Here are some stream of consciousness NHL lockout ramblings:
How
can a league that lost a full season just seven years ago, be on the
verge of another work stoppage??? With each passing day, the players and
owners appear to be further apart on getting a deal done.....And there
appears to be no urgency from either side to settle.......Another
long-term lockout would be professional suicide, for the NHL....I mean,
The league has grown in popularity and revenue in every season under the
recently expired CBA....Why would you want to stop that momentum with
another work stoppage???? The NHL lost a whole season seven years ago,
because the owners wanted a salary cap.....Ever since they got, said
cap, they have found ways to circumvent it.....Whether it is through
front loaded contracts or insanely long-term deals, the owners have been
unable to help themselves.....Teams had been in a race to sign players
to long-term contracts before the CBA expired last week......John
Carlson was signed to a six-year contract the day before the lockout
went into effect....Meanwhile, the owners want five-year contracts to be
the maximum years allowed in the next CBA???? How does that make
sense??? Gary Bettman had to be pissed when deals like that went down
last week......Because he looks like a total idiot when his owners are
signing players to crazy deals the day before the lockout, and then
claiming that player salaries are out of control.....This is a league
that saw the Toronto Maple Leafs make $88 million dollars last
season....At the same time, many other NHL teams lost millions of
dollars....This is not a sustainable economic model for the NHL....There
has got to be a better form of revenue sharing in the NHL.....The large
market owners have to come to the realization that, although they will
make less money in the short-term, in the long run, they will increase
their profits through revenue sharing......The NFL is the most popular
and financially successful professional sports league in the
world.....How did they become that way???? Revenue sharing.....Revenue
sharing is the reason a team from Green Bay can compete with a team from
New York City, in the NFL.....With a better and more complete revenue
sharing model, the NHL's business would grow at an even faster
rate.....If more small market teams could sign their best players and be
able to compete with the large market teams, the NHL would increase its
fan base...Fans love to root for a winner....And winning is the best
way to increase a team's fan base.....An increased fan base means; more
ticket sales; more jersey sales; more concessions sold; and more parking
lot revenue....Add all of it up, and the NHL's revenue pie is now
larger......The Players deserve blame for the lockout as well.....They
refuse to negotiate a 50/50 split of hockey related revenue.....And in
the end, we all know that a 50/50 split is what the finished deal will
include.....The players, even with a short lockout, will be losing more
money than if they would just settle with the owners.....And it is
money, that they will never make back.....Mike Modano, claimed to have
lost $7 million dollars because of the previous lockout.....Are the
players really prepared to lose that kind of money again??? Also, the
players have to look in the mirror when it comes to their salaries....
Should Zach Parise and Ryan Suter be making as much money as Tom
Brady??? The answer is no....The NHL is not making or pulling in nearly
as much money as the NFL....Yet, the top players in the NHL are making
as much as the top players in the NFL....Now, I'm not blaming the
players for signing these contracts.....I would too.....But, they have
to understand that they may need to give a little back, in order, to
keep the NHL a successful and growing business.....The players have to
realize that the NHL is the only league, in which, they could make the
kind of money that they do......What scares me the most about this
lockout??? The fact that only two North American professional sports
leagues have ever not awarded a championship, due to labor strife; the
NHL in 2005 and the MLB in 1994.......What does the NHL's current labor
problem have in common with those two labor situations??? Gary Bettman
led the NHL's negotiations in 2004-2005 and Donal Fehr was the MLBPA's
head negotiator in 1994. And now these two men, are heading up the NHL
and the NHLPA, respectively, in this years labor battle......So, we
know both men are not going to blink in this labor debate....Sadly, that
means we could be in for a long drawn out battle......In which,
neither side will win....And the fans most assuredly will lose......
No comments:
Post a Comment