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                                            | Gary Bettman was hired as NHL’s first Commissioner in 1993. (Matthew Manor/Hockey Hall of Fame) |  Gary  Bettman, born June 2, 1952 in Queens, New York, is currently the  longest-serving active commissioner in professional sports, having joined the  National Hockey League on February 1, 1993. After  graduating from law school, in 1977, Bettman joined the New York City law  firm of Proskauer, Rose, Goetz and Mendelsohn. Four years later, he was hired  by the National Basketball Association (NBA), where he rose through the ranks  to become third in command of the league. 
                                        
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                                            | Under Bettman the NHL has expanded from 24 to 31 teams.  
                                            (Matthew Manor/HHOF-IIHF-IOC) |  In  1993, NHL president Gil Stein stepped down and Gary Bettman was hired as the  NHL's first commissioner, and given a mandate that included increasing the  league's footprint in the United States while serving the team owners.  At  the time of Bettman's hiring, the NHL was comprised of 24 teams, with a  commitment to having the Florida Panthers and Mighty Ducks of Anaheim join the  NHL for the 1993-94 season. His focus on expansion into the United States  helped bring the number of NHL franchises to 31. In addition, he was integral  in relocating the Minnesota North Stars to Dallas in 1993, the Quebec Nordiques  to Denver in 1995, the original Winnipeg Jets to Phoenix in 1996, the Hartford  Whalers to Raleigh in 1997, and in 2011, the Atlanta Thrashers were moved to  Winnipeg. 
                                        
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                                            | In 1995 Bettman introduced the idea that each player on the Stanley Cup-winning team would have the opportunity to spend a day with the game’s greatest trophy.                                            (Matthew Manor/Hockey Hall of Fame) |  The  NHL has greatly expanded its footprint under Bettman by featuring games, both  exhibition and league contests, in various locations outside North America,  including Austria, China, Czech Republic, England, Finland, Germany, Japan,  Latvia, Northern Ireland, Russia, Slovakia, Sweden and Switzerland. Another  innovation that garnered great enthusiasm during Commissioner Bettman’s time  overseeing the NHL is the expanded idea of outdoor games. The league introduced  the first Heritage Classic in 2003, the first Winter Classic in 2008 and a  Stadium Series in 2014. To celebrate the NHL’s centennial, a Centennial Classic  and an NHL 100 Classic were played in 2017.   
                                        
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                                            | In 2014 Bettman was named Sports Executive of the Year by the Sports Business Journal. (Dave Sandford/NHL – HHOF) |  Under  Bettman's watch, the NHL has enjoyed rapid growth of league revenues (it has  reported that revenues have catapulted from $400 million in 1993 when he was  hired by the NHL, to more than $4.4 billion by 2016-17. Mr.  Bettman also concentrated on broadcast revenues. In the United States, he  secured a five-year deal with the Fox Broadcasting Company beginning in 1994-95.  That was followed by a five-year deal with ABC and ESPN. A deal with Comcast  was followed by a ten-year deal in 2011 with Comcast/NBC, a recently merged  company. Meanwhile, in Canada, the NHL secured Rogers Media for a 12-season  deal in 2013 to broadcast games across its numerous platforms.  Led  by Bettman, who reports to the franchise owners, the NHL has gone through three  work stoppages. The 1994-95 lock-out finally ended after 104 days when the  owners and the players agreed to a cap on rookie contracts, changes to  arbitration and restrictive rules for free agency that would not grant a player  unrestricted free agency until the age of 31.  
                                        
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                                            | With Bettman at the helm the NHL has introduced games outside North America, including China, England, Finland and Sweden. (Matthew Manor/Hockey Hall of Fame) |  The  cancellation of the entire 2004-05 season resulted because of the chasm between  the owners’ demands and the Players’ Association’s agreement. Finally, the  sides agreed to a new collective bargaining agreement which included a hard  salary cap linked to a fixed percentage of NHL revenues, a 24% rollback on  salaries and free agency beginning after seven years of NHL service. The  league experienced a lock-out again to start the 2012-13 season. Finally, on  January 6, 2013, a deal was reached on a new collective bargaining agreement  that included an eight-year limit on contract extensions and seven years on new  contracts, a salary floor of $44 million US and a salary cap of $60 million US,  a maximum 50% various in salaries over the course of a contract, mandatory  acceptance of arbitration awards under $3.5 million US, no realignment and an  amnesty period to buy out contracts that do not fit under the salary cap. It  was also Gary Bettman who introduced the idea that each player on the Stanley  Cup-winning team would have the opportunity to spend a day with the game’s  greatest trophy. The first team to earn that right was the New Jersey Devils,  Stanley Cup champions in 1995.The Sports  Business Journal named Gary Bettman its Sports Executive of the Year in  2014. He was inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in  2016. As of 2018, the NHL Commissioner can also lay claim to being an Honoured  Member of the Hockey Hall of Fame in the Builder Category. |