'Maurile Tremblay said:
'Football Critic said:
Judges make wrong decisions based of personal and political views everyday, to suggest they dont makes me laugh.
On constitutional or other politically sensitive issues, you may be right.But while some fantasy football enthusiasts may view the NFL labor dispute in ideological terms, I don't think a judge will. The idea that Judge Nelson is predisposed to like the owners better than the players, or vice versa, and will make her ruling based on that bias, strikes me as so cynical as to actually be naive. JMHO.
I agree with this. Here is the problem I have, however.When discussing the fact that in no other industry in America when an employee is asked to take a paycut (again, a misnomer...more of a decrease in the amount of a payraise) can they demand to "see the books" and be taken even remotely seriously, I am met with the response that the NFL player's employment situation is not like mine. That they are uniquely talented individuals (disagree. to a point, players are fungible), that they ARE the product (disagree, the product is NFL football, they are a very important part of the product, no doubt) and that because they are uniquely talented and because they are the product, I should not be able to equate my own employment experiences (due to economic issues, my employer cut all salaries by 10%) to the employment experiences of the NFL player. Ok. Supposing I except that argument as 100% true and that the NFL players' employment situation is significantly different from my own and that I should recognize that, because of that, they should be considered differently...then why is it that we are seeking to apply the same labor laws that apply to automotive workers, teachers and coal miners to the NFL players and their relationship with their employer? It seems to me that we are being asked to recognize the unique nature of the skill and talent level of the NFL player, but refusing to recognize the uniqueness of the NFL as a whole. There is no business (outside of other professional sports) that approximates it. There is no business where the employees and the ownership and the business itself benefits from the 'collusion' of the franchises to put competitive teams on the field against each other. To say that you must apply the self-same labor laws to a situation where we've been asked to recognize that (at least with regard to half of the equation) is unique from all other employment situations is folly. It leads to this game of chicken the owners and the players are having right now, where no one, not even the players WANT the draft or some of the other controls to go away, but recognize that it is their biggest negotiation tool. If the NFL players truly want to apply the same labor laws, then they should also recognize that they are and should be treated no differently than your local teachers union. If they insist that they are, in some cognizable way, different from teachers due to their unique ability, then they (or more correctly, the courts) should also recognize that the NFL is a different animal and that the rules of free market and competition should operate differently than in other environs where the employment base is more fungible. (Maurile, I've seen you compare the NFL to Hollywood, and I have to respectfully disagree with you. Neither MGM or Paramount are made more valuable (in any tangible way) if both studio's summer blockbuster films are competitive within the movie marketplace. The success of one is totally unrelated to the other. In fact, a better argument can be made for the inverse. Additionally, there is nothing (other than scheduling shooting) that prevents Vin Diesel and Katherine Heigl from appearing in both the MGM and Paramount studio blockbusters. On the other hand, having competitive teams on the field benefits all of the teams in the NFL (baseball wonks be damned. The NFL is king for this reason) and there in no way Peyton Manning can play for both the Colts and the Raiders. Can't be done. The two situations aren't comparable.