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Gary Bettman may be closer than ever to leaving the NHL

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David St-Jean
June 2, 2026  (3:53 PM)
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Apr 24, 2026; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; NHL commissioner Gary Bettman speaks to the media before game three of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs between the Utah Mammoth and the Vegas Golden Knights at Delta Center.
Photo credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images

NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman has started laying the groundwork for his eventual exit, according to a Tuesday report from Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman.

Bettman turned 74 today. He's also closing in on his 34th anniversary running the league, a tenure longer than most NHL fans have been alive.

The reporting indicates he has privately discussed a succession plan with members of the league's Executive Committee. Bettman declined to comment.

That timing isn't a coincidence. His annual Stanley Cup State of the Union address is set for later this afternoon, and now there's a much bigger topic sitting in the room.

For a man who's joked publicly that nobody is getting rid of him anytime soon, the mood music has clearly shifted. Privately, the conversation has started.

What a Bettman exit would mean for the NHL's next era

No name has been attached publicly to the succession plan. No timeline either. That's the part that should make every owner, GM, and player agent lean forward.

Bettman has overseen expansion to 32 teams, multiple lockouts, a cap system, and Olympic participation debates that never seem to end. Whoever follows inherits all of it.

The league just wrapped its regular season, with Colorado finishing first overall at 121 points and Vancouver bottoming out at 58. The competitive gap is wide, and any new commissioner walks straight into that file.

There's also the labor side. The CBA, broadcast deals, and revenue-sharing fights don't pause for a transition. Whoever's next will be tested fast.

The succession question won't be solved this afternoon. Bettman is far too disciplined a communicator to drop a date into a State of the Union without a plan already wired up behind it.

But the fact that the conversation is now public, even at this early stage, changes the energy around every owners meeting from here on out. The clock is running, even if nobody will say how much time is left.

Watch the words he chooses carefully when he steps to that microphone.