Florio: No CBA=No Trades. No FA. No Preseason. Yes Draft

DoTheDew

Registered
Joined
Dec 8, 2007
Posts
2,967
Reaction score
0
That may be the case but I'll believe it when I see it. I still feel like mid summer is when these things are going to get done. The players start losing pay checks the moment they don't get signing bonuses as free agents. That's going to hurt at least 10-20% of the players instantly.

And these guys aren't stupid. They know they are going to be missing checks if they aren't playing. Waiting until that happens is money they'll never get back.
 

az240zz

ASFN Lifer
Joined
Sep 11, 2002
Posts
3,314
Reaction score
542
what would happen if the players struck 2 days before the SuperBowl??
 

dreamcastrocks

Chopped Liver Moderator
Super Moderator
Moderator
Supporting Member
Joined
Aug 19, 2005
Posts
47,297
Reaction score
13,961
what would happen if the players struck 2 days before the SuperBowl??

Then we see no lockout and everything plays on like nothing happened.

edit, I thought you meant, struck a deal...
 
Last edited:

slanidrac16

ASFN Icon
Supporting Member
Joined
Jul 11, 2002
Posts
18,485
Reaction score
21,646
Location
Plainfield, Il.
what would happen if the players struck 2 days before the SuperBowl??

That would never happen. Why would the union ask 2 championship teams fall on the sword for the entire league?

And could you imagine the fan fallout against the players if that were to happen? It's bad enough we are going to hear enough about this situation during the Super Bowl.
 

THESMEL

Smushdown! Take it like a fan!
Joined
May 21, 2010
Posts
6,142
Reaction score
1,381
Location
Vernon
I'm staying with my prediction in 2008 until something real changes, The Owners can't pay 66 percent in labor, no business can and cover all the other expenses, even sharing revenue top teams to bottom, 4% profit could be made on a $billon CD, but then none would be spent in Arizona or anywhere else for that matter.

40% tax rate leaves you in the hole already and the Obama administration would rather have 50% or more from any successful business, NFL or not.

Bill Bidwill's has about 70 years invested in the Cardinals, now its worth about 1 $Billion but the doubling and tripling of franchise that happen in this last CBA is drying up. The Owners first offer was 40% to the players.

Last I heard the players have pre planned to kill the union to make the teams honor contracts individually. So the Owners have already won. Now the Owners are saying take the first offer at 40% or leave it, to make the players the bad guys or the reason for the lock out.

Either way the Owners war chests are packed, they will lock out union players and hire non union. The Union ate its own lunch like all unions do, They are addicted and paid to get more, no matter what. The Players union is toast after the 2009 golden standard year of players pay and salary cap. Greed kills union.

The only way the union can survive is to comprimise at 50% equal partnership. Share the heaven and hell of the NFL, Right now when Vick went to prison only the owner was hurt, none of the players suffered financially directly.

If the draft and FA's provides the weakest teams with a fighting chance each year great for all. Players have their cake and eat it too. But when was the last time the Players union diciplined a player? They act like a fool, accept fines with a laugh, could care less about the well being of the NFL overall. Thats all on the owner, the stadium, merchandizing, that the players don't pay nothing but get a cut of the profit?

If anybody ever wore the different hats of a business, They understand. I was the owner, foreman, worker, salesman of my own business. each position or title wanted something else and more from the pie. earned or not.
 
Last edited:

kerouac9

Klowned by Keim
Joined
Feb 14, 2003
Posts
44,253
Reaction score
42,739
Location
Gilbert, AZ
Don't know if everyone read this far, but this was the worst point of all:

Peter King of Sports Illustrated explained in his most recent MMQB that it’s possible a lockout lingering into the late preseason or what would otherwise be the regular season will result in a decision to freeze all potential free agents in place for one more season with their current teams, with 2011 base salaries based on their 2010 pay plus a premium. Such an approach could be necessitated by the chaos that would erupt if, for example, the players cry uncle after losing two weeks of pay and the league slapping together plans for a regular season on the fly. Opening the free-agency flood gates at that point would create chaos as 32 franchises attempt to get ready to play a real game within a week or two after a new labor deal finally is struck.

Oh, good God no.
 
Top