how much they want to spend on players. This time the NHL used a gag order to prevent owners from speaking up, which prevented the large market teams from breaking ranks as they did in 1994-95. Ending up, the NHLPA largely acceded to the NHL's demands. Goodenow would depart following the lockout, notifying the players of his resignation in July 2005.
Ted Saskin era (2005–2007) Goodenow was forced out, in favor of long-time NHLPA Senior Director
Ted Saskin as his successor, drawing on his knowledge in negotiating the collective bargaining agreement that ended the 2004-05 lockout, which contrasted with Goodenow's hardline approach. The NHLPA Executive Board terminated the employment of Saskin as executive director and general counsel on May 10, 2007, following alleged acts of
misconduct. Toronto employment lawyer Chris Paliare concluded Saskin and executive Ken Kim, beginning in September 2005 through January 2007, covertly accessed player email accounts.
Paul Kelly era (2007–2009) On June 28, 2007, the NHLPA's executive board selected
Michael Cammalleri (
Calgary Flames),
Chris Chelios (retired),
Shawn Horcoff (
Edmonton Oilers),
Eric Lindros (retired) and
Robyn Regehr (retired) to form a search committee for a new executive director. With the assistance of Reilly Partners, an executive search firm from
Chicago, the search committee would review the resumes of hundreds of candidates. The committee would ultimately recommend that
Paul V. Kelly, a founding partner of Kelly, Libby and Hoopes law firm in
Boston, become the fourth executive director since the NHLPA's inception in 1967. Through a secret ballot system, the Player Representatives voted in favour of the committee's recommendation, and Kelly would be introduced at a media conference on October 24, 2007. On December 7, 2007, the NHLPA and the
David Suzuki Foundation decided to create a pact, led by
Boston Bruins defenceman
Andrew Ference, which had over 500 NHL players signed up to donate $290 annually to purchase carbon credits in order to offset their regular season travel. On August 31, 2009, Paul Kelly was fired from the NHLPA. On October 30, 2009, interim Executive Director Ian Penny resigned.
Donald Fehr era (2010–2023) Following Ian Penny's resignation, board members, such as
Steve Larmer, also resigned. In late August 2010, it was widely speculated that former
Major League Baseball Players Association Executive Director
Donald Fehr would be appointed to this position. However, a day after the speculation reached a climax on August 26, both NHLPA interim director Mike Ouellet and deputy commissioner and chief legal officer of the NHL Bill Daly disputed the claims that it is all hearsay, and nothing is concrete between the NHLPA and Donald Fehr. However, Fehr would be formally named as executive director later in 2010. On January 6, 2012, the NHLPA rejected a proposal for realignment in the league for beginning in the 2012–13 season, which impacted CBA discussions. On September 15, 2012, with no agreement being reached on a new CBA, the owners
locked out the players, thus threatening the start of the 2012–13 NHL season. Three months later, on December 14, the NHL filed a class action suit with the U.S. District Court in New York seeking to establish the lockout was legal. They also filed an unfair labor practice charge with the U.S.
National Labor Relations Board, stating the union had been negotiating in bad faith and their threat to disclaim interest is a negotiating ploy which violates the collective bargaining process. On December 21, a person told the
Associated Press a vote was cast to give the NHLPA executive board a chance to file a
disclaimer of interest, with the vote in favor 706–22. The board had until January 2, 2013, to file the disclaimer, in which case the union would have dissolved and became a trade organization, which would have allowed players to file antitrust lawsuits against the NHL. On January 6, the NHLPA reached a tentative agreement with the NHL to end the lockout. The NHLPA then approved a league proposal for realignment in the league beginning in the 2013–14 season. In 2023, it was announced Fehr would be replaced as Executive Director by former United States Secretary of Labor
Marty Walsh. == Organization ==