The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Contract terminated

L.A. Kings claim Mike Richards committed a ‘material breach’

- BY GREG BEACHAM

The Los Angeles Kings terminated Mike Richards’ contract Monday, claiming the underachie­ving forward committed a “material breach” of its terms.

The move is a surprising tactic in the Kings’ prolonged attempt to get out from under the last five seasons of the 12-year, US$69 million deal signed by Richards with Philadelph­ia in 2008.

The Kings acquired Richards in 2011, and he played a key supporting role on their two Stanley Cup champion teams. But Richards’ scoring production has declined sharply during his tenure in Los Angeles, culminatin­g in just 16 points from 53 games last season.

The Kings refused to detail their grounds for terminatin­g Richards’ deal, which carries an annual salary cap hit of $5.75 million through 2020. The NHL’s collective bargaining agreement with the players contains nebulous language allowing terminatio­n if a player should “fail, refuse, or neglect to obey the club’s rules governing training and conduct.”

In a brief statement, the Kings said Richards committed “a material breach of the requiremen­ts of his Standard Player’s Contract. We are not prepared to provide any more detail or to discuss the underlying grounds for the contract terminatio­n at this time.”

Los Angeles general manager Dean Lombardi has criticized Richards’ fitness at times while the forward struggled for much of his four seasons with the Kings, culminatin­g in a trip to the minors last season after no team claimed him off waivers.

Lombardi’s decision to terminate Richards’ contract could be contested by the NHL Players’ Associatio­n, and an arbitrator eventually could determine what happens.

Los Angeles placed Richards on waivers over the weekend for the second time this year.

The club demoted Richards to the AHL last season, recalling him late in the regular season before missing the playoffs as the defending Stanley Cup champions.

After his latest trip to waivers, Richards was expected to be bought out by the Kings, lessening his cap hit by spreading it out through 2025.

Instead, the Kings are attempting to declare themselves free of all obligation­s to Richards by breach of contract. Los Angeles still would be subject to a salary cap penalty for dropping Richards, but it would be much less onerous.

The NHL Players’ Associatio­n also kept its public comments brief and neutral.

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