Official Poll: Do you think the CBA will get completed before the deadline?

Reality

Staff member
Messages
31,234
Reaction score
72,789
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
In most negotiations, standard tactics dictate if you are not entirely happy with the offer presented on the table by the other side, employ a "talks are off, doubtful a deal will get done" media push right near the deadline. This leaves you with enough time remaining to get a deal done at the last minute while giving the other side a chance to blink (aka: cave) at the last minute.

Considering this tactic is being played by both sides 2-3 days before the deadline, do you believe a new CBA deal will get done before the deadline?
 

BrAinPaiNt

Mike Smith aka Backwoods Sexy
Staff member
Messages
78,654
Reaction score
43,000
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
I think a deal gets done somehow.
 

Pokes28

Member
Messages
365
Reaction score
0
I do not think it will.

There simply is too much to go and reality is that the start of the NFL year does not mean much. A deal will get done, but it will probably be closer August before a deal is done in my view. The players won't decertify right away as they would no longer have any real way to negotiate.

David Harrell - Pokes
dwh
 

Juke99

...Abbey someone
Messages
22,279
Reaction score
126
I think they'll come up with a temporary solution to buy time..and then strike a deal.

I just can't see that they'll allow the chaos to happen that would if the deal doesn't get done.
 

Yakuza Rich

Well-Known Member
Messages
18,043
Reaction score
12,385
I can't imagine it happening right now.

Upshaw has all but left for Washington, if the owners cave in that would be too much of a coup for the players right now. They'll probably get the CBA extended somewhere down the road, just not today.

Both sides seem pretty adamant that outside of the NFL telling the owners the situation, there will be no meeting today in regards to the CBA.

Rich........
 

Reality

Staff member
Messages
31,234
Reaction score
72,789
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
Juke99 said:
I think they'll come up with a temporary solution to buy time..and then strike a deal.

I just can't see that they'll allow the chaos to happen that would if the deal doesn't get done.
This is exactly what I feel will happen. Basically, they'll agree in principal that they will reach a final agreement in the days after the deadline, but the initial agreement will get them around the deadline problem.

I think both sides knew and planned around the fact that a last minute temporary deal would always be an option.
 

Dayton Cowboy

Active Member
Messages
1,864
Reaction score
5
I think that at the last minute the owners will go to 57% and the nflpa will counter with 58% and they'll meet in the middle... I don't think that it will get done under the current proposal by either side
 

clayman

New Member
Messages
272
Reaction score
0
Reality said:
This is exactly what I feel will happen. Basically, they'll agree in principal that they will reach a final agreement in the days after the deadline, but the initial agreement will get them around the deadline problem.

I think both sides knew and planned around the fact that a last minute temporary deal would always be an option.

I agree. With so much on the line for both sides and the NFL as a whole including Tags legacy, they would definitely have some temporary out in place just for what has gone on.
 

lspain1

Well-Known Member
Messages
4,372
Reaction score
33
The players and owners stand to both lose if a deal doesn't get done. So, I think it gets done.
 

Phoenix-Talon

Eagles Fan Liaison
Messages
5,021
Reaction score
0
According to some sports writers, "no deal" benefits the Cowboys, Eagles, and Washington.

Don't worry, a modified compromise for the benefit of the NFL will surely crank out a last-minute deal!

American venacular ...dude -- don't worry bout it!

British ...not to worry mate!

Australian ... gooday -- no worries!

Shakesparean ...worryeth not thee!

Biblical term ...WORRY NOT +

Philadelphian ...what ...me worry?
 

Thick 'N Hearty

Active Member
Messages
2,359
Reaction score
0
Wasn't there an article or story out somewhere about the player's side being pretty much done, but the owners couldn't agree on the revenue sharing portion?
 

Ashwynn

Well-Known Member
Messages
3,777
Reaction score
500
I just dont know anymore. We will see soon though. Not sure I even know if I want it to happen anymore or not.
 

acheman

Member
Messages
975
Reaction score
2
Did the deadline pass at 4:00PM EST on 3-1-06? If so, then I vote no, and I question why they have meetings scheduled for Thursday 3-2-06.
 

felix360

Active Member
Messages
1,143
Reaction score
21
Pokes28 said:
I do not think it will.

There simply is too much to go and reality is that the start of the NFL year does not mean much. A deal will get done, but it will probably be closer August before a deal is done in my view. The players won't decertify right away as they would no longer have any real way to negotiate.

David Harrell - Pokes
dwh



lets say a deal is done close to august, also 2007 would still go uncapped correct.
 

aznhalf

New Member
Messages
882
Reaction score
0
acheman said:
Did the deadline pass at 4:00PM EST on 3-1-06? If so, then I vote no, and I question why they have meetings scheduled for Thursday 3-2-06.

That deadline was imposed the Tags. It really doesn't count for much. The true deadline is the start of FA which is Thursday at midnight!
 

Arch Stanton

it was the grave marked unknown right beside
Messages
6,474
Reaction score
0
NFL owners to meet again tomorrow

This story was published Wednesday, March 1st, 2006

By DAVE GOLDBERG, AP Football Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - NFL owners will try Thursday to find labor peace before the start of free agency, hoping to avoid the mass dumping of veterans for salary-cap reasons.

The owners will meet in New York, seeking to find a way toward an agreement with the players union that could add $10 million to 15 million to a 2006 salary cap that current is projected at about $95 million. Without it, some teams could be forced into wholesale cuts to get beneath the cap by midnight. Free agency starts Friday.

Three days of talks between the league and the NFL Players Association to extend the agreement that runs out in 2008 ended Tuesday with the sides far apart on the percentage of league revenues earmarked for its players. Gene Upshaw, the union's executive director, said the league is offering to 56.2 percent of its total revenue for the players, almost four points lower than the union's.

"Our number has to start with a six," Upshaw said.

But beyond the numbers is an issue that has divided the owners for two years - revenue sharing among the teams.

Under the current system, some teams make far more than others in ancillary income, ranging from local radio rights to stadium naming rights and advertising. The lower revenue teams say that forces them to commit as much as 70 percent of that money to the players while teams with more outside money contribute far less, giving the high-revenue teams more available cash for upfront bonuses to free agents.

The NFL said in a statement after talks broke off that revenue sharing won't be discussed at Thursday's meeting.

Still, it is bound to come up during a meeting that on the surface is considered a strategy session to determine the owners' next move. Labor negotiations often have a way of being moved forward by deadlines, and revenue sharing is considered a critical part of the formula.

Under the current agreement, 2006 is scheduled to be the last year with a salary cap. An uncapped year in 2007 means new rules that will force teams and agents to change their plans this year and could keep a lot of teams out of the free-agent market entirely.

"It might mean that no rookies get signed because no one is sure of the long-term ramifications," said Tom Condon, the agent for a number of the game's top players.

Even more urgent are salary-cap ramifications for many teams, which anticipated a labor agreement and planned for a much bigger ceiling. Washington, for example, could be as much as $25 million after signings over the past few years that anticipated a salary cap figure well over $100 million.

Others seem ready for whatever happens.

"We're in pretty good shape," New York Giants general manager Ernie Accorsi said Wednesday. "They're going to give us a cap number and we'll be ready for it. You always prepare for a worst case, no matter what the situation. You never want to be surprised by something negative, only something positive."

Accorsi said he's also not worried about new rules. He said those contingencies are covered in the contracts of two young Pro Bowl players - tight end Jeremy Shockey and defensive end Osi Umenyiora - that the Giants extended last fall.

But others are in a different situation, which could mean wholesale cuts of big-name players at midnight Thursday. What happens in the meetings may determine that.
 

felix360

Active Member
Messages
1,143
Reaction score
21
I just find it very hard to believe that quality players will be cut, basically its going to be like this coming season, all the teams under the cap will pick up the players that are cut, which in turn will make these teams the only real contenders for the super bowl .
 

big dog cowboy

THE BIG DOG
Staff member
Messages
101,923
Reaction score
112,976
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
Close poll. I voted yes. Not sure why. I don't trust Upshaw or Tags. Just get it done already!!!
 
Top