Showing posts with label NHLPA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NHLPA. Show all posts

Friday, 21 December 2012

NHL Cancel Games Until January

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The NHL announced the cancellation of more games on Thursday, this time through January 14, as time is running out to salvage a season.

Amid speculation the league has set mid-January as a deadline to either get a new collective bargaining agreement in place or cancel the entire season, the league predictably cancelled more games with the labour impasse at yet another standstill.

In total, 625 regular-season games, or 50.8 percent of the entire schedule, has been cancelled."I don't want to characterise what today's cancellations mean or don't mean," NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly told The Associated Press in an email. "I will stand on the announcement that was made."

The league and players' association representatives haven't met face to face since Dec. 13 when talks involving mediators failed to deliver any progress.

More news will come Friday when voting wraps up among the 700-plus players who were asked by the NHLPA's executive board for authorisation to file a disclaimer of interest in order to dissolve the union and attempt to have the lockout deemed illegal. Whether the executive board will file a disclaimer remains to be seen but it has until Jan. 2 if it gets a "yes" vote from players Friday.

In the meantime, NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr told reporters in Toronto before an NHLPA charity game Wednesday night that his side is ready to resume bargaining whenever the league agrees to meet again.

"We have to find a way to have discussions because it's very hard to come to an agreement if you're not talking to one another," Fehr said. "It's very hard to come to an agreement if you set pre-conditions to the negotiations, too."

In an email to ESPN.com on Wednesday night, Daly said the league would meet with the NHLPA again but only if the conditions were right.

"We haven't said we won't meet, but we certainly would want to know what the agenda is and how they intend to proceed," Daly said.

During a news conference on Dec. 6 in New York after talks broke up again, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman suggested that anything less than a 48-game season would not be acceptable. Given that the league has said it is willing to push a season into late June, a 48-game season would likely have to begin around the third week of January.

ESPN
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Wednesday, 21 November 2012

NHLPA Gap Remains $182M - Fehr


Donald Fehr said a new proposal in collective bargaining is "about as good" as the NHL Players' Association can do, according to reports.

The offer was put on the table Wednesday morning, according to the Canadian Press.

Fehr said the union had put forward a percentage-based proposal that takes into account the damage caused by the lockout.

He said the sides are $182 million apart over the five-year deal, according to the report.

The NHL is expected to offer a response on Wednesday afternoon, the 67th day of the lockout.

The New York Rangers' Brad Richards told ESPN.com's Pierre LeBrun via text that the NHLPA's proposal "is a move in their direction again and based off of their proposal. There has to be an effort from them to get this done now."

The two sides have been trying to work out impasses on core issues such as splitting revenue and player contracts. On Tuesday, union leaders met for internal discussions.

About a dozen players arrived at the league's headquarters Wednesday morning along with lawyers and union executives.

If a deal is not struck soon, more games will have to be canceled in an already-shortened season. The lockout has wiped out 327 games so far. The next games still scheduled are in December.


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Sunday, 18 November 2012

White Harsh on NHL Commissioner


Detroit Red Wings defenseman Ian White had some harsh words for NHL commissioner Gary Bettman.

"I gotta be honest: I personally think he's an idiot," White told USA Today on Friday. "Since he's come in, I think he's done nothing but damage the game."

White's comments come in regards to the league enduring a lockout for the third time during Bettman's tenure, which began in February 1993. The last lockout forced the cancellation of the entire 2004-05 season.

With the league and players unable to come to an agreement since the latest lockout went into effect September 16, multiple sources told ESPN that Bettman suggested to NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr on Wednesday that the two sides take a two-week moratorium from negotiations.

"The whole process has just been frustrating," White told USA Today. "I think, just where we stand now, you'd think that we're close to making a deal if they're willing to come a little bit our way. It's something that could have been done even in the summer. So it's frustrating. There's just absolutely no need to be missing games and doing this kind of damage."

The two sides remain divided on how to share revenue and player contract issues, as well as who shoulders the financial burden of the losses incurred as a result of the lockout.

With scant optimism that a new collective bargaining agreement will be reached soon, reports surfaced Thursday that the next round of cancellations could be on the horizon.

The league already has been forced to cancel 327 regular-season games -- through Nov. 30 -- as well as the annual Winter Classic. There also has been speculation that the fate of the season may be in jeopardy soon.


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Monday, 12 November 2012

NHL Bettman Keeps Talks Ongoing


A fourth straight day of NHL labour talks failed to bring the league and its locked-out players any closer to a deal that would put hockey back on the ice and save the season. In fact, the gap between the two parties might have become even wider on a failed Friday. Talks resume on Sunday.

After three consecutive and seemingly positive days of talks, discussions had turned sour when negotiations ended for the night. The players' union was under the impression it was nearer to an agreement with the league. NHL commissioner Gary Bettman disagreed.

"Gary made a comment [Thursday] that there is still a lot of work to do. I think, given today's session, there is still a lot of work to do," said Donald Fehr, the NHLPA chief. "We looked at some of the numbers on the various proposals and we thought we were much closer together on the structure of a deal than the suggestions were. They came back to us and said, 'No, we are very very far apart on the structure of the deal.'"

There were vocal disagreements at the end of the session, and the union team went back to its office to hold a conference call with the executive board and other players. The union is beginning to feel that the NHL isn't ready to make a deal now, even if the players were suddenly willing to accept the league's offer in full – which they are not.

"We talked back and forth a little bit, and at one point the question was asked: 'If the players would agree to everything that's in your financial proposal, what you're saying is you still won't make an agreement unless the players give up everything in all of the player-contracting rights in your proposal? The answer was, 'Yes, because that's what we want,'" Fehr said. "One wonders if that's really the case. How do you get there from here?

"Given where we are, we're going to reconvene internally [Saturday] morning and we'll come to grips with where we are and try to figure out what we'll do next. I don't know what will happen next."

Bettman declined to reveal what was discussed or where the disagreements lie. He also wouldn't characterise the mood of the talks.

"I am not going into the details of what takes place in the room," he said. "I really apologise but I do not think it would be constructive to the process. I don't want to either raise or lower expectations. I won't be happy until we get to the end result and that means we're playing again."

The union also fought to put out fires on Friday after a memo to players summarising Thursday's negotiations was leaked to the media. That led to suggestions that the NHLPA had not fully conveyed the owners' most recent proposal to its membership accurately or completely. Fehr shot down the report as false, if for no other reason that there were players present at the negotiations when the offer was put forward.

"Their proposal is made in front of players in the room who hear it," Fehr said. "It's made in front of staff who hear it, it's made in front of former players who hear it. They're on the phone talking to everybody on an ongoing basis afterward. Owners can't come to meetings when they want to hear stuff directly, but every single player can at the union's expense. Come hear it for himself, make the judgements, and all the rest of it."

Players made a pair of proposals Wednesday, and the NHL responded with one Thursday. No new official offers were exchanged Friday. The last of three sessions centred on the core economic issues keeping the sides apart, and it broke up after about two hours.

Bettman said the league was ready to continue talking as soon as the union wants.

"Whatever it takes. We're available," he said. "It's always better to be together and talk when there is something to talk about. I am not getting into the specifics. When you're in a process like this, you're really not watching the calendar. I'm not sure I can tell you what day it is."

The 55-day-old lockout has already caused the league to call off 327 regular-season games, including the New Year's Day Winter Classic in Michigan, and the NHL has said a full season won't be played. The league is in danger of having a lockout wipe out a full season for the second time in seven years.




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Friday, 5 October 2012

NHL Season Start Delayed

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The National Hockey League (NHL) has cancelled the first two weeks of its regular season because of an ongoing labour dispute with its players' union.

The US and Canadian ice hockey league cut 82 games from 11 to 24 October. It is unclear if they will be made up.

The two sides are still far apart on a key issue in the contract talks - how much players should receive of $3bn (£1.9bn) revenue the games bring in.

A labour dispute seven years ago saw the entire 2004-2005 season cancelled.

No future negotiations are currently scheduled.

Without a deal, clashes between the Los Angeles Kings and the New York Rangers, as well as old rivals the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Montreal Canadiens, will be cancelled, the BBC's Lee Carter reports from Toronto.

"We were extremely disappointed to have to make today's announcement," NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly said in a statement.

"The game deserves better, the fans deserve better, and the people who derive income from their connection to the NHL deserve better."

The players' union argued that the league had forced a lockout onto the players.

"If the owners truly cared about the game and the fans, they would lift the lockout and allow the season to begin on time while negotiations continue," NHLPA Executive Director Donald Fehr said.

A recently expired contract gave players 57% of hockey-related revenue. The NHL would like to have that percentage lower than 50% - possibly as low as 47%.

Many NHL players have decided to stay in North America and play in the American Hockey League, the step below the NHL, while some have decided to find clubs in Europe until any deal is reached.



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Monday, 17 September 2012

NHL Lockout Day One Passes


There is no telling when the NHL lockout will end, especially when neither the league nor the NHL Players' Association has committed to face-to-face negotiations to end the labour unrest. There were no formal talks Sunday on the first day of the lockout, the league's fourth shutdown since 1992, including a year-long dispute that forced the cancellation of the entire 2004-05 season when the league successfully held out for a salary cap.

There are no formal talks planned.

However, NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly and NHLPA special counsel Steve Fehr talked Sunday over the phone. The two plan to talk again Tuesday evening, Daly told ESPNNewYork.com.

The league issued a statement to fans on its website that it was "committed to negotiating around the clock to reach a new CBA that is fair to the players and to the 30 NHL teams."

The clock is ticking and there's no new collective bargaining agreement in sight. The league could start to announce this week the cancellation of preseason games, and there's little chance training camps will open on time. The regular season is scheduled to begin Oct. 11, but that obviously is in peril.

Day 1 of the lockout could serve as a preview for the next several cold months: Empty rinks, empty talk.

"This is a time of year for all attention to be focused on the ice, not on a meeting room," the league said. "The league, the clubs and the players all have a stake in resolving our bargaining issues appropriately and getting the puck dropped as soon as possible. We owe it to each other, to the game and, most of all, to the fans."

Pittsburgh's Sidney Crosby, Chicago's Jonathan Toews and Colorado's Gabriel Landeskog were among the players participating in an NHLPA video to fans that was posted on YouTube. With black-and-white photos of each player as a backdrop, they talked about how much the game meant to them, and thanked fans for their support.

"We understand the people that suffer the most are the fans," Crosby said.

Some players won't wait for labor talks to pick up -- they've already packed up.

As of Sunday morning, all NHL players were free to speak to other leagues. Many will land in Russia's KHL, and two big names already signed. Pittsburgh center Evgeni Malkin and Ottawa defenseman Sergei Gonchar agreed to deals with Metallurg. More will surely follow.

Malkin, a 26-year-old centre with the Penguins, is the NHL's reigning MVP. Gonchar, 38, is a defenseman who helped lead the Senators to the playoffs last season.

Although the club provided no further details of their contracts, it said that they would comply with KHL regulations on signing NHL players during the lockout. Under these rules, KHL teams can sign a maximum of three NHL players above their limit of 25.

The KHL also sets the ceiling for the salaries of NHL players at a maximum of 65 percent of what they earn under their NHL deals. Malkin has two years and $16.5 million remaining on his deal with Pittsburgh. Gonchar has one year and $5.5 million left with Ottawa.

Philadelphia Flyers defenseman Kimmo Timonen and forward Scott Hartnell are part-owners of a team in the Finnish league. Timonen, a father of three children, said it would be hard to immediately consider playing overseas unless the entire season was wiped out. But Timonen returned to his native Finland to play in 2004, and clearly understands why some young players are interested in finding a roster spot in Europe.

"A lot of young guys are asking if there's a spot to play," he said. "I'm sure our team can take a few of the guys, but not many."

Many of the players, 25 years and younger, could end up in the AHL, the NHL's primary minor league. No matter where they play, the players are prepared for a lengthy wait to return to the NHL.

The core issue is money -- how to split a $3.3 billion pot of revenue. The owners want to decrease the percentage of hockey-related revenue that goes to players, while the union wants a guarantee that players annually get at least the $1.8 billion in salaries paid out last season.

While the NHL lockout might not destroy the whole season -- like in 2004-05 -- a sizable chunk of games could be lost without any productive talks on tap.

"I'm sure we will remain in contact," Daly said. "But there are no negotiations planned or scheduled at this point."

Teams are prepared for the likelihood the season will not start on time. And so they are making economic plans on several fronts. At the end of each month, for instance, the Buffalo Sabres will refund any games that are cancelled by the NHL.

The Minnesota Wild, meanwhile, fresh off a free-agent spending spree that landed them forward Zach Parise and defenseman Ryan Suter, will send out ticket policies on Monday.

"We support the league's position and trust our NHL negotiating team is looking out for the long-term interests of the game," the Wild said in a statement. "Even as NHL games may be missed, the Wild will continue to support the great sport of hockey at all levels through our grass roots partnerships with amateur hockey associations."

Minnesota defenseman Steve Kampfer, 23, was fired up to report for training part in part to see what it would look like to have those prized free agents -- Parise and Suter -- in uniform to ignite a franchise that missed the playoffs last season.

"It was going to be really exciting to see our lineup with those two acquisitions," Kampfer said. "I guess we'll just have to wait a little longer."

Parise and Suter signed on the same day in July as the Wild made a statement to the rest of the league that they wanted to be true players in the Western Conference. But that will have to wait.

"It's a frustration situation to go through because you never want a work stoppage," Kampfer said. "But we're trying to fight for what's fair for both the owners and players. Everybody wants more money. The owners want to keep more of their profits and the players want their fair share of the profits. As players, we have full confidence that (NHLPA executive director) Donald Fehr will do his job to get us the best deal that he can."

For now, most teams seem to be stable financially. The cancellation of games may change that, but for the time being, the panic button has not been pushed. Penguins spokesman Tom McMillan, for example, said the team has no plans on layoffs "at this time."

In jeopardy are some key dates on the calendar: the New Year's Day outdoor Winter Classic at 115,000-seat Michigan Stadium between the host Detroit Red Wings and the Toronto Maple Leafs; and the Jan. 27 All-Star Game hosted by the Columbus Blue Jackets, one of the league's struggling small-market teams.

The Blue Jackets put out a statement Sunday supporting the league, but did not mention the All-Star Game.

"The league, the clubs and the players all have a stake in resolving our bargaining issues appropriately and getting the puck dropped as soon as possible," the team said. "We owe it to each other, to the game, and most of all, to the fans."

NHL players struck in April 1992, causing 30 games to be postponed. This marks the third lockout under commissioner Gary Bettman. The 1994-95 lockout ended after 103 days and the cancellation of 468 games.

"We play for us and the fans," Flyers goalie Michael Leighton said. "It's not fun for us. We want to play.

"You don't want to be doing this every six to eight years."



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Saturday, 18 August 2012

NHL Players Seek Fehr Deal


NHL Players' Association head Donald Fehr said Friday the players are prepared for the eventuality of an owners' lockout if a new collective bargaining agreement can't be reached.

Fehr wrapped up a meeting held over parts of two days with about 40 players at a hotel outside of O'Hare International Airport. The union will hold similar informational meetings next week in British Columbia and Toronto.

Fehr said it's no surprise for players to hear about the possibility of a lockout, especially since both the NFL and NBA have recently weathered shutdowns.

Players are not surprised and fully understand what the ramifications of a work stoppage would mean, since most of them either lived through or have teammates who were playing when the NHL shut down in 2004, he said.

"It was interested. It was focused. It was sobered," Fehr said, describing the tone of the meetings.

"Players understand what is going on, understand what the issues are and understand how the owners' proposal will affect them, understand how this compares to what happened seven years ago ... understand that this will affect their lives if we can't find a way through this in the immediate future."

The league wants the players to give up a significant amount of salary to stabilise the industry, while the union maintains that goal would be best accomplished with the wealthy teams doing more to help their struggling counterparts.

Fehr is scheduled to resume formal discussions with the league Aug. 22.

When those start, the league and the union will have just 24 days left to reach a new agreement and avoid a lockout. The current CBA runs out on Sept. 15 -- by which time commissioner Gary Bettman wants a deal in place. The regular season is set to start Oct. 11.

The entire 2004-05 season was lost to a lockout and then the players eventually accepted a 24 percent rollback on salaries and a cap. Despite the wide philosophical gap between the two sides, Fehr said there is still time to reach an agreement.

"If there is a mutual will to get this done, if we can find a common platform around which to construct an agreement, then obviously there is plenty of time in which to do that," he said, adding he's out of the prediction business.

"Unfortunately, what you saw in the last two negotiations in football and basketball, and can be argued what happened in hockey in 2004, is that the lockout was the strategy of first choice, not the strategy of last resort.

"I hope that's not true this time, but time will tell. Having said that, when Gary says it's much more preferable to get a deal done before Sept. 15, we agree with him."

Phoenix Coyotes right wing David Moss said the players are prepared and have discussed all eventualities.

"The league are the ones saying that if we don't come to a decision. ... The players are still very optimistic and hopeful that things will get done on time, and we're working in that fashion," said Moss, who played last season with the Calgary Flames.

"The players are preparing (like) there's going to be a season; they do all the things leading up to that until we're told otherwise."

The teams aren't necessarily acting the same way.

On Thursday, Detroit Red Wings general manager Ken Holland cancelled the team's annual prospects tournament in which seven other teams were slated to play: the Buffalo Sabres,Carolina Hurricanes, Columbus Blue Jackets, Dallas Stars, Minnesota Wild, New York Rangers and St. Louis Blues.

"Due to the uncertainty surrounding the collective bargaining agreement and the advance commitments required from the various parties," Holland said, "we have determined that it is in everyone's best interest to cancel."

Under the owners' proposal, the players' share in revenue would be cut from 57 percent to 43 percent and would include a change to the way the salary cap is calculated. Instead of being set at $8 million above the midpoint, the upper limit would be reduced to $4 million above. As a result, the salary cap would drop to $50.8 million next season, which is below where the floor currently rests.

The league also called for the elimination of salary arbitration, contract limits of five years (with equal money paid each year, essentially eliminating signing bonuses) and 10 years of service before unrestricted free agency kicks in.

The NHLPA estimated the league's proposal would cost players approximately $450 million per season.

Fehr designed his own system, including an expanded revenue-sharing plan that would see the wealthy teams distribute more than $250 million per season to the ones having financial struggles.

"One of the things the players asked me is, 'Why did we give them what we did the last time if this was going to be the result this time?' " Fehr said.