KINGS17
Smartest in the Room
- Apr 6, 2006
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Lockout talk: Why each side might (and might not) want to...
Should the league decline its option to re-open the agreement, the union will have until Sept. 15 to make a call on whether to terminate the deal in 2020, setting the stage for a possible work stoppage in 12 months time.
The parties have had ongoing talks for months; they met again this past week. There are suggestions those dates could come and go without a definitive resolution, by mutual consent.
“The parties have basically stopped operating under those deadlines,” said a source close to the talks.
Further down in the article:
As an agent was quick to note, if the players opt-out with a view to gaining ground on a series of demands, they can expect the other side to show up with a lengthy shopping list as well.
That’s not to say some players aren’t feeling militant.
San Jose Sharks defenceman Marc-Édouard Vlasic said recently he wouldn’t mind if there was a work stoppage.
Quite the contrary in fact: He’s hoping for one.
“We’ll wait and see what the league will say on Sept. 1, but of course there’s a lot of stuff that I’d like to change,” Vlasic said. “If the players aren’t satisfied on certain fronts, then we should rethink the CBA.”
The main sticking point for Vlasic, and for a great many other players, is the escrow mechanism. In order to ensure a 50-50 revenue split with the owners, players see a portion of their salary withheld each season in order to compensate for any shortfall in revenue growth.
It can take years to get a reimbursement, and often it amounts to pennies on the dollar, partly because the players have not shied from exercising their annual escalator option to increase the salary cap. (The cap increasing more quickly than revenues = more escrow. Roughly half of the increase in the NHL’s escrow-retention percentage is due to the rise in the upper limit.)
“Escrow should be eliminated. It should be zero,” said Vlasic, who was involved in the last labour talks in 2012 and plans to play a role in the coming negotiations. “I mean, players sign a big contract, and they get 15 percent taken away immediately because of escrow. It’s not our fault. We’re the product, and it’s our job to ensure people watch our league. It’s not our job to take care of (equalizing revenues). Players keep saying year after year that they don’t like escrow. Now’s the time to put on the big-boy pants.”
LOL, Vlasic is out of his mind. Yes, the article does mention the owner's Holy Grail, the end of the guaranteed contract.
Should the league decline its option to re-open the agreement, the union will have until Sept. 15 to make a call on whether to terminate the deal in 2020, setting the stage for a possible work stoppage in 12 months time.
The parties have had ongoing talks for months; they met again this past week. There are suggestions those dates could come and go without a definitive resolution, by mutual consent.
“The parties have basically stopped operating under those deadlines,” said a source close to the talks.
Further down in the article:
As an agent was quick to note, if the players opt-out with a view to gaining ground on a series of demands, they can expect the other side to show up with a lengthy shopping list as well.
That’s not to say some players aren’t feeling militant.
San Jose Sharks defenceman Marc-Édouard Vlasic said recently he wouldn’t mind if there was a work stoppage.
Quite the contrary in fact: He’s hoping for one.
“We’ll wait and see what the league will say on Sept. 1, but of course there’s a lot of stuff that I’d like to change,” Vlasic said. “If the players aren’t satisfied on certain fronts, then we should rethink the CBA.”
The main sticking point for Vlasic, and for a great many other players, is the escrow mechanism. In order to ensure a 50-50 revenue split with the owners, players see a portion of their salary withheld each season in order to compensate for any shortfall in revenue growth.
It can take years to get a reimbursement, and often it amounts to pennies on the dollar, partly because the players have not shied from exercising their annual escalator option to increase the salary cap. (The cap increasing more quickly than revenues = more escrow. Roughly half of the increase in the NHL’s escrow-retention percentage is due to the rise in the upper limit.)
“Escrow should be eliminated. It should be zero,” said Vlasic, who was involved in the last labour talks in 2012 and plans to play a role in the coming negotiations. “I mean, players sign a big contract, and they get 15 percent taken away immediately because of escrow. It’s not our fault. We’re the product, and it’s our job to ensure people watch our league. It’s not our job to take care of (equalizing revenues). Players keep saying year after year that they don’t like escrow. Now’s the time to put on the big-boy pants.”
LOL, Vlasic is out of his mind. Yes, the article does mention the owner's Holy Grail, the end of the guaranteed contract.