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NFL Offseason 2011 - The Longest Yard?

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[*]A salary cap will remain in place, but teams will need to be at or near it.

This is nothing new, unless the percentage has radically changed; the 2009 salary floor was around 85 percent of the cap.

Well, supposedly it's being upped to 90%. With that said, there were glaring loopholes with the salary floor, that teams such as Tampa Bay readily took advantage of.

To quote:
A person familiar with the finances of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers says that last season, the team signed two free-agents, running back Noah Herron and defensive end Patrick Chukwurah, for contracts that totalled $25 million. Under the rules of the salary cap, the Buccaneers were charged that full amount for the players. But to actually earn that money, each player had to, among other things, block six punts apiece—an exceedingly difficult prospect. In the end, neither player ended up taking a single snap. Mr. Herron was paid $157,000 and Mr. Chukwurah $71,000, although the team's salary-cap number reflected the full value of their contracts. Tampa Bay, which ranked among the lowest teams in spending last season, has lost all six of its games. Tampa Bay and NFL officials declined to comment

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704224004574489773943949070.html

-Jamman
 
Just as an update for those keeping score at home, after four days of talks that were described as "productive," negotiations between the players and the NFL have fallen apart again, with sources from both sides reporting that discussions are trending "backwards."

You know, this is the time of year when I normally begin steeling myself for 16 consecutive steel-toed kicks to the balls by the Bears.

Now, I don't know whether to do that or not because it's less and less likely that there will even be a goddamn season.
 
Just as an update for those keeping score at home, after four days of talks that were described as "productive," negotiations between the players and the NFL have fallen apart again, with sources from both sides reporting that discussions are trending "backwards."

You know, this is the time of year when I normally begin steeling myself for 16 consecutive steel-toed kicks to the balls by the Bears.

Now, I don't know whether to do that or not because it's less and less likely that there will even be a goddamn season.
 
For the most part, I've been leaning more towards the players' side, but the reports of some of their newest money demands (such as demanding a portion of the revenue for non-football related events in stadiums such as concerts) are just getting silly. It's reached a point where I almost have to wonder if the two sides are just fucking with each other now.
 
My wife and I get amped up every Sunday to watch the Pats. We look forward to it all week and enjoy the time together. I'm gonna be bummed if we start losing games here.

Aren't training camps supposed to begin in 2-3 weeks?

Even if they get a deal done at the 11th hour, the quality of play is gonna be crappy at first with lots of injuries.

And Timby, I own some steel-toes boots for when I visit construction sites. I'll gladly fill the testacle kicking task for you.
 
You know, this is the time of year when I normally begin steeling myself for 16 consecutive steel-toed kicks to the balls by the Bears.

Now, I don't know whether to do that or not because it's less and less likely that there will even be a goddamn season.

Should probably practice, just so you don't lose the calluses. Maybe just prepare for 10 or so kicks to the nuts this season? Gives you more time for the Cubs to get in their kicks, i guess...
 
For the most part, I've been leaning more towards the players' side, but the reports of some of their newest money demands (such as demanding a portion of the revenue for non-football related events in stadiums such as concerts) are just getting silly. It's reached a point where I almost have to wonder if the two sides are just fucking with each other now.

It's the revenue share. That's the entire sticking point. The players are fine with 48 / 52 (majority to the owners), but the owners are trying to hose them on everything else. Goodell was fine with 48 / 52 when he was negotiating directly with DeMaurice Smith, but then the owners dropped a stinkbomb this week when they returned to their demand of $500 million off the top of all revenues before anything enters the revenue pool. Anonymous sources within the players' organization (most likely Smith speaking off the record) say that the tone of the talks has now returned to what it was before the lockout even began.

You're absolutely right, the sides are fucking with each other. It's basically a power play, on both sides, to see who will cry "uncle" first. The problem is that 32 billionaires (well, 31, plus the publicly owned Green Bay Packers) are much better prepared to withstand this game of chicken than the players are.

Roger Goodell is John Hammond, and DeMaurice Smith is Dennis Nedry.
 
The players should just make Jay Cutler their representative. That way in a few hours he'll quit and make the I-just-bit-a-lemon face, the owners will win, and we'll have a season ;)
 
I'm sure most of you have run across this somewhere on the interwebs, but just in case...

[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QJ-2YtHn2dU[/yt]

Nice cameos from some original stars....

:techman:
 
Apparently the financial issues have been agreed upon, but the current sticking point is the owners' insistence that a team can select three free-agent players for whom they have the right of first refusal -- basically, an unrestricted free agent can negotiate with another team, but the signing team has to notify the player's original team of the terms of the deal, and the original team has the right to match it.

Sounds like the owners want to implement restricted free agency like the NHL used to have. Or, it's the franchise tag on steroids.
 
Honestly, if that's the sticking point, I'd probably concede it. At least for players below a certain age. In some ways, it's better than the franchise tag, since the player at least gets a signing bonus (and, actually, the fully negotiated amount of money). IIRC, Basketball's restricted free agency system operates similarly to this.

If anything, this seems bad for the owners, since it might lead to bidding wars.
 
Of course, the NFL is the biggest user of the Poison Pill in contracts, so unless they fix the wording of the 'matching' part, it would be meaningless anyway...
 
Apparently the financial issues have been agreed upon, but the current sticking point is the owners' insistence that a team can select three free-agent players for whom they have the right of first refusal -- basically, an unrestricted free agent can negotiate with another team, but the signing team has to notify the player's original team of the terms of the deal, and the original team has the right to match it.

Sounds like the owners want to implement restricted free agency like the NHL used to have. Or, it's the franchise tag on steroids.

Not familiar with the NHL rules, but I believe the NFL already has restricted free agency in one form or another. After 4 years of service is restricted, after 6, unrestricted?

Aren't the owners also pushing for 3 franchise style tags on players as well? I've heard that from various sports media.

As a fan, I have no problem with this. I'm a Pats fan, and if not for the franchise tag, Mankins woulda been gone. But as a player, I can see why they don't like it. Yeah you get great money for that one year, but blow out a knee along the way, and say goodbye to that multi-year deal you're playing for.
 
The owners have dropped the "right of first refusal" demand for this year's free agents.

Have you noticed that the owners seem to be crumbling like a house of cards on a lot of issues recently? There's a reason for it. The players unveiled their secret weapon on Wednesday: A sack of money under the mattress.

SI.com's Jim Trotter reports a previously undisclosed secret fund that would pay each player roughly $200,000 in 2011 may be the spark that ignited progress in labor negotiations Wednesday.

NFLPA boss DeMaurice Smith secured the insurance policy that would go into effect if there's no football this year. Ravens CB Domonique Foxworth threw that "ace in the hole" on the table with momentum at a standstill Wednesday. One source close to the owners acknowledged that the revelation "definitely" got their attention. Between the players' secret fund and Judge Doty's ruling that the owners could not touch their own "illegally created" $4 billion lockout fund, Foxworth's move may prove to be the turning point in the CBA discussions.

I wish I could have been in the room when Foxworth dropped his dick on the negotiating table and said "suck it" like that.
 
^That's funny, I thought he asked Goodell how his ass tastes. Didn't know about the dick on the table business.

Hrd to believe they kept that a secret for this long.
 
Yeah, I'd be interested to find out when they bought the policy. $200,000 per player times 2,000 players means that's a $400 million insurance policy. The NFLPA was definitely in a position to afford it, of course; it had $200 million in the bank around the beginning of March. And in any event, it definitely screwed up the owners' "we have more money than you, so we can wait this thing out longer than you" strategy.

Although it would be perversely hilarious if the networks funded that $400 million. I think the owners would call in airstrikes if they learned the networks made "what if there's no football" deals with both sides. :lol:
 
ProFootballTalk.com says:
Per ESPN’s Chris Mortensen, the new labor deal will be good for ten years.

Citing multiple sources familiar with the negotiations, Mortensen reports that the decade-long agreement will give the players somewhere between 46.5 and 48 percent of the revenue generated by the NFL. There is a specific credit for the players allowed if three new NFL stadiums are constructed, including one in Los Angeles.

The sides agreed on a format for free agency rules on Friday. Mortensen reports that the market will most likely open on July 25, following the three-day window for teams to re-sign their own free agents.

According to Mortensen, the owners have conceded to eliminate all two-a-day practices from training camp. Teams can instead conduct a helmet-less, non-contact practice in place of a second full-contact workout on the same day.
Sounds good, though I wouldn't be surprised if there's an opt-out clause somewhere in the new CBA.
 
Mort's generally full of shit, though. There are two things that, right now, I don't see happening:

1. NFLPA re-certifying as a union before the owners vote on a deal
2. A new CBA signed in the next 6 days

Something that needs to happen is a resolution / settlement in the 2011 TV revenue (that is, lockout insurance) case, because there's no way the owners settle Brady without knowing where half the season's revenue is coming from. The legacy fund (benefits for retired players) is still an outstanding issue, too, and I'm not entirely sure that Judge Nelson will approve a settlement between the NFL and NFLPA that punts on that elephant in the room.

I could easily be wrong, but it seems like a lot of this optimism is just shit being fed from the league side to a media desperate for some good news. While I believe the parties are close to a deal, I remain confident this is going to stretch out another week or two before the lockout actually ends.
 
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Well, whenever the lockout ends, the wife and I have a date in the Dreadowlands whenever the Pats go to NJ. I sat through that playoff game last winter with a couple of Jets fans giving us the business, and I'd love to return the favor.

Or so we swore to each other on the broken down train home from Gillette.
 
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