It depends on the specific player contract. There are some with millions at stake, while others have nothing tied to it.how much lost income to players for missing OTAs?
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It depends on the specific player contract. There are some with millions at stake, while others have nothing tied to it.how much lost income to players for missing OTAs?
With everything being said and written right now......I'm confused. lol
Hmm..I did not think any player got paid for OTAs or millions for practice or training camps. I thought all players received a per diem and a check for each pre-season game that is very tiny compared to their regular game checks. Trying to find out what the $320million is for.It depends on the specific player contract. There are some with millions at stake, while others have nothing tied to it.
Hmm..I did not think any player got paid for OTAs or millions for practice or training camps. I thought all players received a per diem and a check for each pre-season game that is very tiny compared to their regular game checks. Trying to find out what the $320million is for.
Arthur Boylan arrived in New York City Monday afternoon, fresh off his vacation. According to multiple reports, he went straight from the airport to where lawyers for the NFL and NFLPA* are meeting Monday.
The original plan was for both parties to meet Boylan on his home turf in Minneapolis Tuesday. That plan obviously changed.
Its probably going to be a quiet Monday in labor news, but we can pass along word that the NFLPA* filed for a summary judgment, asking that the lockout to be declared illegal. The motion will be rendered a moot point if there is an agreement.
NFLPA* spokesman George Atallah told the New York Times this is just a procedural move and doesnt indicate the state of negotiations. Wed quibble with that slightly: It indicates negotiations are ongoing, something both sides aimed to end four months ago.
Dunta didn't want to be here under the franchise tag or during free agency. He was forced to take a 1 year deal and risk potential injury that would ruin his free agency value. If Dunta gets another leg injury in 2010, he doesn't get near the money he got from the Falcons. So while the short-term 10 mil for one year is nice, he would be risking losing 40 mil in free agency by way of injury and also may miss out on going to a team/coach he actually wants to play for.
On the other hand, had Dunta sat out the 2010 season, he would have made $0 and missed a season. If the team doesn't want the player to go elsewhere, they can just play that card and pay him for one year to keep him off the market. The franchise tag is basically an ultimatum to the player, and I hate the idea of that. There is no contract in place with the player, it's basically forced on them and doesn't allow the player to hit free agency, which I believe they are entitled to at that point in their career.
Houston franchised Robinson last year, and he was the only franchised player in the NFL who chose to sit out the entire offseason.
Some statistical measures suggest that Robinson was not just one of the worst cornerbacks for the Texans, but one of the worst-rated cornerbacks in the league.
Whether or not Robinson stayed or went, the Texans secondary was likely going to be a concern.
Because they earned free agency by playing out their contract. Why should anyone be forced into a contract? It's a ridiculous system, and there's no other major sport that has a similar function. I really couldn't care less if billionaire owners lose a star player because they don't want to pay them the money they think they are worth. Allow the free agency market to decide their value, and let the player decide what they want to do. If the organization wants that player for a high cost for one year, let the team offer that in free agency and let the player decide if he wants that contract.
It's been refuted by a couple players, but if they did admit it, that would mean that the Packers broke the lockout rules so maybe they are just covering things up.Posted by Mike Florio on July 18, 2011, 10:16 PM EDT
Though the labor deal still isn’t done and no one knows for sure when and if it will be, the defending world champions are making it known that players should be ready to show up at the team facility on Saturday for a meeting.
Per a source with knowledge of the situation, the Packers are telling players that the doors will open on Friday, and that the team wants the players in town in order to get started on preparations for training camp and the preseason.
This presumes that the remaining issues between the NFL and the NFLPA* will be resolved in time for the players and the owners to separately approve the new agreement. The fact that the Packers are getting the word out shows how widespread that presumption currently is.
Of course, teams aren’t supposed to be talking to players during the lockout. For many teams, however, that ship sailed a long, long time ago.
UPDATE: Jason Wilde of ESPN Milwaukee says via Twitter that the report is “100 percent true,” and that he has confirmed it through two team sources.
Source: Packers are telling players to be ready to show up on Saturday
It's been refuted by a couple players, but if they did admit it, that would mean that the Packers broke the lockout rules so maybe they are just covering things up.
Hmm..I did not think any player got paid for OTAs or millions for practice or training camps. I thought all players received a per diem and a check for each pre-season game that is very tiny compared to their regular game checks. Trying to find out what the $320million is for.
This should all be cleared up tomorrow. I hope...
Report: Some Executive Committee members were “infuriated” by reports of benefits for plaintiffs
Posted by Mike Florio on July 20, 2011, 7:37 AM EDT
As the dust settles on Tuesday’s unexpected brouhaha regarding the efforts of four named plaintiffs in the Brady antitrust lawsuit - or agents and/or lawyers working on their behalf - to get something for themselves as a settlement of the case approaches, one of the guys who reported that an effort was made to block the franchise tag from ever being used on Colts quarterback Peyton Manning and Saints quarterback Drew Brees reports that the issue ultimately was dropped based in part on the reaction from other players.
Mike Freeman of CBSSports.com reports, citing an unnamed player, that some members of the NFLPA* Executive Committee were “infuriated” by the news. “They want blood,” the unnamed player told Freeman.
The Executive Committee was meeting on Tuesday in Washington, in advance of an expected Wednesday analysis of the proposed labor deal. Since Brees is a member of the Executive Committee, there’s a chance that things may have gotten a little awkward in the room.
Freeman also opines that, to the extent Brees, Manning (via his agent), and Chargers receiver Vincent Jackson are now saying they never asked for special treatment, they’re telling the truth. Sort of. As Freeman sees it, others had been pushing the issue on behalf of players who, as a result, were able to maintain plausible deniability.
As we first heard the story last month, CAA was attempting to secure the exemption for its clients, Brees and Manning. On Tuesday, Jason Cole of Yahoo! Sports reported that an effort was being made to make Jackson and Patriots guard Logan Mankins free agents in 2011, or to get them $10 million each for the money they lost via the rules of the uncapped year and their ensuing holdouts. Greg Bedard of the Boston Globe and Freeman reported that the effort of behalf of Brees and Manning was still being made. And Adam Schefter of ESPN reported that Jackson’s agents had confirmed that Jackson indeed wanted free agency, or free money.
The issue has now been resolved, via the face-saving suggestion that the NFLPA* has decided it would be too cumbersome to negotiate deals for some or all of the 10 named plaintiffs in the Brady antitrust case. The more likely explanation is that, with a storm of criticism coming from players, some in the media, and fans, the NFLPA* realized that it wasn’t the best issue to have on the table at a time when the deal was so close to being struck.
And that’s one of the realities of the new media world in which we operate. As a PFT commenter pointed out, the twists and turns of the Reggie White antitrust action in the early 1990s weren’t covered and analyzed and reacted to in real time. Today, everything is subject to immediate assessment and scrutiny. And whoever was pushing this issue as of Tuesday grossly underestimated the extent to which the information would instantaneously trigger strong feelings that could be expressed just as instantaneously.
The road to a CBA
This morning, a completed draft is being readied for the NFLPA Executive Committee and the NFL's Labor Committee. The NFLPA Executive Committee and all 32 player representatives are set to meet today in Washington to peruse, and hopefully approve, a proposed settlement. A full vote by all 1900 players would then take place. Players would recommend that the Brady named plaintiffs sign off on the deal. Upon approval by the named plaintiffs, the ball would change possession into the Owners' hands.
On Thursday, the Owners are meeting Atlanta, with two or more executives from each team attending. If at least 24 of 32 owners ratify the proposed CBA, peace will be born after four months of grueling labor pains. The NFL would then spend Thursday and Friday briefing team executives on the intricacies of the new CBA.
Comprehensive settlement
The pending litigation and related matters Brady v. NFL, the television contract case under Judge Doty, the NFL's unfair labor practice charge with the NLRB, the NFLPA collusion grievance from last year, etc. are expected to be rolled up into one all-encompassing "global settlement" between the parties.
Recertification
Without a union, the labor exemption shielding the NFL from antitrust liability does not attach. As part of the new CBA, the NFL insists that the NFLPA return to its previous role as the exclusive union of NFL Players.
If recertification mirrors the 1993 post-White recertification, there must be:
A majority vote (50% + 1) of NFL players by signed authorization cards designating the NFLPA as the exclusive collective bargaining representative of all present and future players
The NFL voluntarily recognizing the NFLPA
The NFLPA filing a notice with the U.S. Department of Labor and an application with the IRS (to reclassify for tax purposes from a trade association to a labor organization)
Although it sounds like a lot, in today's electronic age, preparations have likely been made for this to be done electronically, via the Internet, saving some much-needed time.
Judge Nelson's blessing
Beyond the Player and Owner votes, there is the matter of the still-pending Brady v. NFL and presenting their settlement agreement to Judge Susan Nelson, the presiding judge who has been apprised of all the negotiations from mediator Arthur Boylan.
Nelson would ensure notice was given to all 1900 NFL Players and potentially hold a hearing where Players unsatisfied with the proposed settlement are afforded the opportunity to object (Judge Doty held the same in 1993 with only a handful of players objecting). Nelson would have ultimate authority to approve the ten-year settlement and end Brady.
This process more of a formality, especially once the NFLPA recertifies is not expected to delay the resumption of NFL football.
A not so simple issue
One issue all sides will be watching is what will happen with decertification. The Owners will try to foreclose the NFLPA's ability to decertify in the future; the Players will resist mightily. To deny decertification as an option will be a major blow to future union leaders in all major sports leagues.
With a ten-year agreement, decertification is not something that will concern the NFL for a long time, but it is in the interest of both parties to find a mutually agreeable solution, and incorporate it into an explicit and unambiguous clause in the next CBA.
Judicial oversight
The 1993 CBA as a result of the White settlement carried oversight from the Minnesota District Court. That oversight has represented a pebble in the shoe of the NFL, with Judge David Doty's rulings for Michael Vick and others costing Owners tens of millions.
The Owners are insistent in not having similar oversight in the coming agreement, and I sense they will not.
Timeline
Upon expected approval by the full NFL ownership tomorrow in Atlanta, there is a seminar scheduled for team negotiators to review the new rules to play under in the business of football.
As we expected, there will likely be a three-day period of interaction between teams and their own players players under contract, rookies, pending free agents. That period will be full of tampering, as players and agents will want to know what is behind Door Number Two before agreeing with their own team.
Following that time, the bell will ring on the 2011 League Year, setting off the building of rosters and talent in as compressed a time period as the modern NFL has known. Teams and agents are bracing themselves, but fans are ecstatic.
The labor pains are ending, the baby will be here soon.
linkNFL Players Association president Kevin Mawae and spokesman George Atallah spoke with reporters Wednesday morning and admitted the process -- reported by some outlets as a formality -- could take a while.
"The players are not in a rush. We're not tied to a timeline of July 21st," Mawae said. "We're not going to agree to any deal unless it's the right deal for all the players."
The agreement in hand is a thorough framework of an agreement that addresses the major bargaining points but is not complete, according to the Washington Post.
"There's a lot of legal stuff that needs to take place and we all know how long lawyers take," Mawae said.
The Boston Herald reported Tuesday that the union's executive committee will not ask for any special considerations for the 10 plaintiffs listed in the Brady v. NFL antitrust suit. It had been reported that Logan Mankins and Vincent Jackson -- both plaintiffs in the suit -- wanted $10 million or the promise of unrestricted free agency as a settlement of that suit.
When asked about the plaintiffs, Mawae did not specifically address the issue.
Can confirm @SI_JimTrotter report that settlement has been voted through by player reps, passed on to plaintiffs. But only conditionally ...
link
NFLPA (WHAT NFLPA????) president and spokeman???????? As of THIS MORNING, the NFLPA president did not specifically address the "LAWSUIT"?????
If I understand correctly, you're questioning the existence of the NFLPA as a group/organization?
The NFLPA still exists, but it's current status is a Trade Association.
It will eventually re-certify to being a Labor Organization.
I know.................but recertification has to occur in order to legally make the CBA complete.........the recertification process will not occur (sign sealed and delivered) in the course of just a couple of hours.
According to local labor attorneys who are not involved in the NFL negotiations, the process for the players association to recertify is simple and won't take long. The easiest way for it to happen is for the players to ask the owners for voluntary recognition.
A source within the NFLPA confirmed Friday that reforming as a union is a simple process. The most likely scenario, the source said, is that players' signatures could be obtained at training camp once the owners lift the lockout and allow the players to return to work.
However, there is precedent for the league operating without a players union. The previous time the players decertified, they did not reform as a union until four years later.
I'm under the impression that while it may not be a two hour process, recertification isn't difficult, it's not necessary to end the lockout, and if history is any indication, it doesn't even have to happen quickly...
LINK
linkThe good news? None of the 10 named plaintiffs in the Brady antitrust action want to become free agents in exchange for signing off on the settlement of the case.
The bad news? According to Mike Freeman of CBSSports.com, Chargers receiver Vincent Jackson and Patriots guard Logan Mankins still want $10 million each.
The report comes despite Jackson’s Twitter claim after the issue of free agency or free money arose on Tuesday that he wants nothing other than to play ball.
NFL Lockout Looms As Negotiations Reach Final Day Getty Images
Were gonna need more ice for all of this champagne.
At a time when it has been widely believed that the NFLPA* and the NFL will approve the proposed labor deal and open the doors for free agency and training camps next week, Seahawks guard Chester Pitts told Tony Bruno of FOX Sports Radio that it will take two full weeks to get the situation resolved.
Pitts is the Seahawks player representative, and he attended Wednesdays meetings in Washington, D.C. So hes privy to whats going on behind closed doors.
Frankly, we dont know what to make of any of it. Our gut feeling is that the players are dragging their feet in order to get something else from the owners, even if both the players and the owners will lose roughly $100 million each for every week of the preseason that is lost.
Jim Trotter of SI.com reported on Wednesday that the players request for $320 million in lost benefits during the uncapped year of 2010 remains an issue, even though that was a wrinkle of the prior CBA, which when viewed from start to finish was favorable to the players. And as Mike Freeman of CBSSports.com reported on Wednesday night, Chargers receiver Vincent Jackson and Patriots guard Logan Mankins still want $10 million each to put their signatures on the settlement papers of the Brady antitrust class action.
We think everything can get wrapped up quickly if/when the two sides decide to wrap it all up. For now, it looks like the players will be deliberately dragging their feet in the hopes of extracting a few final concessions from the owners.
Again, the two sides have resolved much thornier issues. It should be easy to resolve these remaining matters, if NFLPA* executive director DeMaurce Smith can display true leadership to his players and if Smith can continue to keep a leash on NFLPA* lawyer Jeffrey Kessler, who possibly is stirring the lets get paid more money pot.
"It’s all over the place, so I’m basically preparing like they are going to call tomorrow, but if they call in two weeks to vote I know that’s when I’m ready because until I get a call and someone says this is where we are and we are ready for you guys to vote. Whether you’re 1% done or 99% done it doesn’t matter because you are not done"
Gotta' say that I think dutchrudder is winning this debate.
The FT is a way to actually PREVENT a great player from improving any of the other 31 teams out there. It's a hostage tool, and that's why players (Such as #23 Pay Me Rick) get so mad about it. Loss of a long-term contract, and inability to move to a new team for a fresh start.
Players aren't robots. Not cattle/commodity. They're people who want what they think is a fair chance at happiness. To that end, this is why they object to the FT. The team designating the player with the FT sometimes has no real intention of pursuing a long-term deal...they just want the player for one more year--Maybe even TWO more years if they use it successively.
I feel that we held onto Dunta only as "insurance" and at some point it was decided to let him go completely at the end of that insurance season. We didn't gain anything by keeping him that last season, except see a player who (for the most part) was likely pissed off and wasn't really a "team player" like you'd want your starting veteran CB to be.
Therefore, the FT is not doing what it was intended to do. It's having the opposite effect upon players.
Here's a good review (all in one article) of the important points anticipated in the new CBA.
Brave New NFL: Rumored Changes We May See in the New CBA
Injured Reserve: Wouldn't it be nice if a player placed on IR wasn't lost for the year? Under the old CBA, the only option a team had to play an injured player who was placed on IR then later became healthy was to cut him and give him an injury settlement, then re-sign him to a new contract. Jamal Brown might have came in handy for the Saints during the 2009 playoffs.
It seems to me that they are basically at the precipice of an agreement and that both sides could have this endorsed and agreed upon by the end of the day today - if not for Jackson and Mankins.
Assuming that is the case, if these two numbskulls drag this out for any length of time, especially if it costs games or even a delay to the season, then I don't think it goes well for them, either with their teammates and fellow players, and especially not with the fans. I think they are pretty close to the edge now in terms of delays starting. Maybe if they can wrap it up tomorrow or over the weekend we'll still be able to get things starting pretty much on time....but past that and delays and/or cancellations are inevitable.
These guys better think long and hard. NFL fans have a long memory.
Details about the NFL’s CBA have been few and far between over the last month or so as the judge’s gag order has kept things relatively quiet, but I’ve learned from more than once source that fans could end up being very surprised with some of aspects in this deal that should be completed by this weekend.
I’ve been asking myself “why would NFL veterans and their leader, DeMaurice Smith, negotiate a new deal that would get so many veterans cut as a result of teams needing to get under the cap?”
The players are clearly excited about the agreement in the proposed CBA that would force teams to spend as much money as needed to reach the $120 million dollar threshold, but this deal could still hurt veterans on teams who have been aggressive with their spending and who find themselves over the proposed $120 million threshold.
I might have found my answer.
I’ve learned from people close to the negotiations that we may not see the massive cap casualties that we’ve expected. In fact, there may not be any penalties for teams who are over the $120 million dollar threshold. What that would allow teams to do is hang onto veterans, if they so choose, without penalty. What was less clear to me was whether or not we’ll actually even see a salary cap. It is my understanding that for the first few years of this deal, the “cap” on spending could be soft or even non-existant.
Now why would the owners agree to that? Isn’t that the baseball model that has created such a disparity between the haves and the have nots? Yes and no.
Many on the players side believe that this CBA has as much to do with the big market owners trying to find a way to force out the owners of small market teams as it does with finding a way to split up money between players and owners. There is big TV money on the way and both the players and owners know this. I promise you that if Bob Kraft and Jerry Jones were in charge of getting a deal done, they would have made the minimum spending $140 million or more and they would have agreed to a CBA a LONG TIME AGO. According to my sources, many owners view this CBA as their big opportunity to get rid of owners they don’t like.
So in summary, we might all be surprised to find out that there is actually a soft cap or even no cap for the first few years of this deal as the NFL transitions from the old CBA to the new CBA. If that is the case, then could any team in the league become a player in the free agent market this year no matter how much they are currently spending? It could happen.