Again I'm not pro owner but facts are facts, the NFL can not exist long under the current agreement.
Would you like to buy a business knowing that you are going to probably lose money or break even?
You're very good on on assertions, but I don't see any "facts" here. Let me help you by giving you another chance to support what you're saying.1) Has an NFL owner ever lost money over the course of his/her ownership? Has an NFL franchise ever sold for less than the previous time it changed hands?
2) If the NFL has existed under similar versions of this same agreement since 1993, why can't it continue to exist under this agreement?
3) Does your answer to #2 above take into account that the game is MORE popular, and making MORE money than it ever has? Does it address the +8-10% TV ratings that will drive the next network contract?
TIA for helping me see the light here.
The owners had offered a little more than 56.5% of total football revenues to the players; the players wanted 59.5% and needed the owners to share more of the money they earned locally and had not shared creating a divide of at least $100 million between the top earners and the poorer ones.
Old deal
1)Salary cap of $94.5M in 2006.
2)No salary cap in 2007.
3)Player compensation and benefits drawn from a pool made up of 87% of league revenue known as DGR (designated gross revenues), with players getting 65% of those monies.
4)Team owners share TV, gate receipts, but not locally generated revenue (parking, luxury box rentals).
5)No restriction on how many times a team could use franchise designation on a player.
6)Signing bonus could be prorated over as many as seven years (four in 2006) for salary-cap accounting.
7)NFL draft expires in 2008.
8)Possibility of a strike or lockout in 2008 after agreement terminates.
New deal
1)Salary cap of $102M in 2006.
2)Salary cap of $109M in 2007.
3)Player compensation and benefits drawn from a pool made up of 100% of revenue known as TFR (total football revenue), with players getting 59.5%.
4)Team owners share all revenue, though not equally.
5)Team can franchise a player three times, the last at a rate of pay earned by quarterbacks.
6)Signing bonus can be prorated over five years in 2006, over six years in 2007 and again over five years in 2008.
7)NFL draft continues through end of agreement.
8)Labor peace through 2011.
Compiled by Larry Weisman, USA TODAY :
http://www.usatoday.com/sports/football/nfl/2006-03-08-labor-deal-reaction_x.htm
Above is the differences in the previous CBA and the Current CBA on most of the major points. Notice in the bolded paragraph above as well as point 3 in both CBAs the players got not only a larger share of the pie but a larger pie to share. The owners are simply asking for this to be reduced to be more fair, except the players are the ones screaming not fair. In the bolded paragraph the owners were offering 56.5% of TOTAL revenue (Which is unbelievable in the first place) but the players wanted 59.5% of TOTAL revenue and they got it, why? Because Tagliabue and Upshaw were both retiring and Tagliabue didn't want to end his reign during a strike. So he and Upshaw basically railroaded the extra 3% through. Even at the time owners knew they would opt out and try to renegotiate down to the 56.5% they had offered. I don't see the NFL going forward under the current agreement and the players will eventually agree to the extra 1 Billion off the top ar a reduction down to 56.5%.
You can clearly see the difference the NFL operated under up to 2005 and the MAJOR difference in the amount of money the players got in 2006. The owners were not being greedy, they offered 56.5% but the players were being greedy knowing they had the NFL over a barrel and Tagliabue on their side by wanting to come to an agreement before he stepped down.
Now, having said that and pointed out the differences in the two CBAs I will answer your question the Lions and Dolphins lost money last year and the Jaguars lost 16% of their team value according to Forbes:
http://www.sportsuntapped.com/forbes-two-nfl-teams-lost-money-last-year-113166/