Doty may not get the case after all. This is from ESPN:The audited statements will not...guaranteed not...include the detail behind the numbers...so if the players reps think they are going into the ledgers etc of the owners that will never ever happen. They may get the financials....which I personally don't agree with...but they will not see the detail behind the financial...the auditors reviewed that and in their certification they say "fairly presents........" and that is where this will end.
The ONLY thing at this point the players have going for them IF what I read about the offer is true is the fact that Judge Dody is handling the case...he is totally a "players judge" and both sides know that...he proved that in the past.
If this is what the ownership offered and it was rejected, I can't even imagine what they are holding out for. Maybe the retired players should be able to vote for this.
This is all fine, but doesn't include some of the remarks made by Pasch and Smith following the breakdown.
The issue still remains that the teams want more off the top money.
It's a bit rich to say you are splitting the difference when in fact you are asking for an additional 700 to 800M per annum (Pasch referenced $750M, Smith $800) off the top to be added to the $1.0B that teams recieve under the now expired agreement.
This is why Smith says, and I paraphrase: "We are not going to sign a $5B cheque without seeing the books."
It should be noted that Pasch did say that the teams were prepared to offer a third party audit to satisfy this player demand.
I can imagine that an audit with strict terms of reference agreed to by both parties will at some point come into play. If the teams are secure in believing that this will make their case for additional cash off the top, and the players also see that this is the likely outcome, they will likely then come to a mutually agreed figure.
The players will not hold out for a year or longer. Owners are fully funded to pay all their stadium debts as only about 20-30% of the stadium revenue comes from NFL games. The stadiums are separate corporations and stand on their own. The players have nothing to do with stadium revenue. Standard & Poors estimates the owners can fully fund any stadium debt for 1-2 years and be just fine. There are a lot of millionaire players but their are more who are not millionaires and who will cross picket lines long before one year passes with no pay. Some are already grumbling. It is going to be very difficult to keep the players from coming out and blasting the union after the scheduled start of the season. The owners in fact have a lot more money than the players. The players insist on seeing the owners books. I do not think that will happen or should happen. These are privately owned businesses (except Green Bay who are exempt because they are a public company) and no private business should be forced to open its private books to anyone except the IRS, if they have need. There should never be a legal precedent set for such action. I want to see the Cards books but I have no such right. This is an overreach by the union. Maybe they should request a search of Mr. B's house while they are at it.
From what I've read at the NFP the books are open, to a degree, what the PA wants to see is line-items.
The NFLPA, in turn, listed reasons why no new CBA was reached, saying the NFL:
Demanded a multibillion-dollar giveback and refused to provide any legitimate financial information to justify it.
Wanted to turn the clock back on player compensation by four years, moving them back to where they were in 2007.
Offered no proposal for long-term share of revenues.
Demanded 100% of all revenues that went above unrealistically low projections for the first four years.
Refused to meet the players on significant changes to in-season, off-season or pre-season health and safety rules.
Kept on the table its "hypocritical" demand for an 18-game season, despite its public claims to be working toward improving the heath and safety of players.
Wanted cutbacks in workers' compensation benefits for injured players.
Sought to limit rookie compensation long after they become veterans — into players' fourth and fifth years.
Instead we are left wondering if there will be a real season. The move by the union to decertify helps the possibility that there will be a season. If the NFL had locked out the players as a union, then the season would have been in much more jeopardy. But decertifying means it is more likely that we do have a 2011 season, although courts will decide that. The league can now file an injunction to prevent a lockout -- which the NFL plans to do -- and that would make the league implement a set of rules to guide the 2011 season, which the players would play under if they were to their liking as the anti-trust suit wound its way through the courts.
Demanded a multibillion-dollar giveback and refused to provide any legitimate financial information to justify it.
Demanded 100% of all revenues that went above unrealistically low projections for the first four years.
Sought to limit rookie compensation long after they become veterans — into players' fourth and fifth years.
1. We more than split the economic difference between us, increasing our proposed cap for 2011 significantly and accepting the union's proposed cap number for 2014 ($161 million per club).
The salary cap in 2007 was 109 million. Now under current proposal in 2011 it would be nearly 170 million. That's hardly requesting players to go back to 2007
The salary cap in 2007 was 109 million. Now under current proposal in 2011 it would be nearly 170 million. That's hardly requesting players to go back to 2007
Where do you see $170 million? I see a proposed cap acceptance of 161 in 2014. That doesn't say what it is in 2011, 2012, 2013
See my guess in the NFL is being honest with their information, but leaving out the bad stuff.
The players union is doing the same.
Ironically the listing of 2011, 2012, 2013 is 3 years not 4 years. Maybe the NFL rolls back and then jumps up when it projects the economy will be better?
Sorry I answered that above.