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NFL owners may opt out of labor agreement next week

 

NEW YORK -- NFL owners could opt out of their agreement with the players union next week, leaving open the possibility of a 2010 season without a salary cap.

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The labor agreement is on the agenda for the league meetings in Atlanta on Tuesday.

"If they don't do it next week then it will be soon after that," Gene Upshaw, the executive director of the NFL Players Association, said Friday. "They want to opt out and we don't."

In the agreement signed in March of 2006, both sides were given the right to get out of the deal by Nov. 8, 2008. League officials noted that doesn't mean that a decision could not be made earlier.

That contract was due to expire at the end of the 2013 season. If the owners nullify it, a move that has seemed inevitable for a while, it would end after the 2011 season with 2010 being uncapped.

The end of the agreement does not necessarily mean that there will be a work stoppage, although Upshaw has predicted that the owners could lock out the players in 2011. But the early opt out also could lead to earlier talks on a new deal, which the owners feel has leaned too far toward the players - Upshaw already has had several preliminary meetings, including one recently with Jerry Richardson of Carolina and Pat Bowlen of Denver, two of the owners expected to be involved in the negotiations.

And despite predictions that owners with more cash would corner the market on star players in an uncapped year, there are safeguards against that, notably a provision in the contract, first signed in 1993, that extends the period needed from free agency from four years to six if that happens.

The early termination of the labor contract has been expected for at least the last six months.

Several owners have complained that the current deal, which gives 60 percent of the revenues to the players, has been too one-sided. It was done at the last moment and was the last major act of former commissioner Paul Tagliabue, who managed to put together a coalition of high-revenue, middle-revenue and low-revenue teams to ratify the contract.

Only two low revenue teams, Cincinnati and Buffalo, voted against it.

Since then, however, high-revenue owners, such as New England's Robert Kraft, have also supported negotiating for a new deal. And if a vote is taken, 24 of the 32 teams would have to vote to extend it, something that is highly unlikely to happen.

One problem, league officials note, are rising and unpredictable bond rates, which leave teams like Dallas and the New York Giants and Jets, who are building new stadiums, with rising costs and rising debt on their bonds. The Cowboys' Stadium is scheduled to open next season and host the 2011 Super Bowl and the new facility for the New York teams is scheduled to open in 2010.

AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service

Copyright 2007-2008, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved
 
Talk Back
Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Sep 15, 2007

May 16, 2008 7:12 pm

Why in the world would the owners opt out of this contract?

  1. Can you imagine the players salaries without a cap?
  2. Doesn't the cap create equality between the teams?
  3. Won't the large market teams like New York, New England (Boston), and Dallas have an big time advantage - See the New York Yankees and MLB
    ...(more)
Reputation:94
Level:All-Star
Since:Oct 31, 2006

May 19, 2008 12:19 am
I have to side with the owners on every single point of this. Get the agreement closer to 50-50. And I'm going to add one more scrap to the pile of things that should be forced down the players' throats in the next CBA: automatic contract holdout penalties. Not just team threats - League sanctioned, in writing, you-break-your-contract-you-are-fin
ed penalties. Add in a rookie pool, with saf
...(more)
Reputation:91
Level:All-Star
Since:Jan 16, 2008

May 19, 2008 12:42 pm
As we all already know.  One of the strongest angles of the NFL is the salary cap. If that change, the game will be gone just like MLB. Im sick of the Yankees, Real Madrid, Chelsea, you name them. 
Reputation:90
Level:All-Star
Since:Oct 10, 2007

May 17, 2008 10:35 am

Here are tidbits of info about the CBA.  Since owners are at the 40-60 split of revenues, they would like to get it close to 50-50. That would be number one OR 1b.  The other one, would be a rookie salary like the NBA has. In otherwards, give the big money to the proven veterans and not to the untested rookies.

The players association would vote for the rookie salary and barga ...(more)

Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Nov 30, 2006

May 16, 2008 9:44 pm
Wow...with the NFL being the the most popular sport in America, I cannot imagine how big some of those salaries would be.

And maybe the Redskins might finally be able to buy that super bowl their after.
Reputation:96
Level:Superstar
Since:Aug 30, 2006

May 16, 2008 11:45 pm
I'm pretty sure that