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    League and union set for key round of labor talks

    TORONTO (Reuters) - The National Hockey League (NHL) will learn how wide a gap it faces in labor talks that threaten the 2012-13 season when the players' union delivers a counterproposal on the core economic issues this week.

    After meetings last week in an effort to agree to terms on a new labor deal, the two sides have scheduled four meetings this week in a bid to avoid another lockout like the one that wiped out the entire 2004-05 NHL season.

    If a new deal is not reached before the current collective bargaining agreement expires on September 15, the NHL could impose a lockout that would threaten regular season play and test the patience of fans.

    After last week's negotiations in New York, the NHL Players Association (NHLPA) said it expects this week to make an official response to the proposal that was submitted by the league on July 13.

    The sides are meeting on Monday at the NHL's Toronto office with talks also scheduled for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at the NHLPA's Toronto headquarters.

    While both sides have reached common ground on some smaller issues, including player safety, there remains a significant gap with regards to the economics of a new labor agreement as many teams feel they cannot survive under the current system.

    The NHL wants to reduce the players' share of hockey-related revenues to 46 percent from 57 percent despite enjoying record-breaking revenue of $3.3. billion last season along with an increase in television ratings.

    That gives the two sides barely a month to sort out their issues before training camps for the 2012-13 NHL season could face delays or cancellations.

    The NHL's 82-game regular season is currently scheduled to open on October 11 with eight teams in action.

    (Reporting by Frank Pingue; Editing by Steve Ginsburg)

     

    9 comments

    • sirstefan  •  New York, New York  •  5 days ago
      If this season gets significantly shortened or cancelled, Bettman shouldn't be fired, he should be staked out in front of a net without any padding and the players allowed to slapshot him to death on a live PPV broadcast - proceeds to the NHLPA pension fund
      • goondman 5 days ago
        Your all correct about owners v/s Bettman, but Bettman should still be fired
      • Leo 5 days ago
        This. I'll pick just 3 players to shoot. Chara, Weber and Karlsson.
      • sirstefan 5 days ago
        Maybe - but by allowing himself to function as the owners' puppet & mouthpiece, he's the figurehead for irresponsible, unnecessary and possible long-term harm to the world's greatest sport, and should be at least first in line for this punishment
    • Raft  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  5 days ago
      I have BC, BU, northeastern, & Harvard within 5 miles,& AHL Providence Bruins, Worcester Sharks & Manchester Monarchs 35 to 50 miles away, so I'll spend time ( & my money ) watching them just like the last lockout. How does Bettman & NBC feel about that!
    • Eric  •  5 days ago
      Millionaires vs Billionaires, just get it done and quickly!
    • Stephen M  •  Warwick, New York  •  6 days ago
      GOD ,please don't let this happen again, please, greed is a nasty thing, unfortunetly it's what makes the world go round, shame, bunch of rich guys trying to get richer, while the guy with three young kids and a morgage to pay who works selling beer to us is out of a job, thats more than a shame as i type and think about, it sucks ! i hope the nhlpa reads this, wake up
      • Juan_Tomsonavitch 5 days ago
        Yep, they better get this done. They are still recovering their fan base from the last one. If not, this lockout just may put them under. No fans, no hockey.
        They need to do this one for us fans, not the $.!!!
    • goondman  •  5 days ago
      ...."as many teams feel they cannot survive under the current system".
      Seriously????? Wasn't the last CBA supposed to fix this problem???? Sorry owners, but this was the agreement you all wanted! Stop punishing the players because it’s not their fault that YOU found loop-holes in contracts etc, etc, etc, etc, etc. What a joke
    • Tommy like Wingy  •  Columbus, Ohio  •  5 days ago
      I was frustrated a couple years ago with the dispute. Now I am excited because we can get one more year of practice. Signed, Columbus Blue Jackets
      • Joe C 5 days ago
        It's going to take a lot more than one year, and a lot more than practice.
    • jason  •  5 days ago
      The owners caused this mess not the players; the latest in the rumor mills is the revenue sharing between the large markets and smaller market teams. It appears to me that the larger market teams do not want to share what they currently have with the smaller market teams, hence the larger swing in revenues for the owners as proposed in the NHL’s first go at a new CBA . This way the larger market teams can keep what they already have (with a slight increase no doubt)and the smaller market teams get a little more. I say screw the salary cap and institute a luxury tax because you know they will be in the same boat 5-10yrs from now. As far as the fans coming back , with another lockout the NHL can kiss any new/larger TV deals goodbye , if there are no fans to watch the games (minus the die hards) then the broadcasters cannot sell advertising. Right now the NHL's growth depends on the casual fan aka the bandwagoners who run out and buy jerseys , tickets and the like. Just one fans thoughts.
      • goondman 5 days ago
        You got that right about tv deals etc. However, that being said, I can totally see (as much as I hate them) NBC coming to the rescue. "Get a deal done or your done". If that were to happen, what network would carry NHL games, Home And Garden
    • Steve Moore  •  5 days ago
      Gotta side w/owners, as they take 99% of the risk in this business propostion. Wonder how many thumbs down I can get for this ?
      • StuartM 5 days ago
        Hey Steve, how do the owners ice a team without players? Go out on the ice themselves?

        And before you throw up that old "greedy players" meme, just riddle me this--who put a gun to Minnesota's head and made them put out the Suter and Parise offer sheets? And just what were Parise and Stuer supposed to do? "Oh, no sir, I won't play for anything more than half of what you're offering me of your own free will?" The owners have no one to blame for the insane offer sheets being put out than the owners themselves. Maybe they need to control themselves rather than forcing the players to do it for them...
      • BigBlueCrushAll 5 days ago
        It's hardly a huge gamble when 90+% of the teams are pretty much guaranteed to make a profit. And the players are more at risk of physical harm and significantly shortened careers (which is much more of a financial burden than breaking even for an owner) than any owner is. Do you think the guy making league min on his entry deal and getting a career ending injury in his first month is gonna have an easier time making a living than his owner who lost out on an EXTRA 400K because of the CBA?
    • Baloneywrapper  •  Tampa, Florida  •  5 days ago
      I hope they all can work it out, but either way, I'd like to see more college games on TV.

    Overall Medal Count

    Rank Country Gold Silver Bronze Total
    1 United States 46 29 29 104
    2 China 38 27 23 88
    3 Great Britain 29 17 19 65
    4 Russia 24 26 32 82
    5 South Korea 13 8 7 28
    6 Germany 11 19 14 44
    7 France 11 11 12 34
    8 Italy 8 9 11 28
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