NHL Proposal
- 50/50 split of hockey-related revenue, $300M "Make Whole" (directly between what it had previously tabled ($211 million) and what the NHLPA had asked for ($393 million))
- A 10-year term for the CBA, with a mutual re-opener after eight years
- no compliance buyouts (buyouts of player contracts that don't count against a team's salary cap)
- unrestricted free agency eligibility rules and salary arbitration rules would stay the same as in the previous CBA
- contract term limits of five years (7 for re-signing own players) with 5% variance year to year, which Daly described as "the hill we will die on."
NHLPA Counter Offer
- acceptance of the 50/50 split and $300M "Make Whole"
- eight years term for CBA, with an option to opt out after Year 6
- no compliance buyouts (buyouts of player contracts that don't count against a team's salary cap)
- unrestricted free agency eligibility rules and salary arbitration rules would stay the same as in the previous CBA
- contract term limits of seven years with 25% variance year to year
Make note of Daly's "the hill we will die on" comment. Couple that with just how close these two proposals are. Yet, somehow, the counter-offer was enough to have Bettman literally shaking mad at a press conference (that was pretty funny and shocking at the same time) and the owners so pissed off they stormed out of the room? Why? The owners simply felt it was a take-it-or-leave-it offer and were offended that not only did the players not take it but insisted that Fehr come back in the room to dot the "i's" and cross the "t's" (don't believe me, read this: http://aol.sportingnews.com/nhl/story/2 ... key-strike) on what they felt was a pretty strong basis for a mutual deal. You know, things that lawyers and hired negotiators do. Last time I checked, not too many players have law degrees.
Make no mistake about it, owners are insisting on dry-fisting the players who are simply asking that they use "only" 3-fingers and some canola oil as lube. They simply believe they are entitled to break the players and (again) get the exact deal they want and are willing to throw away the season to get it. I guess Jacobs has convinced them it's still the 50s or something. AND let's not forget that this is all in a salary-cap world where the top players are already limited to 24% of the team's salary cap from the prior CBA. All this is on top of that.
If there was even the smallest shred of blame I could have possibly reasoned to put on the players, these last few days have completely wiped it away. On a positive note, I blame Bettman himself less than before. That blame and a helluva lot more has been shifted to Jacobs and his crew of owners who are running this shit (not necessarily the 6 who were in the room; maybe the Calgary and Tampa guys, but I don't think the others are part of it)
- 50/50 split of hockey-related revenue, $300M "Make Whole" (directly between what it had previously tabled ($211 million) and what the NHLPA had asked for ($393 million))
- A 10-year term for the CBA, with a mutual re-opener after eight years
- no compliance buyouts (buyouts of player contracts that don't count against a team's salary cap)
- unrestricted free agency eligibility rules and salary arbitration rules would stay the same as in the previous CBA
- contract term limits of five years (7 for re-signing own players) with 5% variance year to year, which Daly described as "the hill we will die on."
NHLPA Counter Offer
- acceptance of the 50/50 split and $300M "Make Whole"
- eight years term for CBA, with an option to opt out after Year 6
- no compliance buyouts (buyouts of player contracts that don't count against a team's salary cap)
- unrestricted free agency eligibility rules and salary arbitration rules would stay the same as in the previous CBA
- contract term limits of seven years with 25% variance year to year
Make note of Daly's "the hill we will die on" comment. Couple that with just how close these two proposals are. Yet, somehow, the counter-offer was enough to have Bettman literally shaking mad at a press conference (that was pretty funny and shocking at the same time) and the owners so pissed off they stormed out of the room? Why? The owners simply felt it was a take-it-or-leave-it offer and were offended that not only did the players not take it but insisted that Fehr come back in the room to dot the "i's" and cross the "t's" (don't believe me, read this: http://aol.sportingnews.com/nhl/story/2 ... key-strike) on what they felt was a pretty strong basis for a mutual deal. You know, things that lawyers and hired negotiators do. Last time I checked, not too many players have law degrees.
Make no mistake about it, owners are insisting on dry-fisting the players who are simply asking that they use "only" 3-fingers and some canola oil as lube. They simply believe they are entitled to break the players and (again) get the exact deal they want and are willing to throw away the season to get it. I guess Jacobs has convinced them it's still the 50s or something. AND let's not forget that this is all in a salary-cap world where the top players are already limited to 24% of the team's salary cap from the prior CBA. All this is on top of that.
If there was even the smallest shred of blame I could have possibly reasoned to put on the players, these last few days have completely wiped it away. On a positive note, I blame Bettman himself less than before. That blame and a helluva lot more has been shifted to Jacobs and his crew of owners who are running this shit (not necessarily the 6 who were in the room; maybe the Calgary and Tampa guys, but I don't think the others are part of it)
I was there on that fateful day, were you?