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Reports: NHLPA to vote on $75 million salary cap

NHLPA Member Meeting

NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 13: Don Fehr, executive director of the National Hockey League Players Association meets with the media at the Marriott Marquis Times Square on September 13, 2012 in New York City. Joining him from left to right is Ruslan Fedotenko, Henrik Lundqvist, Zdeno Chara and Sidney Crosby. (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

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According to multiple reports, the NHLPA is expected to vote on a $75 million salary cap today.

If approved, it would raise the cap from its current level of $73 million; however, it would not quite match the $76 million figure that the league pegged in March.

It’s not clear how the union came up with the $75 million figure. It’s possible that only part of the five percent growth factor was used -- say, 1.5 to 2.5 percent -- with the addition of the Vegas Golden Knights making that more palatable for free agents.

There had been talk that the salary cap could remain flat for next season, as a way to address the players’ concerns about escrow.

“Obviously the higher the cap goes, the more exacerbated the escrow problem becomes,” NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said before the Stanley Cup Final. “Certainly our position with the players’ association has been that we’ll manage the cap tighter and keep it lower to try to address the escrow situation, if that’s your preference.”