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    Ken Campbell
    Jan 27, 2019, 01:31

    Add it up, and there's $251,955,592 on the ice at the 2019 NHL All-Star Game.

    SAN JOSE -- There will be more than a quarter of a billion dollars in payroll out on the ice Saturday night for the NHL All-Star Game, which makes the cash prize of $1 million to the winning team seem like change-in-the-couch type of money.

    The payroll for all four teams would, thankfully, get under the salary cap of $79.5 million, but the Atlantic Division is going to be in some real trouble this summer, after Nikita Kucherov’s salary almost doubles from $4.8 million to $9.5 million and Auston Matthews signs his contract extension/offer sheet that figures to come in at a minimum of $13 million. The Pacific Division, already with the highest payroll in the four-team league, could find itself in a real jam once Elias Pettersson and Clayton Keller negotiate their second contracts (not to mention Drew Doughty’s cap hit going from $7 million to $11 million next season). That’s what happens when eight of the 44 players are still in their entry-level deals.

    We joke, of course, because that’s what we do. But when you look at the salaries of the players involved in this event, it’s easy to see why nobody takes this thing very seriously. And as THN colleague Matt Larkin pointed out Friday night during the all-star skills competition, it might cause you to cringe just a little bit when you see these players whipping around the ice without helmets. There’s no way Jim Nill, Jim Montgomery and the entire Dallas Stars fan base did not gasp collectively when defenseman Miro Heiskanen lost an edge and went hurtling into the boards during the fastest-skater competition.

    Without further ado, we present the cap hits for each of the four teams in the 2019 NHL All-Star Game. As you can see, the Central Division is giving its management team the best bang for its buck, by far.

    ATLANTIC DIVISION
    PLAYER 2018-19 CAP HIT
    John Tavares, TOR $11,000,000
    Jack Eichel, BUF $10,000,000
    Steven Stamkos, TB $8,500,000
    David Pastrnak, BOS $6,666,666
    Keith Yandle, FLA $6,350,000
    Jeff Skinner, BUF $5,725,000
    Jimmy Howard, DET�� $5,291,666
    Nikita Kucherov, TB $4,766,666
    Andrei Vasilevskiy, TB $3,500,000
    Auston Matthews, TOR $925,000*
    Thomas Chabot, OTT $863,333*
    TOTAL $63,588,331

    METROPOLITAN DIVISION
    PLAYER 2018-19 CAP HIT
    Sidney Crosby, PIT $8,700,000
    Henrik Lundqvist, NYR $8,500,000
    Claude Giroux, PHI $8,275,000
    John Carlson, WSH $8,000,000
    Kris Letang, PIT $7,250,000
    Brayden Holtby, WSH $6,100,000
    Cam Atkinson, CLB $5,875,000
    Seth Jones, CLB $5,400,000
    Kyle Palmieri, NJ $4,650,000
    Sebastian Aho, CAR $925,000*
    Mathew Barzal, NYI $863,333*
    TOTAL $64,538,333

    CENTRAL DIVISION
    PLAYER 2018-19 CAP HIT
    Patrick Kane, CHI $10,500,000
    Ryan O’Reilly, STL $7,500,000
    Pekka Rinne, NSH $7,000,000
    Nathan MacKinnon, COL $6,300,000
    Mark Scheifele, WPG $6,125,000
    Blake Wheeler, WPG $5,600,000
    Gabriel Landeskog, COL $5,571,429
    Devan Dubnyk, MIN $4,333,333
    Roman Josi, NSH $4,000,000
    Mikko Rantanen, COL $894,167*
    Miro Heiskanen, DAL $894,166*
    TOTAL $58,718,095

    PACIFIC DIVISION
    PLAYER 2018-19 CAP HIT
    Connor McDavid, EDM $12,500,000
    Leon Draisaitl, EDM $8,500,000
    Brent Burns, SJ $8,000,000
    Drew Doughty, LA $7,000,000
    Johnny Gaudreau, CGY $6,750,000
    Erik Karlsson, SJ $6,500,000
    Joe Pavelski, SJ $6,000,000
    Marc-Andre Fleury, VEG $5,750,000
    John Gibson, ANA $2,300,000
    Elias Petterson, VAN $925,000*
    Clayton Keller , ARI $885,883*
    TOTAL $65,110,833

    * Does not include potential performance bonuses