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Author Topic: Terms of new CBA revealed  (Read 6287 times)
Landshark
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« on: June 21, 2011, 03:06:03 pm »

Sounds like a fair deal for both sides.  Players percentage of revenue drops from 53% to 48%.  Owners don't get their $2 billion credit off the top.  A rookie wage scale will be implemented, no 18 game schedule, and a Thursday night game on NFL network every week. 

C'mon guys, get it done!!!

http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=6687485
« Last Edit: June 25, 2011, 02:09:30 pm by Landshark » Logged
Tenshot13
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« Reply #1 on: June 21, 2011, 03:40:27 pm »

I heard that the 18 game season is negotiable but not take it or leave it and that the other 8 Thursday night games go to the highest bidder, not all on the NFL network.  Regardless of the details lets get it done!
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masterfins
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« Reply #2 on: June 21, 2011, 04:02:22 pm »

Interesting proposal.  The problem I see with the players accepting it is that the real benefits to the players are based on projections of future income growth.  Are current players going to approve a CBA that may not benefit them if they are out of the league in three years??

BTW I hate the idea of an 18 game season, and games every Thursday.  Current pro football is too physical to endure an 18 game season, especially when you factor in a couple more games for the playoofs.  Thursday games suck for the road teams on a short week, and again with the physical nature doesn't give the players' bodies time to recover to compete at a top level.
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Brian Fein
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WHAAAAA???

chunkyb
« Reply #3 on: June 21, 2011, 05:24:12 pm »

What if Thursday games coincided with bye weeks?
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MikeO
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« Reply #4 on: June 21, 2011, 05:46:23 pm »

Game every thursday makes sense, but ESPN has college football on Thursdays and pays the NFL $1 billion for Monday Night Football. ESPN won't want to pay the NFL $1bill then have the same NFL take away their entire Thursday night rating for college football, possible conflict there.

Sounds fair for both sides I guess just off what you wrote, without looking into the fine print. The owners not taking their cut off the top must chap the ass of some of those guys, it must be killing them to give that up!
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fyo
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« Reply #5 on: June 22, 2011, 05:35:48 am »

The owners not taking their cut off the top must chap the ass of some of those guys, it must be killing them to give that up!

No, that's just you reading your already-determined-truth ("owners will cave") into this.

The facts are simple:

Under the old CBA, players got about 60% of revenue after $1 billion was taken off the top. With $9 billion in revenue, that's 53% of total revenue.

Under the leaked proposal, players get 48% of total revenue. (Less, since owners get to take some money off the top for stadium building, but how much is unclear.)

So, players are taking a 5 percentage point decrease, or about a %10 pay cut.

No, the losers here are the small market teams. The cap will go from being a reasonably "hard" cap (no, let's not start this discussion again, you lost) to a much "harder" cap.

There will still be the old-fashioned cap, but as demonstrated in the previous cap-thread, those numbers bore little resemblance to actual payouts, even seen over multiple years. What the leaked proposal suggests is that the minimum cap will switch from using "cap accounting" to actual payroll numbers.

Taking ESPN's example of a $120 million cap, instituting a payroll minimum will force teams to actually pay out close to $120 million a year.

That drastically increases the floor and makes it much harder for small-market teams (or cheapskate owners) to "manage" their salaries. That's where the resistance to this deal is going to come from (owners' side, anyway).

What you have to remember is that the old CBA provided mechanism for increasing the salary cap league-wide if the total payout in any year was below a certain threshold (it was last triggered for the 2009 season). So low payouts from the small-market teams (usually) would result in a league-wide cap increase, effectively allowing those small-market teams to shift the burden of paying out the difference to the whole the league.

--------

Overall, other than 5 percentage points less for the players, what this deal does is take away a lot of the accounting crap. The $1 billion off the top. The cap floor fudging. The players have to place less trust in the teams now, since their share is simply calculated from the gross revenue with less possibility of the owners to fudge the numbers. They also get more steady payouts year-to-year and team-to-team. The owners, on the other hand, lose a lot of flexibility in how they manage their salaries, which will hurt any team experiencing a cash crunch.

The other major additions are completely unsurprising: A rookie wage scale, improved health care coverage, and increased benefits.
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MikeO
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« Reply #6 on: June 22, 2011, 06:12:40 am »

No, that's just you reading your already-determined-truth ("owners will cave") into this.


No, the losers here are the small market teams. The cap will go from being a reasonably "hard" cap (no, let's not start this discussion again, you lost) to a much "harder" cap.



You can't take a shot at me and say "don't start"..lol ! I didn't lose that argument, I was right then an I am still correct. The cap has been hard since day 1 that isn't changing. It can't get "harder". Its like your more pregnant today than yesterday, its impossible. It's either a hard cap or a soft cap. PERIOD!!

And the owners are about to cave, why do you think so many owners are upset with this deal and why it might take another month to convince a lot of them to get to 24 votes. Or why they will have to change some of this stuff beingl eaked. According to NFL Network this isn't going to end till Mid-July unless a minor miracle happens. I hope the NFL Network report is wrong, but thats what they are saying.

Forcing teams to spend damn near 96.5% of the cap or whatever the amount is, that is the owners caving. Forcing ALL of them to spend money is NOT what Cincy, Arizona, Carolina, Buffalo,....etc want!! To quote, Charlie Sheen....for the players that is WINNING!! And for the owners that is CAVING!
« Last Edit: June 22, 2011, 06:17:48 am by MikeO » Logged
fyo
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« Reply #7 on: June 22, 2011, 06:33:44 am »

The cap has been hard since day 1 that isn't changing. It can't get "harder". Its like your more pregnant today than yesterday, its impossible. It's either a hard cap or a soft cap. PERIOD!!

Wink

This reminds me of the "clean thread", although ever-so-slightly more on topic.

The old cap left plenty of room to fudge. The old cap allowed teams to not actually pay out any amount resembling the cap number.

The leaked proposal enforces a much stricter adherence to the cap.

Call it what you like.


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And the owners are about to cave, why do you think so many owners are upset with this deal and why it might take another month to convince a lot of them to get to 24 votes.

As you point out, it only takes 9 votes to put the kibosh on the deal. While there will be resistance from small-market teams, it's not going to get anywhere close to 9 nay votes.

In terms of negotiation strategy, however, it is in the NFL's interest to have it appear that a lot of owners are very unsatisfied, whether that is the case or not. In fact, I'm surprised we haven't seen some choice (public) outbursts of dissatisfaction from a couple of owners. I would have expected that. Perhaps the court order to not discuss the negotiations publicly is having an effect?

Quote
for the players that is WINNING!! And for the owners that is CAVING!

Yeah, taking 48% instead of 53% of overall revenue is a real WIN for the players.
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MikeO
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« Reply #8 on: June 22, 2011, 06:44:52 am »



Yeah, taking 48% instead of 53% of overall revenue is a real WIN for the players.

If you take away the BILLION off the top and you FORCE the owners to spend over 95% of the cap, it actually is WINNING! Cause its a higher overall number. But why let facts get in the way
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fyo
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« Reply #9 on: June 22, 2011, 06:48:43 am »

If you take away the BILLION off the top and you FORCE the owners to spend over 95% of the cap, it actually is WINNING! Cause its a higher overall number. But why let facts get in the way

Now you are just plain wrong.

The players actually *got* 53% with the old system (60% before the $1 billion). Which teams paid how much may have been "fudge-able", but no one disputes that the players got %53 with the old CBA. Not the players, not the league, not the press.

If the leaked proposal is correct, this number will DROP to 48% under the new CBA.

The $1 billion off the top was already corrected for in the 53% vs 48%.
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MikeO
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« Reply #10 on: June 22, 2011, 07:08:55 am »

Now you are just plain wrong.

The players actually *got* 53% with the old system (60% before the $1 billion). Which teams paid how much may have been "fudge-able", but no one disputes that the players got %53 with the old CBA. Not the players, not the league, not the press.

If the leaked proposal is correct, this number will DROP to 48% under the new CBA.

The $1 billion off the top was already corrected for in the 53% vs 48%.

whatever, believe what ya want when every report says otherwise
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fyo
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« Reply #11 on: June 22, 2011, 09:20:25 am »

whatever, believe what ya want when every report says otherwise

Cite a source, please, because you are dead wrong.

You can start by taking a look at the article actually linked to at the top of this thread. I'll quote the relevant bit:

"players were actually receiving around 53 percent of all revenues instead of the much advertised 60 percent."

That ESPN is touting the 60% and making it seem like people thought this is what players got is laughable, of course (and would make the drop in pay for players much worse). The mathematics is trivial:

60% of ($9 billion minus $1 billion) = $4.8 billion
$4.8 billion / $9 billion = 53.3%

Anyway, that's neither here nor there. The plain facts are that players got 53% of total revenues before and would get 48% under the leaked proposal.
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masterfins
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« Reply #12 on: June 22, 2011, 01:19:02 pm »

What if Thursday games coincided with bye weeks?

Well that would certainly work out better, makes scheduling a little difficult.  Although the bye weeks don't start til a couple weeks into the season, right?  I just seem to recall a few seasons back where the genius NFL schedulers had Miami play a Monday night game, then a Sunday game, then a Thursday game.
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Spider-Dan
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« Reply #13 on: June 22, 2011, 02:28:05 pm »

Game every thursday makes sense, but ESPN has college football on Thursdays and pays the NFL $1 billion for Monday Night Football. ESPN won't want to pay the NFL $1bill then have the same NFL take away their entire Thursday night rating for college football, possible conflict there.
That's a conflict for ESPN, not the NFL.  ESPN would (and does) have the same conflict between the NFL and MLB/NBA/NHL games.  The NFL has no need or desire to plan their schedule around ESPN's programming lineup.
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MikeO
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« Reply #14 on: June 22, 2011, 06:41:19 pm »

That's a conflict for ESPN, not the NFL.  ESPN would (and does) have the same conflict between the NFL and MLB/NBA/NHL games.  The NFL has no need or desire to plan their schedule around ESPN's programming lineup.

Then ESPN will have no desire to pay the NFL $1 billion for Monday Night Football. Look at it from both sides skippy. You think the NFL will want to piss off their best customer, one who pays them $1 billion for game rights!! HELLO!!!!!
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