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Locker Room Main Forum Commanders Football & NFL discussion |
View Poll Results: Who do you blame for the CBA mess? | |||
Owners | 24 | 26.67% | |
Players | 24 | 26.67% | |
Both | 42 | 46.67% | |
Voters: 90. You may not vote on this poll |
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03-16-2011, 06:28 PM | #466 | |
Playmaker
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Virginia Beach
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Re: Ongoing CBA discussions
Quote:
George Martin, director of NFL Alumni Association: DeMaurice Smith treats alums as 'afterthought' Another brilliant PR strategy by D. Smith.
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03-16-2011, 06:38 PM | #467 | |
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Join Date: Feb 2004
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Re: Ongoing CBA discussions
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In that scenario revenue sharing will be out the window and it will be like baseball. I can't imagine NFL owners except maybe big market teams wanting to model the league after the MLB. I remember Danny Boy being upset that the Bengals weren't spending his share of the pool money to compete not too long ago...I can't imagine him wanting to share any money with owners like that.
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"The Redskins have always suffered from chronic organizational deformities under Snyder." -Jenkins |
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03-16-2011, 06:49 PM | #468 | |
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Join Date: Feb 2004
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Re: Ongoing CBA discussions
Quote:
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03-16-2011, 08:59 PM | #469 | ||||
Gamebreaker
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 14,513
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Re: Ongoing CBA discussions
I want to admit a error I stated previously debated Slinging Sammy. He apparently is correct with the 59.5 of total revenue (after 1 billion cut from top) the players were to receive over the 6 year period.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/09/sp...all/09nfl.html Quote:
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NFL owners approve six-year CBA extension - NFL - ESPN Quote:
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03-16-2011, 09:12 PM | #470 |
Special Teams
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Eastern Ohio
Age: 55
Posts: 232
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Re: Ongoing CBA discussions
31 of 32 teams currently "may" require season ticket holders to pay for their tix in a lockout shortened season.
NFL LOCKOUT: 31 Of 32 NFL Teams Requiring Payments For 2011 Season Tickets
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03-16-2011, 09:22 PM | #471 | |||
Gamebreaker
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 14,513
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Re: Ongoing CBA discussions
Owners are so quick to point out that it's players cost that are cutting into their expenses. How do we know it's not their wasteful spending or stuff they should be claiming as personal? This statement best describes why the NFLPA need to see the books, and I don't blame them. I mean the full books, not the "audited" versions that don't show shit.
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I still don't see why nobody has commented on arguably the most telling evidence in this whole debate that I posted earlier. Instead Of Player Pay Cuts, NFL Needs More Revenue Sharing - SportsMoney - news on the business of sports - Forbes Quote:
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03-16-2011, 09:27 PM | #472 |
Living Legend
Join Date: Aug 2008
Age: 57
Posts: 21,458
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NC_Skins: try to understand that not all fans who support the owners think that this is a pure employer employee struggle a la your local pipe fitter union (or any other job). Many people, myself among them, understand the simple fact that NFL player are among the most elite athletes in this world. And that nearly all train their whole life in order to play in that elite stratosphere. Further, I don't know of anyone who doesn't acknowledge they should be paid very well for the risk to their body and for the skill they demonstrate.
Given all that, I still support the owners more than the players. Its my view that the players are not really looking to negotiate, but to protect what they got in the last CBA (which they can do, but doesn't mean I have to agree with them) while the owners are trying to roll back a CBA that in their current view went to far(which they also are entitled to do, but doesn't mean you have to agree with them). |
03-16-2011, 09:34 PM | #473 | ||
Gamebreaker
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 14,513
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Re: Ongoing CBA discussions
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Just curious, but did you read that article I posted from Forbes. Read it, if you still are behind the owners after you read it then I'll concede. I think showing the books could possibly be the missing key to why their profits may be declining. |
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03-16-2011, 09:37 PM | #474 | |
Gamebreaker
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 14,513
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Re: Ongoing CBA discussions
Speaking of Jerry Richardson.
Sources: Panthers' owner Richardson wants to protect staffers' jobs - CharlotteObserver.com Wonder if Danny boy is protecting all of his workers like Jerry Richardson is? Quote:
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03-16-2011, 10:14 PM | #475 |
Living Legend
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Age: 57
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The concluding paragraph of the Forbes article states that the nfl could likely show hard numbers to back their claim but have chosen instead to go into a bunker mentality to protect the whole rather than make the case for some.
So Forbes acknowledges that there is a financial case to be made, but they say that the owners ought to do a better job sharing revenue to solve their problems. That is what the issue was in the days prior to the 2006 CBA, and clearly some of the owners have decided that the revenue sharing model isn't working and believe player costs should be reduced. It is the NFL owners right to decide the revenue sharing model they choose to use, and for there to be one at all they need one that a majority of owners agree on. That one they all agree on requires that they reduce the compensation to the players. That just is the economic reality of the nfl. If the players push it to the last bit they will succeed in breaking the nfl's revenue sharing model completely because it takes 24+ owners to agree on any new terms, and they won't get that many to sign on without significant reductions. If you want to turn that into a blame of those 9 or so owners(whichever ones they are) you can do that, I choose to say that the players need to understand the economic realities that are pushing the owners to this position and as the Forbes article CLEARLY shows you don't need to see the books to understand the issues. You only need to see the books if you want to try to pitt the owners against one another. So again IF the players want to break the nfl model and go towards the mlb model that saden mentioned earlier, then go ahead and push to see the books that tell you exactly what the Forbes article already said. IF the players want to keep what revenue sharing the nfl has in place (which has resulted in great competition over the last 25+ years) then sit back down and look at how the long term numbers can be made to be a win for all even if there is a numerical loss. |
03-16-2011, 10:58 PM | #476 | |
Playmaker
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Virginia Beach
Posts: 4,347
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Re: Ongoing CBA discussions
Quote:
You've mentioned this Forbes article a few times so I finally have a few minutes to give my take on it. - You portay this as being Forbes magazine's position. It is not. This article was done by a free-lance contributor, Maury Brown. This is one analyst's opinion, nothing more. - Your table indicates "Operating Income", I and others, have referenced profitability which is the more important number of any business at the end of the day. - The article also mentions the Packers profitability numbers which I referenced to back up my point about declining profits. - The article also mentions that there are teams running in the red. - The author advocates increased revenue sharing.....(wealth redistribution anyone). Each of the 32 teams in the NFL are there to make as much profit as possible while putting a competitive product on the field (their levels of success at profit/competitiveness vary greatly). There is already a good deal of revenue sharing and a salary cap in place to help the teams in weaker markets or with weak profitability. If I was Jerry Jones, Dan Snyder, Robert Kraft, etc. I wouldn't want to give up my profits to help other less successful owners unless there was a risk in my bottom line to not doing so. I agree the books are not going to be 100% clean, but I'll bet they're a lot cleaner than is being portrayed. Maybe the NFL and NFLPA should look at a different model to work with for splitting the revenue.
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"I would bet.....(if), an angel fairy came down and said, '[You can have anything] in the world you would like to own,' I wouldn't be surprised if you said a football club and particularly the Washington Redskins.'' — Jack Kent Cooke, 1996. |
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03-17-2011, 12:32 AM | #477 | |
Playmaker
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 3,159
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Re: Ongoing CBA discussions
Quote:
I think lots of Panthers' fans would love to make that trade. Snyder may not be "loved" by everyone in DC, but Richardson would not get a lot of votes if he ran for mayor in Charlotte either...
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03-17-2011, 12:36 AM | #478 |
Playmaker
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 3,159
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Re: Ongoing CBA discussions
Just thinking out loud here...
If the owners think that the players have too good a deal, would the owners be willing to keep the same CBA but take the players side of the deal - - i.e. the players portion is $1B off the top plus 40.5% of the rest and the owners get 59.5% of the rest? If the players think the deal is a fair one, would they trade sides with the owners? Since I have not heard either side suggest that swithching sides would be a useful model, I wonder if these folks are looking at the same numbers...
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03-17-2011, 11:09 AM | #479 |
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Re: Ongoing CBA discussions
im pretty sure the NFLPA wants to see the audited fin docs. Audited meaning that an accounting firm has reviewed their statements and accounting practices and certifies that it is GAAP compliant, generally accepted accounting principles.
If teams were to provide their own docs w/out a 3rd party oversight, they could claim future losses in this fiscal year to make their expenses seem higher, accelerate interest incurring, defer recognition of rev to next year, etc.
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03-17-2011, 11:59 AM | #480 | |
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Re: Ongoing CBA discussions
Quote:
Players: 9B - 1B = 8B * 59.5% = 4.76B Owners: 8B * 40.5% + 1B = 4.24B
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