Results 1 to 8 of 8

Thread: Did I dream this???

  1. #1
    Cape Codger OptiBoard Gold Supporter hcjilson's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2000
    Location
    Cape Cod, Hyannis, MA. USA
    Occupation
    Dispensing Optician
    Posts
    7,437

    Did I dream this???

    I saw Eddie G's avatar and it reminded me of a news story I either heard early this AM or dreamed about last night. The story was that the National Hockey League was holding discussions to end the lockout. Is this true, or did I dream it??
    "Always laugh when you can. It is a cheap medicine"
    Lord Byron

    Take a photo tour of Cape Cod and the Islands!
    www.capecodphotoalbum.com

  2. #2
    One of the worst people here
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Canada
    Occupation
    Other Eyecare-Related Field
    Posts
    8,331
    It is almost done.

    It sounds like a deal has been done. A salary deal has been done, but the lawyers have to look over the contract.

    Basically the players crushed. If the players would have signed the deal offered to them last September they would have gotten a better deal.

    I think it is $37 million per team, 50 percent linkage to revenues and a 24 percent salary rollback.

  3. #3
    Master OptiBoarder spartus's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    CA
    Occupation
    Optical Retail
    Posts
    552
    What's "hockey"?

    Signed,

    Someone who lives in a warmer climate

  4. #4
    Master OptiBoarder Snitgirl's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
    Occupation
    Dispensing Optician
    Posts
    1,764
    Good question.. what is it?

    From another person in Sunny Cali..

  5. #5
    Pomposity! Spexvet's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    On my soapbox
    Occupation
    Dispensing Optician
    Posts
    3,760
    It's the second best sport in the whole wide world! American Football is still #1 :D
    ...Just ask me...

  6. #6
    sub specie aeternitatis Pete Hanlin's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2000
    Location
    Hickory Creek, TX
    Occupation
    Lens Manufacturer
    Posts
    4,964
    American NCAA Football is #1...

    ...followed by NFL Football...

    ...NHL Hockey...

    ...NCAA Baseball...

    ...PGA Golf...

    ...ML Baseball

    (Just my ranking, however)

    Knew the players would cave... because they were being ridiculous!
    Pete Hanlin, ABOM
    Vice President Professional Services
    Essilor of America

    http://linkedin.com/in/pete-hanlin-72a3a74

  7. #7
    One of the worst people here
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Canada
    Occupation
    Other Eyecare-Related Field
    Posts
    8,331
    http://www.tsn.ca/nhl/news_story.asp?id=130274

    NHL, NHLPA reach tentative CBA deal


    TSN.ca Staff with CP files



    7/13/2005 2:35:28 PM

    And now for the words everyone has been waiting to hear: The deal is done!

    The NHL and NHL Players' Association have finally reached an agreement (pending ratification) on a new six-year collective bargaining agreement that - if approved by the NHL board of governors next Thursday and the rank and file membership of the NHLPA next Tuesday - will officially end the stalemate on July 21.

    The agreement, a complex document reportedly numbering more than 600 pages, came after the two sides staged marathon negotiating sessions for nine consecutive days. Since the 2004-05 NHL season was officially cancelled on Feb. 16, the league and union have met on 82 occasions, leading to an agreement that will revamp the way the entire professional hockey industry conducts its business.

    The league went into this lockout, which started on Sept. 15, 2004, seeking cost certainty and believes it has achieved that with a new economic system from top to bottom.




    It is expected both the NHL and NHLPA will move to ratify the agreement within the next seven days, with a formal announcement on July 21. During that time, it is expected the new CBA will be distributed to all in the hockey industry so they can begin getting themselves up to speed on a myriad of new rules and regulations.


    if(!sops){if(p.sops){var sops=p.sops;}else{var sops="";}} if(dUnitBox==true){boxAd=true;} if(boxAd){if((!dUnitSky)||(dUnitBox)){place300x250();}}
    Among the most significant features are:

    - a hard team-by-team salary cap with a payroll of range of $21 million to $39 million (in the first year), which includes all player costs (benefits, insurance etc).

    - the league's total expenditure on player costs (salaries, bonuses, benefits and insurance) is not permitted to exceed 54 per cent of defined hockey-related revenue and the salary cap and payroll range will move up or down as revenues increase or decrease each year of the deal.

    - a 24 per-cent salary rollback for any NHL player who has time remaining on an existing contract, keeping in mind that the players will receive none of the monies they were slated to earn in the lost season of 2004-05.

    - liberalized free agency (including unrestricted status at 27 by year four of the deal), a more restrictive entry level system, totally revamped salary arbitration, improved pension benefits and a revenue-sharing plan.

    - Age eligibility for unrestricted free agency at age 31 in 2005, 29 in 2006, 28 in 2007. In 2008, it's 27 or seven years of NHL tenure.

    This agreement (pending ratification) will kick off the most bizarre and busiest off-season in NHL history after the league became the first major professional loop to lose an entire year to labour strife.

    As tutorials are conducted to allow NHL owners, general managers, NHL players and player agents to understand the new economic order, plans are already in the works for the two ratification votes.

    NHL commissioner Gary Bettman will be recommending acceptance of this agreement to the governors, so a simple majority of the league's 30-man ruling body will be enough to ratify it.

    It's also expected the NHLPA's executive committee, led by president Trevor Linden, will be endorsing the deal, which means a simple majority of the NHLPA's more than 700 members will be enough to make it binding. For those players who cannot physically make it to the membership meeting, the vote will be conducted through the NHLPA's secure website, The Source.

    "I don't think the deal that we're going to get would have been ratified last summer," said Sean Burke, a free agent like many of his brethren. "But I just think we've been worn down to the point where at this stage the deal would really have to be incredibly bad for the guys not to vote it in. At least that's the sense I'm getting."

    Assuming both groups ratify, the NHL is expected to begin a brief transition period before the league fully re-opens for business.

    But before teams and players start to concern themselves with the specifics of transition - such as the buying out of some players to allow teams to meet cap requirements or the attempted signing of 2003 and 2004 draft picks who would re-enter the 2005 entry draft if not signed - the league is expected to unveil significant changes to the game, on and off the ice.

    Because no season was played in 2004-05, there is no order of selection for the 2005 entry draft, which is scheduled to take place as a scaled-down event in Ottawa's Westin Hotel on July 30. Usually, teams draft in inverse order of finish from the recently-concluded season, but this time there will be a weighted draft lottery (with the teams who have fared poorest over the last few years to get marginally better odds than those who fared well) to determine who gets the first overall pick and the right to pick young phenom Sidney Crosby. That lottery is scheduled to take place on July 21 when the NHL is expected to formally announce the new CBA.

    When it comes to 2003 draft picks, like Philadelphia's highly-touted first-rounders Jeff Carter and Mike Richards, those players will be eligible for the 2003 rookie limit, with a 24% rollback, along with performance bonuses that can total $850,000. This gives those players incentive to sign with the team that drafted them in 2003 rather than re-enter the 2005 draft.

    In addition to that major business, the NHL is also expected to unveil significant rule changes aimed at making the game more exciting and fan friendly, including shootouts to end tie games and the removal of the red line for the purpose of allowing two-line passes.

    While the regular season will remain at 82 games long for each team, the format of that schedule may be altered.

    Once the NHL's formal news conference is put to bed, along with the lottery and rule changes, the brief transition period should unfold in order to take care of the loose ends from the expired CBA. At some point, the NHL will declare itself open for business and NHL teams will be sorting through a huge pool of unrestricted free agents as many teams make themselves over from the ground up.

    Whether it is the brave new world the NHL hopes, remains to be seen, but the level of activity and uncertainty will be higher than at any other time in league history.

    For now, though, the only thing that matters in the short term is this: The deal (pending ratification) is done.

    The lockout wiped out the entire 2004-05 season, including all 1,230 regular-season games, denying hockey fans a Stanley Cup champion for the first time since a flu epidemic cancelled the 1919 final. The NHL became the first major professional league in North America to loose a season from beginning to end because of labour strife.

    Once Bettman announced the season cancelled Feb. 16, both sides returned to the negotiating table March 11 in the first of 44 meetings aimed at making sure the 2005-06 season wouldn't be delayed.

    The two sides met every single week starting in early May and didn't let up until the end, cramming in long days in the final six weeks in an effort to finally get it done.

  8. #8
    Just An Optician jediron1's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2004
    Location
    USA, New York
    Occupation
    Dispensing Optician
    Posts
    1,727
    Quote Originally Posted by Pete Hanlin
    American NCAA Football is #1...

    ...followed by NFL Football...

    ...NHL Hockey...

    ...NCAA Baseball...

    ...PGA Golf...

    ...ML Baseball

    (Just my ranking, however)

    Knew the players would cave... because they were being ridiculous!
    The only one I would add and not because I believe it's a sport but because it draws hugh fans is Nascar. Just my 2 cents:D

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Similar Threads

  1. Air Force's dream, Homeland Security's nightmare
    By rinselberg in forum Just Conversation
    Replies: 11
    Last Post: 10-09-2004, 09:34 PM
  2. Another Hornets Nest...............Optical Trade Magazines
    By Chris Ryser in forum General Optics and Eyecare Discussion Forum
    Replies: 81
    Last Post: 01-08-2003, 05:17 AM
  3. World Cup...
    By John R in forum Just Conversation
    Replies: 109
    Last Post: 06-30-2002, 05:09 PM
  4. North Carolina Dream
    By Cindy in forum Just Conversation
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 05-19-2001, 07:36 PM
  5. Dream Adventure
    By Night Train in forum Just Conversation
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 05-14-2001, 12:44 AM

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •