Zeus wrote:Well, let's see:
- make whole went up to $300M in the final offer from $211M in the initial. Math disagrees with you
- payroll cap went from $59.9M in the one on the NHL website to $70.2M in the agreed deal. Even with the drop to $64.3M in year 2, that's still higher since the NHL.com one says it stays flat year-to-year. Math, again, disagrees
- 5-year contract limit (NHL.com) with 5% variance year-to-year. CBA signed says 7 years or 8 for own free agents w/ 35% variance, 50% max over contract length. Math is really hating your argument right now
- proposal of limits on arbitration, entry-level contracts, and increase in time before gaining eligibility for free-agency (NHL.com), none of these limitations or changes are in the new CBA. Looks like Lady Logic is against you now too
- original offer had nothing but players changed from a Defined Contribution to Defined Benefit pension plan. Math and Lady Logic are teaming up on you here (this one is bigger than you think)
Yes, the owners "gained" in the term (6 to 10 years with opt-out after 8 years for either) but that's all they got over and above their initial offers. And that's even debatable because we're not sure yet if the owners are even gonna like the new CBA or not (they hated their hand-picked one from 7 years ago enough to lockout...again). And both parties lost with the shortened season, that ain't no win for either side. The owners moved towards the players on EVERYTHING else. They had do, their initial offers were so insane and heavy-handed we all knew they were going to.
Sorry, man, emperical evidence is destroying your arguments
*sigh*
You still keep going back to earlier deals to show the NHLPA somehow benefited from holding out... That's stupid. Painfully so.
- Make Whole was a provision that came later, and how nice you seem to credit that as win. Personally, I find that funny and indicative of just how little the NHLPA had to bargain with here.
- Year 1 stays the same, that's all, and that's made up in the other provisions. Again, you are counting a win from measuring against the initial offer no one took seriously...
- You have to be kidding me here. The league got exactly what they wanted here, saving greedy owners from themselves. The leagues STARTING nonsense offer included 5 year max with equal cap hits...but what you need to realize is what existed to this PRIOR. I find it hilarious you are seeing another "pew, NHLPA did OK here"....lol.
Meh, I will stop there and not even go into how the shortened season completely rails the HRR. You are confusing yourself again for an easy reason: Don't compare it to the leagues previous offer, look at where and how the counters changed. The Players would not have had to move nearly as far as they did if Fehr wasn't in the picture. The fact that you are applauding previous "OMG THIS IS BULLSHIT!!?" points as a win supports my stance.
PS - Burke is gone but I don't see that making it any more likely for Toronto to get Luongo (I don't think Toronto even has what Gillis wants).