sleepwalker 512 Report post Posted October 24, 2012 In the end, the fans lose. Which is why I say the NHL and NHLPA can go jump off a cliff. Agreed. Like has been pointed out in this thread a few time before though, its like the two sides in power in politics. Neither cares about the people whatsoever. Thats not the point. Its a power/money game. 1 Nightfall reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Johnz96 Report post Posted October 24, 2012 I agree 100% with your assessment. What Bettman and Daly are doing now is petty. Not that we haven't seen this from Fehr in these negotiations though. Before the NHL's big 50/50 proposal hype, they were waiting on Fehr to table a proposal, and Fehr never did. His response was that this wasn't "ping-pong" and the NHLPA proposal was what they wanted to work from. So, while you are against Bettman, just realize that Fehr pulls the same crap when it benefits him. In the end, the fans lose. Which is why I say the NHL and NHLPA can go jump off a cliff. I think anyone fighting Bettman is fighting for us. They/we can't just let him lock us out every time the CBA expires to get what he wants for the new one, in this case it is to cheat players out of money they have agreed to pay them and offered in the first place. I don't understand how anyone can possibly blame the NHLPA for any of this. The players are doing their part When he finally unlocks the doors let's do ours. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
frankgrimes 1,836 Report post Posted October 24, 2012 The NHL can go eff off. I hope the players won't budge so the midget fatback Daily and the play it poor owners won't try this s*** again. Sent from my BlackBerry 2 HadThomasVokounOnFortSt and Rick D reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nightfall 871 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 I think anyone fighting Bettman is fighting for us. They/we can't just let him lock us out every time the CBA expires to get what he wants for the new one, in this case it is to cheat players out of money they have agreed to pay them and offered in the first place. I don't understand how anyone can possibly blame the NHLPA for any of this. The players are doing their part When he finally unlocks the doors let's do ours. Lets keep in mind that the side that has the worst deal always strikes or locks out. If the players were making 43% and the owners were making 57%, would you be against the owners if the players went on strike? I hardly think so. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Buppy 1,720 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 I agree 100% with your assessment. What Bettman and Daly are doing now is petty. Not that we haven't seen this from Fehr in these negotiations though. Before the NHL's big 50/50 proposal hype, they were waiting on Fehr to table a proposal, and Fehr never did. His response was that this wasn't "ping-pong" and the NHLPA proposal was what they wanted to work from. So, while you are against Bettman, just realize that Fehr pulls the same crap when it benefits him. ... What the owners' camp is doing now is standing firm. Nothing inherently wrong with the behavior; it's wrong only if you believe they're standing firm behind an unreasonable demand. You can say the same for the PA, if you happen to think their demands are unreasonable. I don't, so I don't see any problem in their standing firm. (And it's hard to believe you really think they are either, when you posted an idea that was essentially the same as one of the PA proposals.) But you're also ignoring the fact that it isn't ping-pong. There's no rule anywhere that says proposals have to take turns. When Fehr didn't put forth a new proposal, what he was really saying was that the offer at that time was the same as the last offer made. The owner's were the ones who supposedly took their offer off the table, so really they were the ones not showing their hand at the time. Besides that, the owners gave the impression that they weren't willing to consider any offer that didn't include an immediate pay cut (and considering how they handled the PAs last offers, that's not hard to believe), so it's likely there was little point in making a new offer. Much like the current situation. There's nothing to talk about, and there won't be until someone loses (or sits on the brink of losing) enough to change their mind. (Hopefully that's tomorrow, but I won't hold my breath.) You can go either way (or neither), depending on which side (if any) you think is being reasonable. For clarity, when I say reasonable, I mean making an offer the other side should accept. The players' demands as I see them: No reduction in current contracts (or at least, no more than would be taken under the escrow rules of the prior CBA) No reduction in the actual dollar value of the current players' share: $1.883B + marginal growth to offset rising benefit costs. (at least not as long as revenue keeps growing at a decent rate. Subject to the same escrow as above.) Players' share not below 50% in any given season Token rise in players' share if revenue growth exceeds expectations (not so adamant on this I think, but the only proposal without it is the "#3", where it's mostly replaced by some player pay being outside the players' share) They certainly want contracting rules to stay as is, but they haven't talked much about that. I don't know that I would conclude that the lack of any provisions in their proposals is because they're actually proposing to keep them as is, or just leaving them to be negotiated later. The owners' demands: Immediate reduction of the players' share to 50% Players' share not more than 50% in any given season Pretty much across the board reduction in all player contracting rights They seem fairly adamant about "clarifying" the definition of HRR, which should be taken to mean redefining it in their favor (though it does also open the door to go the other way). Seems absurd that there's anything to clarify after seven years, but then again the PA didn't exercise their right to audit league accounting until Fehr came in (and found problems, league settled for paying players an additional $20M, who knows what the player's might have been shorted in the first 5 years since those years can no longer be audited) so I guess it really is needed. I don't think anything in the players' demands is unreasonable, unless it turns out they are totally inflexible on any contract rules. The only demand from the owners that I think is reasonable is the HRR, and only if they really mean 'mutual clarification'. Ironically, that one should be the most ridiculous, but sadly it seems truly necessary. 1 Pskov Wings Fan reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Euro_Twins 4,475 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 What the owners' camp is doing now is standing firm. Nothing inherently wrong with the behavior; it's wrong only if you believe they're standing firm behind an unreasonable demand. You can say the same for the PA, if you happen to think their demands are unreasonable. I don't, so I don't see any problem in their standing firm. (And it's hard to believe you really think they are either, when you posted an idea that was essentially the same as one of the PA proposals.) But you're also ignoring the fact that it isn't ping-pong. There's no rule anywhere that says proposals have to take turns. When Fehr didn't put forth a new proposal, what he was really saying was that the offer at that time was the same as the last offer made. The owner's were the ones who supposedly took their offer off the table, so really they were the ones not showing their hand at the time. Besides that, the owners gave the impression that they weren't willing to consider any offer that didn't include an immediate pay cut (and considering how they handled the PAs last offers, that's not hard to believe), so it's likely there was little point in making a new offer. Much like the current situation. There's nothing to talk about, and there won't be until someone loses (or sits on the brink of losing) enough to change their mind. (Hopefully that's tomorrow, but I won't hold my breath.) You can go either way (or neither), depending on which side (if any) you think is being reasonable. For clarity, when I say reasonable, I mean making an offer the other side should accept. The players' demands as I see them: No reduction in current contracts (or at least, no more than would be taken under the escrow rules of the prior CBA) No reduction in the actual dollar value of the current players' share: $1.883B + marginal growth to offset rising benefit costs. (at least not as long as revenue keeps growing at a decent rate. Subject to the same escrow as above.) Players' share not below 50% in any given season Token rise in players' share if revenue growth exceeds expectations (not so adamant on this I think, but the only proposal without it is the "#3", where it's mostly replaced by some player pay being outside the players' share) They certainly want contracting rules to stay as is, but they haven't talked much about that. I don't know that I would conclude that the lack of any provisions in their proposals is because they're actually proposing to keep them as is, or just leaving them to be negotiated later. The owners' demands: Immediate reduction of the players' share to 50% Players' share not more than 50% in any given season Pretty much across the board reduction in all player contracting rights They seem fairly adamant about "clarifying" the definition of HRR, which should be taken to mean redefining it in their favor (though it does also open the door to go the other way). Seems absurd that there's anything to clarify after seven years, but then again the PA didn't exercise their right to audit league accounting until Fehr came in (and found problems, league settled for paying players an additional $20M, who knows what the player's might have been shorted in the first 5 years since those years can no longer be audited) so I guess it really is needed. I don't think anything in the players' demands is unreasonable, unless it turns out they are totally inflexible on any contract rules. The only demand from the owners that I think is reasonable is the HRR, and only if they really mean 'mutual clarification'. Ironically, that one should be the most ridiculous, but sadly it seems truly necessary. I am not debating the fact that they are standing firm. Good on them for fighting for what they (the owners) think is right. I am upset about the fact that they refuse to meet with the PA to discuss what they can do to solve all this crap, without any preconditions. Everything should be on the table for negotiations in a lockout, not just what Bettheleaguesmoneyman thinks should be discussed. The PA wants to negotiate currently and resolve the lockout, the evil twins don't. If that changes I will take the owners side. I agree 100% with your assessment. What Bettman and Daly are doing now is petty. Not that we haven't seen this from Fehr in these negotiations though. Before the NHL's big 50/50 proposal hype, they were waiting on Fehr to table a proposal, and Fehr never did. His response was that this wasn't "ping-pong" and the NHLPA proposal was what they wanted to work from. So, while you are against Bettman, just realize that Fehr pulls the same crap when it benefits him. In the end, the fans lose. Which is why I say the NHL and NHLPA can go jump off a cliff. Yes, but what Fehr did was in fact a little bit different, as the owners tabled an extremely unreasonable offer, while the PA was trying lose as little as possible. I tend to agree with Fehr on that one solely because the owners were refusing to budge on their initial proposal, rewording a proposal does not count as a "new" proposal. Yes I know the PA was also trying to keep what they had, but that is what any good unionhead would do, they were not asking for more, just what they were promised (as far as contracts go), but the owners were asking for a huge salary rollback, afgter they committed to the contracts THEY signed. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
hillbillywingsfan 792 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 The NHL can go eff off. I hope the players won't budge so the midget fatback Daily and the play it poor owners won't try this s*** again. Sent from my BlackBerry Not sure why you are wishing that. The players and the nhlpa haven't changed one bit from what they have wanted the very first time they came to the table. Thats whats screwing this all up. no one wants to give any. Players for some reason think they are worth more then their employers and the employers know better. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
RippedOnNitro 22 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 (edited) Some more interesting tweets: @Real_ESPNLeBrun: Bettman says 82-game season must start by Nov. 2. NHLPA leadership believes an 82-game season can start a bit later... Game of chicken Andy Strickland @andystrickland According to sources Don Fehr has convinced the players the longer they remain firm, the better the deal will be down the road #NHLPA Edited October 25, 2012 by RippedOnNitro Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
RippedOnNitro 22 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 Katie Strang @KatieStrangESPN #CBA PA Executive Director Don Fehr: "The players made multiple core-economic proposals on Thursday that were a significant move in the ... Katie Strang @KatieStrangESPN "....owners direction. We are and continue to be ready to meet to discuss how to resolve our remaining differences, with no preconditions.." Katie Strang @KatieStrangESPN #CBA "...For whatever reason, the owners are not. At the same time they are refusing to meet, they are winding the clock down to yet... Katie Strang @KatieStrangESPN #CBA "...another artificial deadline they created." John Vogl @BuffNewsVogl The lockout talks might gain some traction if Fehr realizes these "artificial deadlines" are real, actual deadlines in the NHL's eyes. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
frankgrimes 1,836 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 (edited) Here is a really good summary of what needs to happen (concessions from both sides) for the lockout to end. Basically I agree with all points but the biggest one is so simple: http://www.usatoday....to-end/1650627/ If the owners want the players to give back again, they can't ask for reduced player rights like waiting even longer for UFA status or no arbitration, this is not 2004-5. Not sure why you are wishing that. The players and the nhlpa haven't changed one bit from what they have wanted the very first time they came to the table. Thats whats screwing this all up. no one wants to give any. Players for some reason think they are worth more then their employers and the employers know better. If the players "win" we won't have this crap every 5 or 6 years simple as that and it would also mean the end to the dark Bettman era. Players are the product, fans are watching the players/teams not the owners if people want to watch a bunch of billionaires in their super luxury suits go on I highly doubt, the ratings or even attendence would be that great. Edited October 25, 2012 by frankgrimes Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
55fan 5,133 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 Just for fun and giggles, not that it would ever happen, but I'd love to see the PA submit a proposal in which they agree to the League's demands on the condition that they will receive their agreed-upon pay for the duration of future lockouts (not strikes) at the owners' expense. Bettman would implode. I was also reading last night that the players on LTIR are still paid during a lockout. The article was talking about DiPetrio being taken off LTIR at the end of the summer, not because he was ready to play, but as a money-saving move in the event of a lockout. Is this the case? If so, does LTIR fall under the escrow rules? How does that work during a lockout? If I recall correctly, Eaves is our only guy on LTIR. Lucky him. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
cusimano_brothers 1,655 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 “The union has chosen not to engage on our proposal or to make a new proposal of their own so, unfortunately, it looks like the 82-game season is not going to be a reality,” NHL commissioner Gary Bettman told reporters in Brooklyn, N.Y. “We are, and continue to be, ready to meet to discuss how to resolve our remaining differences, with no preconditions,” NHLPA head Donald Fehr said Wednesday. “For whatever reason, the owners are not. At the same time they are refusing to meet, they are winding the clock down to yet another artificial deadline they created.” Any questions? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest RedWingsDad Report post Posted October 25, 2012 (edited) ... if people want to watch a bunch of billionaires in their super luxury suits go on I highly doubt, the ratings or even attendence would be that great... I could just see you spitefully spitting out the words "bunch of billionaires in their super luxury suits" !!!!!... really now, the personal wealth of the owners (or players for that matter) is not the issue here at all. Lay off the jealousy induced class warfare... Edited October 25, 2012 by RedWingsDad Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
frankgrimes 1,836 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 Any questions? @ this point it is just funny and I mean really funny, now they can't even agree on oneline or twoline at best sentences. Sounds like if either side is talking about apples the other one understands Cocacola. Sent from my BlackBerry Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
cusimano_brothers 1,655 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 From Sportsnet: One day after controversial translated quotes emerged from a Russian newspaper, Nashville Predators forward Sergei Kostitsyn clarified his comments Tuesday in an interview with The Tennessean. On Monday, Kostitsyn was quoted as saying that "it would be better (for the players) if the lockout continues," and "if the NHL season is lost, let it be that way." Those quotes caused a mini firestorm and made many fans believe that he wanted the lockout to wipe out the 2012-13 season. Kostitsyn told the Nashville paper that he was misquoted by Sport-Express from Russia. "We all want to get back to hockey in the NHL and a full year and an 82-game season, but we need to reach a deal that is fair and we need to respect contracts that are already signed. It’s only fair," Kostitsyn said. Are translators tested? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
chances14 227 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 Andy Strickland @andystrickland According to sources Don Fehr has convinced the players the longer they remain firm, the better the deal will be down the road #NHLPA that's nonsense. the longer this goes on, the worse it will be for both sides 1 drwscc reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sleepwalker 512 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 (edited) that's nonsense. the longer this goes on, the worse it will be for both sides Not all people on both sides. Despite the emotional based rhetoric from fans about how they think Illitch is against the lockout, and wants to get back to hockey asap, blah blah blah. The reality is, Illitich HATES the fact that he has to support the s***ty welfare franchises and has made it clear multiple times that he feels this way. The longer the lockout goes on, the better chance there is that those welfare teams fold, and owners like Illitch won't have to foot the bill any more. I am willing to bet Illitch hopes the lockout goes far past one season, so the teams that deserve to fold, do, and he and the other owners like him can finally stop supporting the bottom feeders. Edited October 25, 2012 by sleepwalker Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
chances14 227 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 Not all people on both sides. Despite the emotional based rhetoric from fans about how they think Illitch is against the lockout, and wants to get back to hockey asap, blah blah blah. The reality is, Illitich HATES the fact that he has to support the s***ty welfare franchises and has made it clear multiple times that he feels this way. The longer the lockout goes on, the better chance there is that those welfare teams fold, and owners like Illitch won't have to foot the bill any more. I am willing to bet Illitch hopes the lockout goes far past one season, so the teams that deserve to fold, do, and he and the other owners like him can finally stop supporting the bottom feeders. if i was a player, i would not want any teams to fold. that is less jobs for them Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
up2here 41 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 Honestly the more I read on this the more skeptical I get. If more than half the league is losing money, including good markets like Minnesota and Buffalo, then whats their motivation for playing? Theyre making more money not to play. I guess I should stop reading. I should be watching Pavs deke defensemen out of their jocks and talking about the scoring leaders or how much of a crybaby Crosby is. Instead i'm digging into the finances of teams bleeding red ink. I stopped caring whose fault this all is a long time ago, soon I'm going to stop caring all together. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
number9 3,297 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 Tim Panaccio @tpanotchCSN: Asked someone of prominence who's been active in staging several Winter Classics about the % of Michigan WC happening. "Zero" he said. #upsetting Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jedi 1,865 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 Looks like the League will pull their most recent offer off the table as of today. The NHL will withdraw its latest proposal to the NHL Players' Association once Thursday's deadline to have a new deal in place comes and goes.There were no talks held again Thursday and none have been held since last week's NHL proposal and counter-proposals from the NHLPA. Read the story for reactions from both Daly and Fehr regarding this... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
drwscc 212 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 Good use of PR by Fehr again. NHLPA "We demand to negotiate off of one of our proposals, and we'll talk" NHL "No, let's work off of our plan" NHLPA "The league refuses to negotiate with us. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
haroldsnepsts 4,826 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 Good use of PR by Fehr again. NHLPA "We demand to negotiate off of one of our proposals, and we'll talk" NHL "No, let's work off of our plan" NHLPA "The league refuses to negotiate with us. Do you have a source where the NHLPA demanded that the league negotiated off one of their proposals? Because it sounds like you have it backwards. Since rejecting the union's trio of offers in Toronto last Thursday, the league has maintained that they will not meet unless the NHLPA agrees to work off their last proposal, which included a 50/50 revenue split and a provision to "make whole" existing player contracts by using deferred payments.Earlier this week, the union's attempt to re-ignite negotiations -- the NHLPA requested a meeting with the league without preconditions Tuesday night -- was spurned. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sleepwalker 512 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 Looks like the League will pull their most recent offer off the table as of today. Read the story for reactions from both Daly and Fehr regarding this... It always amazes me reading some of the comments people leave to articles like this. One of the comments I read on that article by some GM slappy, was saying that Bettman should just bring in a bunch of scab players to play the season, since it won't matter anyway since all the fans support the team, not the actual players on the team. Uh...yeah. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
chances14 227 Report post Posted October 25, 2012 Good article by James mirtle talking about money difference between players and owners proposals. Lot closer than we might think http://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/hockey/globe-on-hockey/nhl-closer-to-a-deal-than-they-think/article4634609/ Share this post Link to post Share on other sites