kali o. wrote:I find it a little funny that my proposal wasn't all that different.
The players will accept it (barring some minor issues) or the entire season is lost.
No chance. 5-year contract limits? Revenue sharing with little teeth? Massive escrow payments in year 2? That bullshit "make whole" crap? A LOT has to change before there's an agreement, we ain't even close right now. Putting a pile of shit in a pretty box don't mean they want it. I was actually kinda hopeful after I hear the initial quick details that the owners finally caved in a bit and finally decided to be a little reasonable. But after reading that article on NHL.com, I knew there's a long way to go. I may not get to see the Winter Classic after all.
Consider this nothing but a PR move after the league got confirmation from that Republican think tank they hired that they were losing badly in the public eye (not opinion; look it up). There's a reason they released the details of a private CBA still in ongoing bargaining to the public. That's completely unprecedented and a huge shock to everyone. And if you read how it's worded (look at the underlined parts), it's specific purpose is to gain public support to put pressure on the players. It absolutely reeks of desperation on the part of the owners (quick deadline, grandstanding, making private negotiations public officially) and the players ain't stupid enough to swallow the pill as provided, not with Fehr at the helm.
The other hopeful divide-and-conquer result of this to weaken the result of the PA ain't gonna work either. The comments coming out of the players within hours pretty much showed they weren't drinking that Kool Aid. And that's before they even had a day to get through the nitty gritty of it.
If you think the NHL owners are an old boys' club, they seem progressive when compared to the MLB owners prior to the '94 strike. Remember, it was the way baseball owners acted that gave strength to sport unions and the concept of free agency to begin with back in the 70s.