Was over at NFL.com and saw this article. I don't know if it's been posted yet. If it has, too bad, you can post as awesome as I can:
http://www.nfl.com/news/story/09000...s-details-of-proposal-that-union-didnt-accept
As I know I'd probably be knee-jerk against a Union (especially one that puts up no financial risks and still wants to reap profits), I'm staying out of this completely. Here's to more debate, crying, whatever you want to call it. Quick question by the way, when did workers become entitled to a portion of profit? You only get profit AFTER wages and salaries have been paid. From the outside looking in, it sounds like they wanna double dip.
EDIT: But what the hell do I know, I refuse to follow this and I'm just guessing from misinformation probably.
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If you really haven't been following this, you're just naturally a lot smarter than most people here because you're spot on.Coral Reefer likes this. -
Doesn't matter now, there is both a dissolved Union, and a Lockout, as well as several lawsuits and a case in Judge Doty's court involving TV contracts..the lawyers will make out like bandits.
I am generally in favor of the Union as Ownership has not bargained in Good Faith, however both had a hand in this and hopefully a disinterested 3rd party will impose a solution on two recalcitrant factions.
The law is a club, not a scapel, so to me they would have been better off working things out amongst themselves.texanphinatic likes this. -
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Then again, not knowing **** about this situation, didn't the owners push to lower wages? If that's the case then they certainly have some fault.gunn34 likes this. -
Players will now take owners to court seeking to have their contracts enforced, when there was a union the owners could simply say "we are not locking out players, we are locking out their Collective Bargaining Organization because we have no contract with them". -
The owners should have to show their books, I don't know why that is so difficult for them if they've negotiated in good faith. Their reluctance indicates to me that they haven't.
As for the players, I like to think I understand a little bit. They literally lay their lives on the line each week, some of them will have permanent brain damage from playing in the league. That would increase with an 18 game schedule. Those are substantial risks, financial and otherwise, as far as I'm concerned.
One solution is to have player salaries be negotiated as a % of the cap which is, in turn, tied to league profits with another portion set aside for post-NFL health insurance. They would potentially absorb financial risks that way. But, again, the owners would have to provide transparent accounting, which they're unwilling to do.texanphinatic likes this. -
CFL has played 18 games for 25 yrs, NFLers to me are coming off as spoiled. -
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i sympathize with the NFL players more than any other professional sports league because of the shorter length of career compared to NBA and MLB players, and the lack of guaranteed contracts.
But why should the owners HAVE to show the players their books? What other business has to do that? And NFL players enter into their CHOSEN profession understanding their are serious health risks involved. One can say that the risk of concussions and permanent brain damage is still being studied, and not completely understood. That is true and not to be discounted, but the risk of permanent paralysis is well known among players from several examples, so it is not as though players are in the dark that their lives can be altered on any play.
the players have shot themselves in the foot in a few ways IMHO, and i heard these same sentiments echoed by average fans i talked to friday and saturday nights;
while i understand it is oversimplifying things a bit to state that the players had a union, didn't get their way via collective bargaining, then decertified so they could sue the league, that is the way it comes off to the average observer. it looks like they are wanting to have it both ways. when all is said and done and they reform their union, the players will come off looking even worse to the average fan.
Demaurice Smith is no Gene Upshaw. Upshaw garnered alot of respect from the league, and among the people i talked to. Smith does not to put it kindly. he was being ridiculed by the guys i was talking to and their perception is he is way out of his depth.
having Peyton Manning, Tom Brady, and Drew Brees be the plaintiffs in the antitrust lawsuit will bite the players in the ***, in the court of public opinion. they are three of the highest paid players in the NFL. while they are popular, even the average fan knows they are not only set for life, but have generational wealth, provided by the NFL. that is not going to draw sympathy from the average fan.
PS to Poco; i really like your offseason in your sig... though i want Tory Gurley of South Carolina as our late round flyer on a WR. i am a bit partial, but he is a good character guy, good hands, and good size. -
A guy lasts, or he doesn't.
That is not to say I want guys to be injured or have shortened careers, but look at all of the teams who have made the playoffs in consecutive yrs, the Pats, Colts, Eagles etc, none of those players are complaining about playing those extra games over the yrs and yet because the starting RG on the Lions thinks 2 more games, or about 100 plays, will shorten their career the season should not expand?gunn34 likes this. -
As for the players, I don't sympathize too much. Even the shortest career for a high round draft pick (probably a 3 year contract) would net millions. That should be enough to last a lifetime. But if the owners want to claim money troubles, they have to show evidence of money troubles. I think everything stays deadlocked until that point.charlestonphan and texanphinatic like this. -
But in a world where the Marlins got hundreds of millions of dollars in tax payer money while claiming losses when they were really making bank, and in a world where the league is making money hand over fist with record viewership and TV deals, they damn well better be ready to prove financial hardship if they're going to ask their employees union to take a smaller cut of the lie.
And just for the record, I kind of stand with the owners on this issue. IF Green Bay is indeed an indicator of the profit that the rest of the teams in the league are seeing, then I agree heartily with the owners that they're running too big of a risk, and need a bigger slice of the pie.
But I have a hard time trusting billionaires who are crying poor while the sport is at an all time high in popularity.
Just my .02
Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkGARDENHEAD and texanphinatic like this. -
I have no sympathy for the players at this point. The rookies' wage scale is out of control as well. I far as I am concerned, the owners should not have to open their books for the players or the union. They both are making what they are making because of the clubs. If they don't like what they have now then they can take their skills and degrees (or lack thereof) and search for a new career that will pay them what they currently make.
I would agree that both sides are being greedy. I would also agree that the league has not negotiated in good faith over the past couple of years preparing for the possibility of a lockout. However, the players are doing pretty well for themselves and I don't want to hear any mumbo-jumbo about their safety. They know the potential threats of their career choice and they have all made a decision to take the clear risks which they are taking every play of every game in return for the inflated salary and fame they receive for doing so.
If I were the mediator I would say the main points here are the 18 schedule, rookie wage scale and retirement benefits. Everyone needs to shut up and realize that the owners are the owners and they don't answer to the players or the union. If the players don't like it they can go search for a new job period. Otherwise, they can accept an 18 game schedule, dramatically reduced rookie wage scale and take the profits from those two decisions an apply it to a benefit package for injured and retired players. Personally, I would implement a wage scale for all players to the point where no player could make more than $8 - $10 million a year. This would allow any additional saving to be applied towards retirement benefits as well. I think that $10 million is more than enough per year for the best of the best players, don't you?Coral Reefer and MarinePhinFan like this. -
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No, the owner of a business doesn't have to give anything to his employees except what is federally and state mandated.
Cops, military service members, firefighters, etc etc (and the list is VERY long), put their lives on the line. Football players play a children's game for millions and millions of dollars. The "they put their lives on the line" is a BS argument. They are paid and paid very well for any risk they VOLUNTEER for. -
The Jets did not have to pay his salary and could have fined him. -
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shula_guy Well-Known Member
Why would the owners show thier books to the players when they do not show them to one another. It is a ridicilous request. Why dont all the players volunterr all thier tax returns for the last 10 years so we can see if they really need more money. When put that way it sounds kind of dumb dont it.
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The NFL is a monopoly. This is not a normal business where the workers can just go "find a another job" in the industry. The NFL owners get substantial benefits from their position, and therefor may have have extra burdens that a normal business would not have. ie if you are going to collectively bargain with your workers in order to continue to enjoy your monopolistic industry, then showing the books doesn't seem too bad....unless they do not show that you are really in such dire financial straits.finfansince72 likes this. -
I am on the owners' side here. I can not feel sorry for people that can make up to twenty million dollars per season to play the game they have loved their whole life and get six months off every year.
Why shouldn't the owners make a lot of money? It is their billion+ dollar franchise. I would like to see at least one hundred million dollars in profit per year on an investment like that.
Even the average players make a million plus per season. The players can go cry me a river for all I care. They deserve no more than what they had before (and I think less). -
Personally I don't feel sorry for either side - they both make more than I will probably ever see, though I think it is rather obvious that the owners brought this situation on themselves. -
shula_guy Well-Known Member
The real legitimate gripe these players have is how contracts are not grunted in the NFL. If that is what they were arguing for I would have a different opinion. What happens if next year the league only collects 8 billion instead of 9 are the players going to take a 600 million cut to balance the percentages out? I doubt that.
Further more as much right as players have to ask for more money the owners have the right to offer less. The owners have the right to cut every player on the team if they choose to. The owners also have the right to lower the salary cap if they choose too. When the players start paying their own salaries then they can decide how money they are entitled too. If they do not like the deal on the table I encourage Peyton Manning and the rest of them to go apply for a job in arena football and see if they can negotiate over 60% of that leagues profits away from the owners.
The owners do not like the deal they agreed to and under the agreement they are legally opting out of it. There is nothing in the agreement that says they can only renegotiate a new deal if they are willing to open their books up. The guy who use to run the now nonexistent nflpa is an idiot. He negotiated himself right out of a job. The players have offered nothing to the owners to make them budge from their position. If the players don't come back, sure it will set the league back but it will rebound as the new players gain experience. The only reason 1987 was such a disaster was because they were all rookies so it was sloppy but time would of fixed that problem.MarinePhinFan likes this. -
They want the billion because as it was, the players were making almost 700 million more than the owners during the last agreement. I hate both sides right now but no way I'm siding with these players. The owners have tons and tons of expences and they pay health care for the players. The players? They pay taxes.... -
Now I do think D Smith is a newb at this and it hurt the process of negotiating a new CBA, however the owners themselves wanted this as well, that is why they voided the CBA 2 yrs ago.
How is D smith supposed to negotiate a deal that not only represents a step back for money available to players, but to do so during boom times for the NFL itself? There is really no way he could do so without overwhelming proof that the NFL was actually losing money and would lose even more money if the status quo remained in place.
That has never been shown to have happened or is likely to happen unless the ownership gives far more insight into their finances. -
Under the old CBA, the NFL grossed approximately $9 billion annually. Of that, $1 billion is given to the owners off the top for expenses. After that, the remaining $8 billion is split with 60 percent ($4.8 billion) going to the players and 40 percent (another $3.2 billion for a total of $4.2 billion) going to owners.
That's over a half a billion dollars more going to the players.
NOW the owners wanted an extra billion dollars off the top. That would have put the players making 400 million less after getting nearly 60 percent of the pot all these years.
Screw D Smith and what the players want. They get all that EXTRA while the owners pay their health care, pay the mortgages on stadiums and practice facilties, transportation and hotels, electricity bills, coaches salaries, assistants, film room personel, trainers and I could go on and on and on. All the while the only thing they see is their teams value go up. Of which how many times to we see teams actually sold? The only thing they can do is borrow money against their teams value and make money elsewhere.
Meanwhile...
The players pay their own taxes and that's it.and MarinePhinFan like this. -
This with 6.5 billion still just floating around "somewhere".
I do think the owners have every right to a 18 game regular season and the players are having sandy manginis gains no sympathy from me, the financial stuff the owners are claiming on it's face is laughable, basically the expenses are prepaid, even at 32 teams x 118 million in payroll that still leaves 4 billion or so floating around the NFL or 128 million per team and that does not include additional stadium revenues from non NFL events. -
Some owners would like to change the Team Revenue Sharing System arguing the system doesn't take expenses into account when revenue is shared.
As it was, the players got almost 54 percent.
Now the owners want 54 percent.
Good for them! They deserve it 1000000000 percent. -
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54%, 63%, 42%, whatever, why should that matter? 50-50 looks nice but means nothing.
BTW, I'm not really going to pick a side in all of this, put it this way, Vontae Davis is flying to Uganda today, think he cares a bit about it?
Then why should anyone? -
MarinePhinFan likes this.
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Come on man..:lol:
Bottom line is, there are reasons why NFL teams rarely come up for sale, and when they are sold they make fortunes for the seller, that is when the B$ stops and the books are trotted out, last couple of teams sold went for over 1 billion and where typically bought in the low 150 million, or less, range. -
The players make the nfl. These are special humans. They are the reason that no other league has succeeded. There aren't that many humans that can do what Henne can, let alone a Manning or a Brees.
The salary cap is for smaller market teams. Some of you guys are asking to name another business were employees get to see the bosses books, well name another business were there is a formal salary restriction that every business in the industry adheres to.
Sent from my SGH-T959V using Tapatalkfinfansince72 likes this. -
If you own something the only one who needs to know exactly what you made is the IRS. The rest deserve nothing and who cares if they make a killing once they sell it after 20 years? The Bungaloes owner would be the only deserving to lose money...
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