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NHL-Gone
#250807
02/17/05 12:22 PM
02/17/05 12:22 PM
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Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 4,595
fathersson
OP
Underboss
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OP
Underboss
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 4,595
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HNL gives up on season. I know before everyone says who cares? Could this be the start of something? The downfall of the whole sport or a new trend in sports in general; someday. Or will this at least give it an opportunity for reform? Of hockey and or the high price of sports. Remember, if I heard this right. That this is the first time in North America that a major professional sport has lost an entire season to a labor dispute.
ONLY gun owners have the POWER to PROTECT and PRESERVE our FREEDOM. "...it is their (the people's) right and duty to be at all times armed" - Thomas Jefferson, June 5, 1824
Everyone should read. "HOW TO KILL A MOCKING BIRD"
CAUTION: This Post has not been approved by Don Cardi.
You really don't expect people to believe your shit do you?
Read: "The Daily Apple"- Telling America and the Gangster BB like it really is!
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Re: NHL-Gone
#250809
02/17/05 04:50 PM
02/17/05 04:50 PM
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Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 8,536 West Chester, PA
Patrick
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Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 8,536
West Chester, PA
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It took baseball nearly 10 years to resurrect itself after holding out for half of one season. The NHL is missing a whole season and I think it's safe to say is the least watched sport of the major 4 (NBA, NHL, MLB, NFL). It doesn't effect me. NBA could hold out next year, but they're expected to reach an agreement in June. -Pat
"After every dark night, there's a bright day right after that. No matter how hard it gets, stick your chest out, keep your head up, and handle it." -Tupac Shakur
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Re: NHL-Gone
#250812
02/17/05 07:20 PM
02/17/05 07:20 PM
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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 839 Elmwood Park, Illinois
YoTonyB
Neighborhood Guy
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Neighborhood Guy
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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 839
Elmwood Park, Illinois
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I'm a hockey fan, and I'm fascinated by labor disputes in professional sports. In the States, they're governed by the same laws the cover the traditional trade and industrial unions.
In the U.S., the National Labor Relations Board makes a distinction between offensive and defensive lockouts. This is an important distinction because it determines whether or not the owners are allowed to use substitute players. The NHL owners are using the lockout to pressure the players to accept their (the owners') bargaining position, particularly the right to a salary cap (and at what level to set the cap). That's considered an offensive lockout, and the owners may bring in substitute players as long as there is no evidence of an anti-union motive in their use of the substitute players. There doesn't appear to be an effort by the owners to break the union, only to get them to capitulate to the demand of a salary cap. Both sides have now agreed to a cap, they just haven't agreed on a number.
Will the owners start next season with substitute players if an agreement isn't reached? Hard to say. Now that the season is cancelled, there is no self-imposed deadline to get things done. However, now that the players have actually set a number for a cap, it will be hard to retreat from that position.
I can say with some certainty that the Chicago Blackhawk ownership could probably withstand an indefinite work stoppage in the NHL. The Wirtz family has a number of other business interests that make the hockey team something less than the majority of their holdings.
That may not be true for other franshises and the lockout may eventually take its toll on some franchises. If just one team folds, that's 30 or 35 guys (plus a minor league system!) all competing for jobs with the remaining teams.
Not sure if this is true in Canada, but under U.S. labor law, I believe the NHL players are eligible for unemployment compensation in a "lockout" (but not in a strike).
tony b.
"Kid, these are my f**kin' work clothes." "You look good in them golf shoes. You should buy 'em"
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Re: NHL-Gone
#250815
02/17/05 08:59 PM
02/17/05 08:59 PM
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Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058 The Slippery Slope
plawrence
RIP StatMan
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RIP StatMan
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058
The Slippery Slope
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Originally posted by YoTonyB: In the U.S., the National Labor Relations Board makes a distinction between offensive and defensive lockouts. Hi, YTB.... I have quite a bit of experience in management-labor relations in my own particular business, but I've never seen a distinction made between the two types of lockouts you mention. I always thought that a lockout was the opposite of a strike. What are the differences between an offensive and defensive lockout? (Bill James doesn't cover this anywhere  )
"Difficult....not impossible"
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Re: NHL-Gone
#250816
02/17/05 10:53 PM
02/17/05 10:53 PM
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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 839 Elmwood Park, Illinois
YoTonyB
Neighborhood Guy
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Neighborhood Guy
Underboss
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 839
Elmwood Park, Illinois
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Hey, Plaw!
I was in grad school (Labor and Industrial Relations!) in the mid-'80's shortly after one of the cases on lockouts and temporary replacements was being decided. There was an emphasis in the Labor Law and Dispute Resolution classes to include this material on strikes and lockouts, and that's why I remember it...but only in broad strokes!
The broad strokes that I remember for a defensive lockout relate to a multi-employer bargaining unit in which some employers are struck and the remaining employees are subsequently locked-out. I don't believe that fits the NHL shutdown. The offensive lockout was management's economic tactic similar to a strike. Where the union could strike to apply economic pressure on the owner to settle, the owner could lockout the worker to apply the same economic pressure. That seems to fit the NHL owners' reason for the lockout.
There were specific parameters that had to be met in order for management to have the legal right to hire temporary replacements. I recall the standard for offensive lockouts being the anti-union motive. Since the NHL owners and the Players Association have continued to bargain; have gotten close on a key bargaining point; and appear to be bargaining in good faith, I'd be convinced that the owners don't have an anti-union motive so they are entitled to employ temporary replacements to run their business.
In any event, the distinction between a defensive and offensive lockout was made to determine whether or not the lockout was legal and whether or not the use of replacement workers was legal.
Now I'm gonna have to google for more details and case law...which I should have done before posting!
I greatly admire the work of Marvin Miller in organizing the MLBPA, specifically because of the steps he took to achieve what they achieved. I can talk for a long time on the relationships between Marvin Miller, the Steelworkers Trilogy, the reserve clause, and the arbitrator's decisions that gave Catfish Hunter, Dave McNally, and Andy Messersmith the first shot at baseball's free agent market!
Bill James actually did a nice essay on the viability of replacement players in Major League Baseball. I wish I could remember where I saw it. It had to have been the 1994 baseball strike since he compared the quality of the replacement level baseball player with the quality of the replacement level football player.
tony b.
"Kid, these are my f**kin' work clothes." "You look good in them golf shoes. You should buy 'em"
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Re: NHL-Gone
#250817
02/19/05 09:42 PM
02/19/05 09:42 PM
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Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 2,552 Michigan
DonPalentino
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 2,552
Michigan
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This sucks I'll tell ya that much. Hockey is my favorite sport. I've been playing it since I was about ten. Since Im from Michigan were hockey is very popular, its aweful. But theres always the Pistons, Tigers(Yes, The Tigers they will be a good team  ) and the Lions, if healthy the Lions could do some things to. They have some very good young talent.
Leonard: I dont know. See, I have this condition. Teddy: Well, I hope its not as serious as his, 'cos this guy's dead.
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