[NFL!] 勞資協議最新進展
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http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=6737634
Independence Day marked the 111th day of the NFL lockout. On Tuesday,
the NFL's owners and players are scheduled to resume negotiations in
New York as the sides try to come to an agreement to end the longest
work stoppage in league history.
Based on some progress made last week in a critical negotiating session
in Minneapolis, there is hope heading into this critical week. Owners
and players are getting closer when it comes to agreeing on the division
of revenue, sources told ESPN.com's John Clayton.
With Chief Magistrate Arthur Boylan stressing urgency in mediation,
the percentage of revenues offered by the owners, according to sources,
rose to around 46 percent.
Last Thursday, player sources told ESPN senior NFL analyst Chris Mortensen
that last week's talks were trending "backwards" as owners reneged on a
simplified formula that would have given players 48 percent of all revenue.
However, talks continued between the two sides late into the night and
resumed again Friday before the sides ended talks before the holiday
weekend.
Commissioner Roger Goodell, NFL Players Association leader DeMaurice Smith,
their colleagues and constituents all appeared in good spirits Friday as
they left the office building where they met and either walked away or
climbed into black cars waiting by the doors.
"We'll continue to meet next week, and the goal is to get a deal done,"
Smith said on his way out.
The two sides have been trying to figure out how to agree on the division
of revenues for this $9 billion business that has steadily grown in
popularity, power and wealth over the last couple of decades as the NFL
has become the nation's dominant pro sports league.
The revenue split, a major sticking point all along and particularly over
the last couple of weeks, is considered a domino that must fall for a deal
to get done.
Another major sticking point has been the union attorney's back and forth
about something the two sides created called the "legacy fund," a source
familiar with the talks told ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter.
One of the league's first proposals to the players called for the
establishment of a new legacy fund for retired players, which would
include $82 million contributed by the owners over the next two years.
Smith's idea, which the NFL agreed to, called for the league to share the
funding with the players on a 50-50 basis. But the union lawyers backed
away and said the owners should fund Smith's idea with no effect on the
cap -- meaning no player contribution.
The key economic issues cannot be resolved until this one is.
Training camps start at the end of the month, with the preseason-opening
Hall of Fame game scheduled Aug. 7 between the Chicago Bears and St. Louis
Rams. Even missing an exhibition game or two would begin to really cost
the league money, not to mention testing the faith of the fans that have
made this sport so big.
There also is the wild card of a pending ruling by the 8th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in the players' antitrust lawsuit against the league,
which was filed in Minneapolis and prompted Boylan's involvement as a
mediator.
The appellate judges won't wait forever, and one of them warned earlier
that neither side will like their decision on the legality of the lockout.
But a faction on the players' side believes it's worth waiting on the court's
ruling, and the owners have had plans in place for years to endure an
extended work stoppage.
Information from ESPN.com senior NFL writer John Clayton,
ESPN senior NFL analyst Chris Mortensen, ESPN NFL Insider
Adam Schefter and The Associated Press was used in this report.
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◆ From: 114.27.17.63
※ 編輯: krajicek 來自: 114.27.17.63 (07/05 09:51)
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