The NFL has operated far too long with the current type of Collective Bargaining Agreement. The most obvious problems involve guaranteed contracts and ridiculous rookie contracts. These two issues will be at the forefront of the next contract as negotiations at a snail pace toward 2011 as well as revenue sharing between players and owners.
As it stands now NFL owners can pull out of the present collective bargaining agreement with the players on November 8, and it appears that the owners are heading in that direction. If the owners pull out of the CBA, there is no salary cap the final year of the agreement (which is in 2010). If the players pull out, players would only receive free agency after six years of service — not four. In 2010 the NFL could operate without a cap. But that would not remain for long. Teams looking for one year success could reap big rewards if they target that year for a run. It would be a big year for one year contracts and the best teams would have the advantage because they would already have the incentive for veteran players looking to win a Super Bowl.
The first obstacle is a must for NFL players. Get guaranteed contracts. It is amazing in a league that has the highest revenue and has the highest risk of injury that there are not guaranteed contracts. What the owners may want in place to cover the expenses is two more regular season games. They would likely change two preseason games into regular season games. Every other sport has guaranteed contracts why doesn’t the NFL?
The second change is another glaring need in the NFL. A rookie salary cap like the NBA has. The guaranteed money to top tier rookies has been insane for a number of years now but has taken an even bigger jump over the last four years. Teams with high draft picks are already bad teams, they don’t need to pay top dollar to players that have not even played yet. If a player is a bust it cripples teams for many years. Matt Millen is an easy target for this issue.
Some other needs in this deal are better pension plans with health insurance for former players. How can a league discard the players that made the league what it is today.
According to a story from ESPN.com there is a lot more to what the owners want as well-"Beneath the surface of this increasingly rancorous dispute is the bargain the players and the owners made in March 2006, an agreement that provided significant increases for players in salaries and bonuses. Instead of 55.5 percent of NFL revenues, the players now are entitled to 60 percent. The salary cap has jumped from $85.5 million per team in 2005 to an expected $123 million per team in 2009, an increase of 43 percent.
Although the owners agreed to those increases, they are not happy about their decision. A number of owners claim their profits have dropped from 10 percent each year to only 4 percent since the 2006 bargain was struck." - Lester Munson ESPN.com
Also of note from the ESPN.com article from Lester Munson: "Upshaw and others involved in NFL labor issues expect the owners to announce that the players will be locked out of training camps, putting the 2011 season in jeopardy. An NFL lockout would come six years after the National Hockey League locked out its players, which killed the 2005-06 NHL season.
The NFL's union, according to Upshaw, will counter with decertification, which means it will give up its role as the official labor organization of NFL players and become a trade association.
"How can they lock us out if we are not a union?" Upshaw said.
Jeffrey Kessler, a union attorney who was a leader of the court fight that led to the 1993 restructuring of the NFL, added: "If you lock out players who do not have a union, it is an antitrust violation."
The battle will lead to the same kind of litigation that began after the players' unsuccessful strike in 1987 and led to the 1993 settlement that allowed owners and players alike to prosper for 15 years. It will be a high-stakes struggle, as the players will seek to duplicate their triumphs in the early '90s with demands for triple damages and injunctions."
This does not look like it will be pretty if this is already starting. With all the egos involved the only real losers will be the fans who are treated to court room drama, lawyer speak, and replacement players. There really isn’t anything like Billionaires arguing with Millionaires! It doesn't look good but there is still hope that this can be taken care of before doomsday in the NFL. This may come down to the final hour. There are a lot of layers to this and one can only hope that they will make sense of all this and get the new deal done.
I've alluded to this in a couple of recent posts. The rookie pay scale has made owning a top draft pick like a liability. These teams that need help can't even trade out of their top picks anymore. They are stuck paying a basically unknown top dollar. This in turn drives the veteran's to ask for more as a proven commodity. This year's draft is testament to that. The draft ends up driving the pay scale upward.
It is the players union's job to get as much for the players as possible, but I'm afraid the goose that laid the golden egg is in jeoprady. As it stands right now there is a division between the owners who have to toe the line on payroll and the owners obviously trying to buy a championship. The economically conscious owners have been successful but now they are becoming identified by their team's poorer than normal record...
It's difficult to feel sorry for any of these rich participants, but this is a game we all love and you're right, the only real loser in all of this will be us...
so, as to not burn the candle at both ends( or words to that effect ) i wont comment on this any further... i do think both sides are guilty playing a game of tug of war... and sometimes not getting any where!!!!!!!!
bob' For the players it'll never be enough and then you have the situation where if they can't come to an agrreement. They'll have to operate the season without a cap.
Yes the proverbial cap where hence it came about it was about understandable quantum physics.
We're not greedy we just like the smell of money !
The greed of the Players' Association and that of the owners knows no boundaries. And yet at the end of the day it's the fans that end up paying for all of this in the end.
slshusker, you are so correct, there could be a whole year canceled and it won't make a bit of difference.
It’s amazing to me that people can't figure out the popularity in the NFL. There are 2 reasons the NFL is popular, it's the best (not even close) sport to gamble on and there is fantasy football, why else would a guy in Iowa watch NFL football. He or she is either rooting for a sack in the fourth quarter to keep the game under the total or get a point they need for their fantasy defense. It's the same reason no one cares if NFL guys go on roids or get arrested, fans care in baseball but not football, if a player can score touchdowns fans could care less what that guy does off the field.
The NFL and their ratings are not going to be hurt if there is a strike. When the strike is over gambling and fantasy will be waiting.
Flint Michigan -
Ask me a question about your team by email- bob260505@yah oo.com
Three time defending (division 2) four square champion
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MVP of 1986 Whiffleball World Series - WWS was played in the side yard and had longer home runs.
2006 1st place league Champion fantasy baseball, 2003 and 2004 second place in fantasy football, 2003 second place in fantasy baseball and hockey, The last person out in Dodgeball in a record 17 of 22 games played in 1992 and led the gym class with over 175 kills in 92 - 93 (averaged 8.18 kills per game)
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