dfosterf
14 years ago
There will not be a lockout in the NFL.
by Wm. David Cornwell, Sr.


Kind of wordy for some, but definitely worth the time and trouble, imo




No lockout Wm David Cornwell 


Public discussion of the looming labor war in the National Football League has all but conceded that NFL owners will lock out players if there is not a new collective bargaining agreement by March 2011. Owners will not lock out players in 2011. Instead, NFL owners will employ a tactic that enhances their leverage in CBA negotiations, increases their share revenues over what they retain under the current CBA, and avoids the wrath of fans, which would surely follow a lockout.
Our labor laws are designed to encourage labor and management to work out their differences in a private contract (collective bargaining agreement). Labor law provides labor and management with swords and shields that enable each side to pressure the other to get a deal. The most significant shield is the non-statutory exemption to the antitrust laws, which insulates both labor and management from antitrust challenges. While lockouts and strikes are among the swords provided by labor law, impasse and decertification (and the rules relating to them) are more likely to be the weapons of choice for the NFL and the NFLPA as the current NFL labor dispute unfolds.
Work stoppages (strikes and lockouts) are the least desirable tactic in sports' labor disputes because, as Commissioner Goodell noted in his recent Super Bowl press conference, both sides lose. When NFL players went on strike in 1987 (the last work stoppage in the NFL), owners compromised the integrity of the game by playing with replacement players and, after three weeks, players ended their strike because they could not endure the economic impact of a strike -- no work means no paycheck. In the end, both sides lost. It does not matter which side initiates a work stoppage, each side ends up hurting itself as much as the other side. NFL owners will not lockout players in 2011 because there is a better option.
In March 2011, once the NFL and the NFLPA have negotiated to impasse, the NFL will invoke a rule relating to impasse and unilaterally impose new rules for wages, hours and other terms and conditions of employment that will be, as required by labor law, substantially similar to the last proposal made to the NFLPA prior to negotiations reaching impasse. The NFL used this tactic in 1987.
In response, in 1987 Gene Upshaw decertified the NFLPA as the collective bargaining representative of NFL players and, invoking a labor law rule relating to decertification, stripped the NFL of the antitrust exemption and opened the door for a wave of antitrust lawsuits against the NFL's then unilaterally imposed system.
Without the antitrust exemption between 1987 and 1993, the NFL's draft, free agency rules, and certain rules regarding player compensation were ultimately declared unlawful. Since 1993, each collective bargaining agreement in the NFL is a variation, in one form or another, of the settlement agreement that resolved the antitrust lawsuits that began with the NFLPA's decertification in 1987.
In 2011, a unilaterally imposed post-impasse system will inure to NFL owners' economic benefit. Commissioner Goodell recently reported that under the 2006 CBA, owners have generated $3.6 billion in incremental revenues and paid $2.6 billion of that "new money" to players. Owners will not be required to share a fixed percentage of revenue with players or fund collectively bargained benefits when the current CBA expires in March 2011. On purely economic terms, owners will conclude that unilaterally imposing a new system after impasse will cost them less than the $2.6 billion paid to players over the last four years. Some of the revenues that owners will retain without a CBA will be spent on litigation and other costs, tangible and intangible, incurred from the absence of labor peace, but by retaining a substantially higher percentage of revenues through a unilaterally imposed post-impasse system, owners achieve their primary objective in the current CBA negotiations. Impasse will shift the dynamic in collective bargaining negotiations in the owners' favor.
As negotiations progress closer to March 2011, expect the NFL to tailor its collective bargaining proposals so that its final, pre-impasse proposal will have two features: (1) owners will make more money than they do under the current CBA and; (2) when converted into a post-impasse system, a reasonable chance of surviving years of challenges under the antitrust laws.
The NFLPA will face a tough choice if the owners press collective bargaining to impasse in 2011. Confronting a smaller piece of the pie under a new system will force the NFLPA to either strike or decertify. The NFLPA cannot strike, sacrifice players' paychecks, and expose players to public ridicule. In response to an impasse, players will play and the NFLPA will decertify and file antitrust lawsuits attacking each element of the owners' post-impasse system. This may be a risky, expensive, and time-consuming course for players.
The NFLPA's antitrust successes between 1987 and 1993 were won on a different playing field. Then, the NFLPA attacked a draft that was 12 rounds (not seven), free agency that excluded players most likely to benefit from an open market for their services (Plan 😎, and fixed salaries that looked like a price fixing sitting duck (practice squad). The NFLPA's successes in these lawsuits resulted in negotiated free agency for players and "cost certainty" for owners in the form of a salary cap. The result has been over 20 years of labor peace, which ushered in explosive growth in player salaries, the popularity of the game, and the value of NFL franchises. The current dispute over revenue sharing is not as dramatic as the 1987 dispute over free agency and cost certainty. In 2011, NFL owners' downside may not be as great as it was in 1987.
Regardless of the outcome of the NFLPA's antitrust challenges, it will likely take at least five years to obtain final rulings. In the interim, owners will save billions in player costs and fans will enjoy NFL football in 2011 and beyond. The open question is whether the ultimate benefit to players will be greater than the cost.



His bio. (He was believed by most "experts" to be the favorite to become the NFLPA representative)

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/wm-david-cornwell-sr/#blogger_bio 





Wm. David Cornwell, Sr., the President of the sports law firm, DNK Cornwell, is nationally recognized as the premier lawyer for sports agents, professional athletes, coaches, executives, and companies involved in the sports and entertainment industry.

In July 2008, Cornwell was featured in the Washington Post for his work on behalf of NFL players and other professional athletes. In 2004, USA TODAY heralded the Ricky Williams reinstatement agreement that Cornwell negotiated with the NFL as one the top 10 sports stories of the year. ESPN.com has referred to Cornwell as a brilliant legal mind.

Cornwells daily practice includes negotiating, drafting, and reviewing endorsement, licensing, and employment agreements for athletes, coaches, executives, and companies in the sports and entertainment industry. He serves as primary outside counsel for numerous sports agencies and assists sports agents and their professional athlete clients in complying with the policies

Fan Shout
packerfanoutwest (1h) : 49ers are underdogs at Packers, ending streak of 36 straight games as favorites
Zero2Cool (8h) : 49ers might be down their QB, DL, TE and LT?
packerfanoutwest (22h) : Jaire Alexander says he has a torn PCL
Zero2Cool (20-Nov) : Even with the context it's ... what?
Mucky Tundra (20-Nov) : Matt LaFleur without context: “I don’t wanna pat you on the butt and you poop in my hand.”
beast (20-Nov) : We brought in a former Packers OL coach to help evaluate OL as a scout
beast (20-Nov) : Jets have been pretty good at picking DL
Zero2Cool (20-Nov) : He landed good players thanks to high draft slot. He isn't good.
Zero2Cool (20-Nov) : He can shove his knowledge up his ass. He knows nothing.
beast (20-Nov) : More knowledge, just like bring in the Jets head coach
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : What? Why? Huh?
beast (19-Nov) : I wonder if the Packers might to try to bring Douglas in through Milt Hendrickson/Ravens connections
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : The Jets fired Joe Douglas, per sources
packerfanoutwest (19-Nov) : Jets are a mess......
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : Pretty sure Jets fired their scouting staff and just pluck former Packers.
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : Jets sign Anders Carlson to their 53.
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : When you cycle the weeks, the total over remains for season. But you get your W/L for that selected week. Confusing.
packerfanoutwest (19-Nov) : the total and percentage are the same as the previous weeks
packerfanoutwest (19-Nov) : the total and percentage are the same as the previous weeks
packerfanoutwest (19-Nov) : the totals are accurate..nrvrtmind
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : I don't follow what you are saying. The totals are not the same as last week.
packerfanoutwest (19-Nov) : ok so then wht are the totals the same as last week?
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : NFL Pick'em is auto updated when NFL Scores tab is clicked
Martha Careful (19-Nov) : The offense was OK. Let's not forget the Bear defense is very very good.
packerfanoutwest (19-Nov) : Who updates the leaderboard on NFLPickem?
beast (19-Nov) : Has the Packers offense been worse since the former Jets coach joined the Packers?
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : Offense gets his ass in gear, this could be good.
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : Backup QB helped with three wins. Special Teams contributed to three wins.
bboystyle (18-Nov) : Lions played outside thats why. They scored 16 and 17 in the only 2 outside games this year
Zero2Cool (18-Nov) : The rest of the NFL is catching up to Packers ... kicking is an issue throughout league
packerfanoutwest (18-Nov) : Packers DL Kenny Clark: We knew 'we were going to block' Bears' game-winning field goal attempt
Zero2Cool (18-Nov) : Lions seem to be throttling everyone, but only (only) got 24 lol maybe the rain is why
Zero2Cool (18-Nov) : Packers vs Lions game doesn't seem so bad.
beast (18-Nov) : Dennis Green "They are what we thought they were, and we let them off the hook!"
Martha Careful (17-Nov) : comment of the day Z2Cool "Bears better than we want to admit. Packers worse than we think. It's facts."
Mucky Tundra (17-Nov) : my worst case scenario: Bears fix their oline and get a coach like Johnson from the Lions and his scheme
Zero2Cool (17-Nov) : Bears get OL fixed amd we might have a problem
buckeyepackfan (17-Nov) : Pretty sure they already have scouting reports on guys who aren't even starting for their college team. The future is now for me.
buckeyepackfan (17-Nov) : I tend to let Gute and Co. Worry about the future.
beast (17-Nov) : That's great news and Packers need to keep upgrading their OL, DL and DBs this off-season, so missing one guy doesn't kill them
beast (17-Nov) : That's great news and Packers need to keep upgrading their OL, DL and DBs this off-season, so missing one guy doesn't kill them
buckeyepackfan (17-Nov) : Jaire and Evans Williams are both ACTIVE! Good news.
Martha Careful (17-Nov) : The badgers really need to change the whole offensive scheme. No draws no screens plus the quarterback is marginal
Cheesey (17-Nov) : If the Badgers had a decent QB, they would have won. The guy can't hit a wide open receiver
Martha Careful (17-Nov) : chop block
Martha Careful (17-Nov) : there was a very questionable job Block call that upon viewing replay was very borderline
beast (17-Nov) : How so? (I didn't watch)
Zero2Cool (17-Nov) : Badgers got hosed vs Oregon
packerfanoutwest (16-Nov) : damn,he hasn't played since week 2
Mucky Tundra (15-Nov) : poor guy can't catch a break
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