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wolfpack
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Post subject: Mortensen,ESPN;NFL to end $100M in revenue sharing Posted: Mon Dec 07, 2009 9:52 am |
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Joined: Sat Aug 08, 2009 7:11 am Posts: 630 Location: between lost and nowhere, southcentral,ks.
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By Chris Mortensen ESPN
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones was fined at least $100,000 in September for violating a gag order by suggesting that revenue sharing was on its way out.
Turns out, he was only tipping the owners' hand.
In a significant move that could impact the flow of money to potential free agents and the competitive balance of teams, the NFL has notified the players' union that effective in March, owners will pull the plug on the $100 million-per-year revenue-sharing program that has subsidized lower-revenue clubs, multiple sources said.
By Tuesday, the NFL Players Association will challenge the move with an NFL arbitrator, special master Stephen Burbank, claiming owners can't terminate the revenue-sharing model without the union's approval because it was adopted into the 2006 labor agreement, which doesn't expire until March 2011.
Management counters that the supplemental model pertained only to salary-capped seasons; 2010 is scheduled to be uncapped.
Burbank is a law professor at the University of Pennsylvania who is responsible for resolving collective bargaining disputes between the NFL and the NFLPA. Approximately eight to 12 lower-revenue teams have qualified on a yearly basis to draw from the supplemental pool. The $100 million fund is part of $6.5 billion in revenues shared by all clubs.
"We are simply going forward on the terms the union approved in March of 2006," NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said.
In the applicable section of the 2006 collective bargaining agreement, it reads: "The revenue sharing program described to the NFLPA by memorandum dated March 10, 2006, has been determined by the NFLPA to be satisfactory. Any material modification to that program must also be reasonably satisfactory to the NFLPA."
A management source said when the owners chose for an early opt-out of the labor deal, triggering an uncapped year in 2010, it opened the door for the supplemental pool to be disbanded.
Lower-revenue clubs that have been subsidized under the supplemental plan will not be subject to the minimum spending rules that exist with the current salary-cap system.
According to NFLPA spokesman George Atallah, "Revenue sharing helps maintain the 'any given Sunday' dynamic in the NFL.
"The amount of money some owners propose to pull out of the system in 2011 could mean the difference between playoffs and blackouts for many teams," he said.
Chris Mortensen is a senior NFL analyst for ESPN.
_________________ "old enough to remember what a red and gold super bowl looks like" "hopefully young enough to see another"
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wolfpack
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Post subject: Re: Mortensen,ESPN;NFL to end $100M in revenue sharing Posted: Mon Dec 07, 2009 9:56 am |
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Joined: Sat Aug 08, 2009 7:11 am Posts: 630 Location: between lost and nowhere, southcentral,ks.
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Another thing moving toward an uncapped year and the bigger teams owning the NFL. The cap is one thing what makes the Nfl better than baseball. Teams like the royals are nothing better than a farm team for the yankees,phillys, ect. If you think Clark is cheap now wait till no cap. 5 or 6 win season probably will be the norm. I guess by the way their playing now that wouldbe an improvment.
_________________ "old enough to remember what a red and gold super bowl looks like" "hopefully young enough to see another"
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TribalChief
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Post subject: Re: Mortensen,ESPN;NFL to end $100M in revenue sharing Posted: Wed Dec 09, 2009 1:06 am |
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Joined: Sat Jul 04, 2009 8:23 am Posts: 1646 Location: SE Kansas
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wolfpack wrote: Another thing moving toward an uncapped year and the bigger teams owning the NFL. The cap is one thing what makes the Nfl better than baseball. Teams like the royals are nothing better than a farm team for the yankees,phillys, ect. If you think Clark is cheap now wait till no cap. 5 or 6 win season probably will be the norm. I guess by the way their playing now that wouldbe an improvment. Exactly! I can't stand Jones; it's my understanding that he pushed for this. This could mark the beginning of the end for the Chiefs in KC they may not be able to survive there. I can also see another players strike on the horizon; not good.
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