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Report: Donald Fehr wanted by NBA agents to be next NBPA leader

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Donald Fehr is the choice of many NBA agents to be the NBPA's next leader. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

Donald Fehr is the choice of many NBA agents to be the NBPA’s next leader. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

NBA agents are floating prominent sports union leader Donald Fehr as the next possible head of the National Basketball Players Association, CBS Sports’ Ken Berger reported Monday.

Fehr is the current executive director of the NHL Players Association and also was the executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association.

He would replace Billy Hunter, who was placed on indefinite leave last week by a committee organized by union president Derek Fisher. That committee formed in order to “move the organization forward” after a stinging report by Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, an independent firm that was hired to investigate the union’s business practices under Hunter’s leadership.

Fehr did not comment when reached by Berger.

While representing NHL players during the recent NHL lockout, Fehr earned the notorious distinction of becoming the first players union director to lead two work stoppages. Fehr also presided over the MLB lockout of 1994-95, which canceled the entire 1994 postseason, including the World Series.

Hunter has been the head of the NBPA since 1996. Because the firm’s report found that Hunter’s contract was never “properly approved,” it said that the contract could be terminated.


  • Published On Feb 05, 2013
  • NHL lockout officially over with MOU signed

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    The NHL will start a 48-game schedule for teams on Jan. 19 after the league and the NHLPA signed a MOU on Saturday. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    The NHL will start a 48-game schedule for teams on Jan. 19 after the league and the NHLPA signed a MOU on Saturday. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    The National Hockey League is officially back after a 119-day lockout and will return to action after the league and the players association signed a memorandum of understanding late Saturday night, the league announced, via NHL.com.

    The NHL board of governors unanimously ratified a contract on Wednesday to end the lockout and the original plan was to start training camps on Sunday, if the memorandum of understanding was finished. The league allowed physicals and medical exams to take place on Friday.

    The wide-ranging Agreement includes an economic system under which Hockey Related Revenues (HRR) will be shared 50%-50% between Owners and the Players. The Agreement includes terms that limit the length of individual Player contracts to seven years (eight when a team is re-signing its own Player) and regulates the compensation structure, year-to-year variability and defining minimum value.

    A 48-game season is expected to start Jan. 19. A total of 510 games, the Winter Classic and the All-Star Game were cancelled due to the lockout. The regular season was originally supposed to begin Oct. 11.


  • Published On Jan 13, 2013
  • NHL ratifies new CBA

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    Hockey is (almost) officially back. The NHL board of governors met today to complete their review of the CBA and vote on it.

    The 113-day lockout was tentatively brought to an end last week when the NHL and NHLPA finally agreed on a deal. That deal is now official with a unanimous NHL board ratification.

    The NHLPA now needs to ratify the deal. They will be meeting Friday-Saturday to vote on the agreement. Camps should start on Sunday.

     


  • Published On Jan 09, 2013
  • Report: NHL season to start Jan. 19

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    The NHL will start a 48-game schedule for teams on Jan. 19. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    The NHL will start a 48-game schedule for teams on Jan. 19. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    The National Hockey League will begin the 2012-13 season on January 19 after the league and the NHL Players Association tentatively agreed to end the lockout over the weekend, reports CBSSports.com.

    The league’s board of governors are expected to meet on Wednesday to sign off on the new collective bargaining agreement. The league is expected to play with a 48-game schedule.

    The 48-game season will be the second in league history. The 1994-95 season was played under the same format after half the schedule was wiped out by a lockout, which contained nothing but intraconference games,


  • Published On Jan 07, 2013
  • NHL players will re-vote on ‘disclaimer of interest’ as lockout drags on

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    The NHLPA began a vote to decide whether a disclaimer of interest is a necessary next step in the lockout. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    The NHLPA began a vote to decide whether a disclaimer of interest is a necessary next step in the lockout. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    NHL players began a vote Thursday night to decide whether they want to again grant authority to their management committee to disclaim interest in their union, according to a report in TSN.

    The vote comes after some progress — but apparently not enough — was made in talks between the league’s owners and its players association over the past two days over the ongoing lockout, which has now dragged on for 110 days. The vote began around 6 p.m. ET on Thursday night and will end within the next 48 hours, according to TSN.

    The NHLPA’s first vote on the subject passed overwhelmingly, but the deadline to disclaim interest passed without action from management on Wednesday. If least two-thirds of players again vote for the measure and the NHLPA this time decides to disclaim, it could lead to players filing antitrust lawsuits against the league.

    NHL commissioner Gary Bettman has said that the “drop dead” deadline for a deal on a new collective bargaining agreement is Jan. 11. That would allow for a 48-game season.

    All games through Jan. 14, as well as the All-Star game, have already been canceled.

    There are several key issues that remain as roadblocks to a potential agreement, but the three most pressing are player pensions, the league’s salary cap and limits on the length of player contracts. Owners want a second-year salary cap around $60 million, according to TSN. Players want a cap more in the range of $65 million. And owners prefer a six-year limit on player contracts — seven if re-signing with a team — while players want any term limits scrapped.


  • Published On Jan 04, 2013
  • NHLPA keeps union in tact, meetings continue on Thursday

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    The NHL decided not to disband the union by the Wednesday midnight deadline, and negotiations with the league to end the lockout continue, reports the New York Daily News. The two sides had a nearly five-hour bargaining session on Wednesday night, and mediator Scot L. Beckenbaugh requested that they return on Thursday to continue.

    “There has been some progress but we’re still apart on a number of issues,” NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said. “But as long as the process continues, I am hopeful.”

    The union had voted in December to allow the executive board to file disclaimer of interest up until Wednesday at midnight. Although the deadline has passed, the union can still take another vote to disclaim interest.

    NHL players and NHLPA staff arrived at the league’s office in New York on Thursday afternoon; the smaller group meetings suggest that discussions will be limited, and no full bargaining talks will occur yet.


  • Published On Jan 03, 2013
  • NHL, NHLPA reportedly discussing expanded 20-team postseason

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    Though it has not been a negotiation topic, the NHL and NHLPA have each internally discussed the possibility of expanding the postseason to 20 teams, according to Sportsnet’s Nick Kypreos. The league’s current format includes 16 teams, eight from each conference.

    The two sides are expected to meet on Wednesday — three months and 17 days into the lockout — in New York after the league made a counter-offer to the players’ union on Tuesday night. Commissioner Gary Bettman said on Monday that the league has told the NHLPA that a 48-game season can begin on Jan. 19 if a deal is reached by Jan. 11.

    Based on the proposed four-conference realignment, a potential expanded playoff could involve “one-game (maybe best-of-three) playoffs for the fourth- and fifth-place teams in each of the four conferences,” writes ProHockeyTalk’s Jason Brough:

    This would have two advantages. First, the additional games would provide additional revenue. Second, more teams in the playoff race theoretically means fewer fans giving up on their teams during the regular season.

    CBSSports.com’s Adam Gretz outlined what the 2012 postseason would have looked like had a 20-team format been in place:

    Just for some perspective: Four additional teams (two in each conference) in the current conference alignment would have resulted in the Dallas Stars and Calgary Flames making the playoffs in the Western Conference last season, as well as the Buffalo Sabres and Tampa Bay Lightning in the Eastern Conference.


  • Published On Jan 02, 2013
  • NHL considering NHLPA offer, meetings resume in New York on Tuesday

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    Gary Bettman

    NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman will meet the NHLPA to discuss counterproposal submitted by the players’ association on Monday. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    The NHL and NHLPA met for three hours on Monday, the first time  in more than two weeks that the two sides have had in-person meetings, in order to try to end the ongoing lockout, reports ESPN. The NHLPA submitted a counterproposal to the league Monday, and additional meetings will be held on Tuesday.

    “We spent a good part of [Monday] afternoon with the players’ association. They were responding to the proposal we made Thursday and their response was a comprehensive one, dealing with a full slate of issues that we raised and proposals that we put forth, and we’re in the process of reviewing their response,” said NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman on Monday. “Our expectation is that we’ll contact them [Tuesday] morning and arrange to get back together, hopefully, certainly by midday. We’re going to try and turn this around overnight so we can continue the process.”

    Bettman declined to provide any details on the NHLPA offer, beyond calling it “comprehensive.”

    Games through Jan. 14 have already been cancelled; the NHL’s last offer indicated that the season needed to start by Jan. 19, and Bettman reaffirmed this position on Monday:

    “What we’ve said is we need to drop the puck by Jan. 19 if we’re going to play a 48-game season,” said Bettman. “We don’t think it makes sense to play a season that is any shorter than that.”


  • Published On Jan 01, 2013
  • Report: NHL extends new offer to NHLPA according to player

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    The NHL sent a new offer to the NHLPA on Thursday that includes some compromise according to an NHL player in a report by ESPN.com’s Pierre LeBrun.

    The player, who requested anonymity, said the new proposal moved on term limits for player contracts, salary variance and buyouts.

    NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly would not confirm what the player said when reached by ESPN.com.

    The league’s push for a five-year limit has been a major roadblock for the players, whose Dec. 6 counter proposal offered to limit deals to eight years. It’s believed the league has offered to move to six-year limits on player contracts.

    Looming deadlines on both sides of the labor dispute could require an agreement soon if the league is to play some form of a regular season.

    The NHL has cancelled games through Jan. 14 since the two sides last met with mediators on Dec. 13.

    On Dec. 6, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said he “can’t imagine wanting to play fewer than” 48 games, a shortened season that would likely have to begin around the third week of January and a resolution to the labor standoff by mid-January.

    A vote by the players has given the NHLPA’s executive board the power to decide whether or not to file a notice of disclaimer of interest, effectively dissolving the union, by Jan. 2.


  • Published On Dec 28, 2012
  • Bill Daly says no talks on NHL lockout are scheduled this week

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    Bill Daly

    NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly announced that no additional meetings were scheduled this week. Games through Jan. 14 have already been cancelled.

    The NHL’s deputy commissioner, Bill Daly, announced that no additional meetings between the league and players were scheduled for this week, reports CSN Philly:

    As the NHL lockout entered its 100th day on Monday, league deputy commissioner Bill Daly told CSNPhilly.com that there are no talks currently scheduled this week. “We haven’t talked about meetings later this week,” Daly said in an e-mail.  ”I guess we will see.”

    Games through Jan. 14 have already been cancelled, leaving less than half of the regular season. A new collective bargaining agreement would need to be in place by the middle of January for a “meaningful season” of 48 games to be realistic.


  • Published On Dec 24, 2012
  • NHL cancels regular-season games through Jan. 14

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    The National Hockey League announced Thursday the cancellation of 2012-13 regular-season games through January 14 due to the league’s labor dispute with the NHLPA.

    The move will leave 625 regular-season games — 50.8 percent of the season — lost during the current lockout.

    NHL Deputy commissioner Bill Daly said yesterday the point of no return for cancelling the entire 2012-13 season is in and around mid-January.

    The 2004-05 season was not canceled until much later in the schedule, but the NHL reportedly won’t wait as long during this lockout.


  • Published On Dec 20, 2012
  • NHL to seek to void all player contracts if union dissolves

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    NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman's league is now in the 91st day of the lockout. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman’s league is now in the 91st day of the lockout. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    The National Hockey League will seek to void all player contracts if the players association is successful in dissolving the union, reports the Toronto Sun.

    The union will vote to dissolve the union electronically starting on Sunday and the process will continue over a five-day period. A 2/3 majority vote is needed to pass and the NHLPA executive board has a Jan. 2, 2013 deadline to file a disclaimer of interest.

    On Friday, the NHL filed a class action complaint to uphold the lockout and an Unfair Labor Practice Charge with the National Labor Relations Board. The Players Association said the league’s position was ”completely without merit.”

    “The NHL requests a declaration that, if the NHLPA’s decertification or disclaimer were not deemed invalid by the NLRB, and the collective bargaining relationship between the parties were not otherwise to continue, all existing contracts between NHL players and NHL teams (known as Standard Player’s Contracts or “SPCs”) would be void and unenforceable,” a statement by the NHL said.

    The lockout is now in its 91st day and all games through Dec. 30 have been canceled.


  • Published On Dec 15, 2012
  • NHL files Class Action Complaint seeking a Declaration ‘confirming the ongoing legality of the lockout’

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    The NHL filed a class action complaint in Federal Court in New York on Friday to confirm the ongoing legality of the lockout. The NHL reacted in response to information suggesting the NHL Players may vote to decertify the NHLPA.

    While simultaneously  filing the complaint, the NHL also filed an Unfair Labor Practice Charge with the National Labor Relations Board. The charge is made on the grounds that the NHLPA has “engaged in an unlawful subversion of the collective bargaining process and conduct that constitutes bad faith bargaining under the National Labor Relations Act.”

    The NHL issued a press release regarding the filing of the Class Action Complaint.


  • Published On Dec 14, 2012
  • NHL cancels games through December 30

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    The NHL Lockout has officially wiped out almost all of 2012 from the 2012-2013 season. The league announced Monday that, due to the ongoing labor dispute, the league has canceled all of its games games through December 30.

    The cancellations mean that the league has scratched 526 games, or 4.28 percent of the season. The league has already canceled traditional mid-season landmark games — the Winter Classic and All-Star game and the surrounding festivities. With the cancellations, the league has 13 total games that could possibly take place in 2012, all of which occur on December 31st.


  • Published On Dec 10, 2012
  • NHL owners and players exchange offers, mediators may enter process

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    The NHL lockout entered its 82nd day on Thursday, and long meetings between the two sides continue to yield no results. The league and players’ association met on Tuesday and then again for 9 hours on Wednesday to try to come to terms on a new CBA. Third-party mediators may enter the negotiation process, reports the Sports Business Journal’s Liz Mullen via Twitter:

    The union said it would consider a 10-year agreement, something that had been discussed earlier, despite the fact that they do not want to go past six years. (The last CBA was a seven-year deal.)

    The two sides will reportedly resume talks on Thursday afternoon, and outsiders have expressed optimism about the prospects of getting a deal done:

    Games through Dec. 14 along with the Winter Classic and All-Star game have already been cancelled.


  • Published On Dec 06, 2012
  • NHL commissioner Gary Bettman ‘pleased with procress’ of CBA talks

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    After a two-hour meeting with the NHL board of governors, commissioner Gary Bettman said that he is “please with the process that is ongoing” in negotiations for a new collective bargaining agreement.

    Talks between the owners and players’ association resumed at 2:15 p.m. on Wednesday, according to ESPN.com’s Peter LeBrun:

    The two sides met for eight hours on Tuesday with six players and 18 owners in the room and Bettman and NHLPA president Donald Fehr absent, according to The Record‘s Tom Gulitti.

    The Star-Ledger‘s Rich Chere described two team executives as optimistic:

    There is optimism from both the league and its players after two positive days. Devils general manager Lou Lamoriello said he was “encouraged” and Columbus Blue Jackets executive John Davidson said, ‘We feel good aboit the information we got.”

    Reporters on Twitter, including the Winnipeg Free Press‘ Gary Lawless, have speculated that the league could proceed with a season between 50 and 60 games if a deal is struck this weekend to end the 81-day lockout.


  • Published On Dec 05, 2012
  • Report: NHLPA authorizes $10,000 stipend for players

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    The NHLPA authorized a $10,000 stipend for its players due to the lockout. ( Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    The NHLPA authorized a $10,000 stipend for its players due to the lockout. ( Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    The National Hockey League Players Association’s Executive Board on Saturday approved authorization to provide a stipend worth $10,000 to all players, reports ESPN.com.

    The NHL players have missed four paychecks due to the lockout.

    The NHLPA’s next decision will be to respond to the NHL on whether to accept commissioner Gary Bettman’s invitation to hold a players/owners-only meeting, with no league or NHLPA staff present. The idea was presented as an alternative option after mediation broke down between the two sides Thursday.

    The league and the NHLPA have been trying to mediate their differences for the past week in order to save the season, which has already cancelled games including the Winter Classic and the All-Star Game.


  • Published On Dec 02, 2012
  • Report: MSG CEO James Dolan willing to enter talks to end NHL lockout

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    MSG CEO James Dolan reportedly would be willing to get involved in talks to help end the NHL lockout. (Chris Trotman/Getty Images)

    MSG CEO James Dolan reportedly would be willing to get involved in talks to help end the NHL lockout. (Chris Trotman/Getty Images)

    Madison Square Garden CEO James Dolan says he is willing to join talks with players in efforts to end the NHL lockout, reports the New York Post.

    According to the report, Dolan signaled his desire to become involved in the NHL talks upon NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman’s suggestion that it might be beneficial that the league’s owners talk to the players.

    It is unknown whether the Garden CEO has officially volunteered his services to Bettman, with whom he has had essentially no personal relationship dating back to at least 2007 when the Garden urged the commissioner be ousted in conjunction with filing suit against the NHL in a dispute concerning website, digital rights, licensing and team merchandise control.

    The league and the players association have been trying to mediate their differences in order to save the season, which has already cancelled games including the Winter Classic and the All-Star Game. The Rangers could lose up to $60 million if the entire season is cancelled.


  • Published On Dec 01, 2012
  • Will failed NHL-NHLPA mediation lead to players-owners meeting?

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    Bringing the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service into the NHL-NHLPA labor negotiations has failed to make a dent in the league’s 75-day-old lockout.

    Two days of meetings with third-party mediators uncovered no common ground and brought the NHL and NHLPA back to their existing labor stalemate.

    NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly addressed the mediation process on behalf of the league:

    “Today, we concluded two days of mediation with FMCS mediators and representatives of the NHL Players’ Association.  After spending several hours with both sides over two days, the presiding mediators concluded that the parties remained far apart, and that no progress toward a resolution could be made through further mediation at this point in time.  We are disappointed that the mediation process was not successful.”

    Shortly after learning that mediation had not been a success, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman reportedly suggested a players-owners meeting as a possible way to break the labor gridlock.

    The lack of mediation success may not immediately further shorten a season that’s already seen the cancellation of games through Dec. 14, the Winter Classic, and the All-Star weekend in Columbus, Ohio in January.


  • Published On Nov 29, 2012
  • NHL, players’ association agree to mediation

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    The NHL and NHLPA agreed to meet with a mediator in attempts to end the lockout. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    The National Hockey League and the NHL Players’ Association have agreed to meet with a mediator to try to resolve the lockout, reports ESPN.com.

    “While we have no particular level of expectation going into this process, we welcome a new approach in trying to reach a resolution of the ongoing labor dispute at the earliest possible date,” NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly said in a statement. “We have no further comment on the upcoming meetings at the current time.”

    The league has already canceled the NHL All-Star Weekend, the Winter Classic, plus all games through Dec. 14. The two sides have not met since Wednesday when the players association’s latest proposal was rejected.

    “At the invitation of the FMCS, and with the agreement of both parties, the ongoing negotiations will now be conducted under our auspices,” Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service director George Cohen said in a statement. “I have assigned deputy director Scot L. Beckenbaugh, director of mediation services John Sweeney, and commissioner Guy Serota to serve as the mediators.”

    Cohen has mediated negotiations in Major League Soccer, the NFL, NBA and the dispute between the NFL and its officials earlier this year.


  • Published On Nov 26, 2012
  • NHL cancels games through December 14, including All-Star Game

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    All-Star Game

    The All-Star Game, announced with fanfare in Columbus, has been cancelled due to the lockout. (Jamie Sabau, Getty Images)

    The NHL lockout will continue into December and has claimed another of the league’s marquee events.

    The league announced today that all games until December 14th have been officially cancelled, as has the league’s All-Star weekend, which was due to take place in Columbus, Ohio on January 26 and 27, 2013. The cancellations mean the dispute between the NHL and its players’ association has resulted in 422 cancelled games, or 34.3% of the season.

    The All-Star Game and its surrounding festivities are the second high-profile casualty of the game cancellations – the Winter Classic, played annually on New Year’s Day, was cancelled earlier this month.


  • Published On Nov 23, 2012
  • Donald Fehr says NHLPA, league are $182 million apart on five-year deal

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    The NHL and its players association have reportedly made progress toward ending the league’s 67-day lockout during their meetings in New York on Wednesday.

    The NHLPA proposed a five-year deal that would set Dec. 1 as the start date to a 68-game season, according to The Globe and Mail‘s James Mirtle. NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr estimated that there is a $182 million gap between the players’ latest offer and the NHL’s last offer.

    An integral part of the players’ proposal is $391-million in “make whole” money over the five years, which is substantially more than the $211-million the owners last had on the table but less than the $592-million the NHLPA had previously asked for.

    Included was a proposal by the union on eliminating heavily front-loaded contracts, the only element of contract rights the NHLPA included in its offer.

    Fehr also said the players’ proposal for the first time deals in percentages as opposed to a guaranteed share.

    “About as good as we can do,” Fehr told reporters in attendance.

    The decision in now in the league’s hands, and its response is expected to come at 1 p.m. Wednesday afternoon. ESPN.com’s Pierre LeBrun tweeted the following quote from Rangers star Brad Richards.

    The Globe and Mail provided full details of the proposal. Several reporters, including CSNPhilly.com’s Tim Panaccio, raised doubts about the accuracy of Fehr’s estimate.


  • Published On Nov 21, 2012
  • Report: NHLPA, league have already agreed on several issues

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    NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman has agreed to 13 of the NHLPA’s 17 main issues, according to a report. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    While the core issues of the NHL lockout are still being discussed, the two sides have agreed on several terms, according to a Toronto Star report.

    Those issues include: moving up the date that teams can sign free agents from July 1 to June 15; allowing cap space to be included in transactions; creating a joint health committee; eliminating re-entry waivers; appointing a third-party arbitrator to deal with appeals for on- and off-ice discipline; and establishing minimum roster requirements.

    In total, Commissioner Gary Bettman has agreed to 13 of the NHLPA’s 17 issues, although the smaller agreements are being nullified by the lack of an overall agreement.

    “Right now, nothing is agreed on because we won’t agree to anything until we get a deal on core economics,” said one insider familiar with the NHL’s positions. “But this is stuff where we said, ‘Okay, we’ll go there.’ ”

    There’s no question the key issues — money (including revenue sharing), contract restraints and who pays for damage caused by the lockout — remain outstanding. Just how far the NHLPA moves, if it does indeed make a substantial new offer, will determine where talks are headed.

    The two sides are “getting closer” on several issues, the report states, involving entry-level contracts, AHL salaries, unrestricted free agency and salary arbitration. As the lockout heads toward its 11th week, the sticking points remain revenue sharing and player contract restraints.


  • Published On Nov 20, 2012
  • NHLPA expected to deliver new proposal on Wednesday

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    NHLPA Executive Director Donald Fehr encouraged the league to continue negotiations last week. The players’ association is expected to have a new proposal to present on Wednesday. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    The NHL Players’ Association is expected to deliver a new CBA proposal on Wednesday, reports TSN. The two sides met on Monday night for 90 minutes and the league asked for a comprehensive offer on revenue shares and player contract rights. The union is working internally on Tuesday and could meet with the league on Wednesday.

    “We’ve never heard a full proposal from them,” NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly said. “We’ve heard their proposal on economics, they’re still suggesting that they’re moving in our direction on economics… We’d like to hear it all together.”

    The players’ association and league will also have to decide how to pay for damage caused by the lockout–the NHLPA’s most recent offer on Nov. 7 did not include the mechanism to account for reduced revenue as a result of a shortened 2012-13 season. The lockout is into its 10th week and all regular season games through Nov. 30 have been cancelled. The sides considered taking a break from negotiations last week, but the NHLPA encouraged continued meetings.

    “It’s hard for me to see how you make an agreement if you aren’t talking and so you talk,” said NHLPA Executive Director Donald Fehr. “Sometimes it doesn’t lead anywhere, perhaps very often it doesn’t lead anywhere, but if you aren’t talking it’s 100 per cent sure it doesn’t lead anywhere.”

    According to USA Today’s Kevin Allen, talks will resume on Wednesday at 10 a.m.


  • Published On Nov 20, 2012
  • Evander Kane leaves KHL’s Dinamo Misk

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    Evander Kane

    Evander Kane has left Dinamo Minsk after playing 12 games ineffective with the team. (Alexander Nemenov, Getty Images)

    One of the first NHL players to jump to a European league is already on the outs with his new team.

    Dinamo Minsk announced today (link via CBC sports) that they player and club have come to a mutual agreement to end Kane’s tenure with the Belarusian club, after scoring one goal with no assists in 12 games with the team.Kane became the first Canadian to jump to a European club due to the still-ongoing NHL lockout.

    Dinamo Mink Atheltic Director Igor Matushkin didn’t mince words in announcing Kane’s departure: “”Unfortunately, Evander Kane could not adapt to hockey in the KHL,” he said on the team’s web site.

     


  • Published On Nov 16, 2012
  • NHL officially cancels Winter Classic

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    After several days of speculation and rumors, the NHL has officially canceled the Winter Classic at Michigan Stadium.

    Last week, after the league and union couldn’t reach an agreement, the NHL canceled all games through November. The Winter Classic, now rescheduled for Jan. 1, 2014, was supposed to feature Detroit and Toronto playing outdoors at the Big House.

    The cancellation comes as a result of the rental agreement between the NHL and Michigan Stadium. If canceled by Friday, the league would only lose a $100,000 deposit; a $250,000 payment was scheduled for Friday and ultimately the league was set to pay $3 million in total for use of the stadium.


  • Published On Nov 02, 2012
  • Kings’ Dustin Brown signs with Zurich Lions in Switzerland

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    In the midst of the ongoing NHL lockout, Los Angeles Kings captain Dustin Brown has signed with the Zurich Lions in Switzerland, TSN’s Darren Dreger reported Thursday via Twitter.

    With the move, Brown goes from the NHL champion Kings to the Lions, who won the Swiss league title last season.

    “Zurich was appealing for a number of reasons, including the city, the country and his familiarity with Marc Crawford as coach,” Scott Norton, Brown’s agent, told USA Today.

    Norton said that Brown was hoping the lockout would get resolved, but there looks to be no end in sight, as reports emerged Wednesday that the Winter Classic is expected to be canceled.

    “He kept holding off on offers hoping that the CBA would have been resolved by this point, and finally just decided that he wants to play the game he loves,” Norton told the paper.

    The 27-year-old Brown had 22 goals and 32 assists with the Kings last season.

     


  • Published On Nov 02, 2012
  • Report: NHL to cancel Winter Classic on Thursday

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    Two weeks ago, the league and union swapped proposals in Toronto, resulting in an impasse that doesn’t seem to have any end in sight.

    The NHL has already cancelled games through November 30th, and reports say the Winter Classic is next on the chopping block.

    NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly says the league is working to submit the next proposal.

    “No new news. We withdrew our most recent proposal on Friday, and now we are spending time thinking about our next proposal and how best to get closer to a resolution,” Daly said by email. “We hope the union is doing the same thing. Given the fact that the union refused even to discuss our last proposal, it would appear that we still have a large gulf to bridge.”

    Even with the Winter Classic cancellation looming, players seem unaffected:

    The league has rejected three of the union’s proposals and responded by announcing two rounds of cancellations, making the Winter Classic the third.


  • Published On Oct 31, 2012
  • Report: NHL to cancel Winter Classic this week

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    Winter Classic

    The NHL Winter Classic could be cancelled this week. (Rob Carr, Getty Images)

    The NHL Lockout has already resulted in the cancellation of 326 games from the regular season schedule. Now, according to a report from ESPN, that total could grow by one – the Winter Classic.

    The annual outdoor game has become an NHL staple since the league introduced it in 2008. The event has been the league’s highest-rated regular season contest, with viewership numbers similar to that of the Stanley Cup. This season’s contest is set to be the first that involves a Canadian team, with the Detroit Red Wings taking on the Toronto Maple Leafs at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, Michigan.


  • Published On Oct 29, 2012
  • Blue Jackets defenseman Jack Johnson questions honor of NHL owners

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    Columbus’ Jack Johnson used his Web site to call out NHL owners. (Doug Pensinger/Getty Images)

    Columbus Blue Jackets defenseman Jack Johnson used his own Web site to question the honor of NHL owners “trying to dismantle existing contracts.”

    Here’s the letter, originally titled “Where Is The Honor?” according to the Columbus Dispatch, as posted on www.JackJohnson3.com:

    “I want to work! I’m a professional athlete and I want to play hockey! In my chosen profession, I don’t have until I am 60 or 70 years old to do this job. My window of opportunity to play professional hockey is limited. If I’m lucky, I can play until I’m 40. I have been training as a hockey player my entire life, and I know it is a privilege to play in the NHL. So each month, each week, and each game that is cancelled is an opportunity I will never get back. This is the case for every NHL player. I value every day in this job and take my commitment to my team very seriously. I give it my all every shift. I come to play every night and I leave it all on the ice. This is my responsibility as an individual, an athlete, and a professional. I have a duty to my team, the organization that has given me this opportunity, and the fans in the stands to give them my best at all times. The concept that the owners are trying to dismantle existing contracts that they in good faith offered, signed, and committed to is appalling, unprofessional, and disgraceful. I negotiated my own contract, without an agent, with the confidence and belief that the owner offering me that contract operated by the same convictions and principals as I do. During the summer, the players offered to play through negotiations and the owners locked us out. We want to play hockey! Where is the honor? I’m ready to play and uphold my end of the deal!”


  • Published On Oct 29, 2012
  • Report: NHL to cancel games through Nov. 30

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    The NHL has cancelled all games through Nov. 30, according to a tweet by CBC’s Elliotte Friedman:

    The league is expected to announce the latest slate of cancelled games on Friday. The move was expected after the NHLPA rejected the league’s latest collective bargaining agreement proposal. The NHL has withdrawn the proposal that included a 50/50 hockey related revenue split and no salary rollbacks after the self-imposed Thursday deadline passed.


  • Published On Oct 26, 2012
  • NHL plans to withdraw proposal, more games likely to be cancelled

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    Bill Daly

    NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly said the league’s most recent proposal would be withdrawn. All games in November may be cancelled. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    The NHL plans to withdraw its most recent proposal to the NHLPA once the Thursday deadline passes, according to a report from ESPN:

    “When we delivered the proposal last Tuesday, we told them it would be on the table through today,” NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly told ESPN.com Thursday afternoon. “Having not reached agreement through today, I expect that we’ll formally notify the union Friday that the proposal is no longer on the table. We’re going to take it back internally and figure out where we go from here.”

    NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr was not surprised by the league’s withdrawal. He commented,

    “Review the history here: they make a proposal, it’s essentially a take it or leave it, we respond on the core economics, they take 10 minutes and say no…. It takes two to negotiate. They seem to be really good at imposing deadlines and issuing ultimatums and having lockouts. It seems to be something they’re well-practiced at.”

    Daly said the proposal would no longer work because it was created under the pretense of having an 82-game season. The league is expected to cancel games through the end of November on Friday.


  • Published On Oct 25, 2012
  • NHL memo to GMs, owners: ‘You MAY NOT: ‘Negotiate’ with a Player’

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    The NHL’s memo to general managers and owners detailing the topics of discussion allowed with players was obtained by Yahoo! Sports. The memo was sent to teams last week and details were released on Tuesday afternoon. In it, the league prohibited teams from negotiating with players and asking specific question related to the ongoing lockout:

    YOU MAY NOT: “Negotiate” with a Player.  This means you may not explore alternatives or variations to the proposals on the table from either side because that would be prohibited “direct dealing.”  You may not ask “What do you want?” or “What do the Players want?”  or “What should the League propose?

    The memo also insisted that teams have players go through the NHLPA and restricted any discussion regarding the league’s position on hypothetical proposals:

    If he volunteers what he has in mind you should not respond positively or negatively or ask any questions but instead refer him to the NHLPA.  Likewise, you may not suggest hypothetical proposals that the League might make in the future or that the League might entertain from the Union.

    The memo also stated that a failure to comply would likely set the league back in efforts to end the lockout and be considered a violation of an NHL by-law.

    Nick Cotsonika reported on Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly’s response to the memo via Twitter:


  • Published On Oct 23, 2012
  • Sergei Kostitsyn reportedly rips North America, hopes lockout cancels season

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    Sergei Kostitsyn reportedly hopes NHL lockout will continue. (Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

    Predators winger Sergei Kostitsyn hopes the current NHL lockout will eventually lead to the cancellation of the entire season, according to a quote in the Russian Sport-Express via the Globe & Mail.

    “Let’s put it this way – it would be better (for the players) if the lockout continues,” Kostitsyn was quoted as saying on Monday.

    “Players want a definite answer. If the NHL season is lost – let it be that way. I would then play in Russia for the whole season.”

    The NHL has already postponed a total of 135 games.

    Kostitsyn, who has played for the Predators since 2010 after  joining the team from the Canadiens, reportedly said he hated life in North America and called Columbus “the gloomiest” city in the United States.

    “I couldn’t get used to (American) mentality. They are totally different people from us,” said the Belarussian, who was twice suspended by the Canadiens in 2009 after failing to report to their minor league team in Hamilton.

    The Tennessean‘s Josh Cooper points out that Kostitsyn’s comments are odd considering his popularity in Nashville.

    Interestingly, Kostitsyn is a pretty popular player with the Predators. Maybe he was referring to his time in Montreal where he wasn’t quite received as well.

    He signed a two-year, $6 million contract in the offseason, so when the lockout ends, odds are he will be back in Nashville.


  • Published On Oct 22, 2012
  • Oilers’ Ben Eager faces assault charges after bar fight

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    The Oilers’ Ben Eager is facing assault charges after a bar fight this weekend. (Andy Devlin/Getty Images)

    Edmonton Oilers’ forward Ben Eager is facing assault charges after a bar fight in Toronto early Saturday morning, according to multiple reports.

    CBC reports that Eager has been charged with assault causing bodily harm, threaten bodily harm and assault with a weapon. According to The Globe and Mail, the fight involved the doorman and came at The Quail and Firkin Pub in Toronto.

    From The Globe and Mail:

    The general manager of the pub told CityTV that her doorman “was brutally attacked and hurt.”

    Video cameras caught the altercation and footage will be passed along to police, said Jennine Lombardo.

    An ambulance took to the bouncer to hospital.

    Eager, known as an enforcer on the ice, signed a three-year, $3 million deal with the Oilers in 2011. Eager was a part of the Stanley Cup-winning Chicago Blackhawks in 2010. He had eight goals and five assists in 63 games with the Oilers last season.


  • Published On Oct 22, 2012


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