JIGGYFLY
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SkinsFan28;3961620 said:If you look at hearts, when you shoot the moon, you get all 26 points, thus getting none, and giving your opponents each 26. HOWEVER, if you fail by even 1 point, you get stuck with 25, while one of the other players takes 1.
I say this, because I think that concept of shooting the moon explains what Verdict had in mind. When I first read his OP, I felt kinda the same as what you have expressed. But Verdict is not saying that the players pushed for wonderful new benefits, merely that their "hand" doesn't have that final winner to get the 26th point, thus they will end up taking a much worse loss. Clearly the players felt that they had the hand to shoot, and going up until this last card, they were doing pretty good, TV Contracts lawsuit is going their way, Judge Nelson said everything they wanted. Right now, the question is whether they will have the courage to eat the queen of spades (go through with a full true forever so be it - decertification) or take their losses, and accept a new, less favorable CBA.
Back on point, to shoot the moon here means make a hard and fast go for it all and don't back down type attitude, and hope you have the cards to win it all.
Let's look at it from the point of if litigation had worked, or the 8th DCoA does support Judge Nelson. Then their shoot the moon strategy will have worked, because the owners will probably be back at the table with an offer very similar to the 2006 CBA, and plus the player may get damages awarded. Thus they would have shot the moon (using the hearts analogy) .
I can understand this analogy, I still don't think it fits but it has logic.
Anytime shoot for for the moon is usually used its to illustrate a party asking for something highly unreasonable or unatainable.
I don't think the players ever approached those thresholds and the owners by asking for a pay cut and longer working hours per say definitely meet that threshold.
