The Penalty Box
Nowhere can an example of the corrupt capitalistic society be
found more perfectly than in this NHL labour dispute. This is
essentially a battle between the Haves and the Have Mores, who
are scratching and clawing each other over their share average
man's money. As the regular man, we pay our money gladly for
tickets, concessions and merchandise for our favourite sport
teams as a diversion from the everyday life. For Canadians, are
national pastime has been held hostage by 2 groups. The owners
are no saints. They have continuously held cities holding the
bag trying to meet their demands under blackmail of moving their
franchises elsewhere. They ask for the public to fund 500
million dollar stadiums that depreciate worse than used cars,
only to ask for better stadiums 5 years into a 20-year term.
They constantly look for markets based on volume of people over
love of the game, as Quebec City and Winnipeg have lost
franchises despite strong local support, while Phoenix and
Nashville continue to languish in relative isolation. Owners
don't care, as they get to split hefty expansion fees between
themselves. For a fan to choose the owners side is like picking
Stalin over Lenin; both systems have been corrupted and neither
truly benefited the people. That being said, the owners do have
a right to choose the structure that best benefits the league.
Despite the fact that there statements of losing money is an
obvious lie for most of the teams out there, no one can truly
argue that the rocketing NHL team salaries are actually keeping
pace with league revenue. It is the owner's fault. They are
responsible. They must be allowed to set up a system that allows
for a levelling of a playing field. Take a look at baseball.
Only 5 teams can seriously compete for the quality free agents,
leaving a pool of mediocrity for the rest of the league. The
players know that sports are a competition, on and off the rink.
Owners will try and bid for players over other teams, thereby
raising the value of the rest of the league. Their arbitration
is such that not only can the players not lose money for an
off-season, but also other players can benefit from higher
salaries if they can post slightly better numbers. The players
are fighting to maintain a lifestyle. They have grown accustomed
to fancy cars and houses. They are fighting for money, because
they know that in a so-called free market system, salaries can
and will escalate, even with a 20+% rollback. Hell, they can cut
their salaries in half if they want, it will be back to today's
average within 2 years, and escalate well beyond that
afterwards. There is nothing wrong with a salary cap. Having
more healthy competitive teams will increase the fan base if
more teams have a shot year to year. That will increase league
revenues with the players will need to make sure they can
monitor and get a substantial piece of, salary cap or not.
Bottom line, the players will lose money of the next couple of
years WHEN THEY FINALLY SIGN A DEAL. How long will they continue
to make NO MONEY before they sign for LESS MONEY? One thing is
for certain, most of the players making the average salary or
less cannot be happy with the direction of the negotiations. Tie
Domi recently blasted Pierre McGuire for daring to say that a
truly anonymous vote will result in 70% of the NHLPA accepting
some form of cap. While Pierre agreed that a percentage should
not be used, it would still be a significant number. Our own
source confirms the same. 2004-05 season is lost, and if there
is no progress next year, look for some of the lower end guys to
start speaking out. Tie will have his hands full trying to keep
his intimidation tactics as those numbers start to grow. Final
result: Game Misconduct on the NHLPA