Saint Nik said:cw said:It wasn't "ignored" by me, Levitt nor any of the players unions. But, as the saying goes, "it's none of their business". Those are legally distinct business entities in their own right. The players negotiating a labor agreement with their employers don't work for them. Those separate entities can be bought and sold separately from the team. They are not required to be owned by a team for that team to be able to function in the league. They are a completely separate business decision for an owner.
But the point is that it distorts the actual financial picture of the league. During the '05 lockout one of the clubs that was cited as one of the teams was the NY Rangers. A team with a storied history in the biggest market in North America had no business losing money. But James Dolan didn't care much about whether the Rangers lost five or ten million dollars because, to him, the Rangers value was as programming. That was where he made his real money. Likewise, and again I'd urge to read the Gladwell article on the Nets issue, Bruce Ratner didn't care much if the Nets were a bad investment or if they lost money because they were going to be the centre piece of a multi-billion dollar real estate development.
That's the issue. You can't run a business as if you don't care if it makes a profit and then, when it comes time for labour negotiations, pretend as if it weren't the case. You can't pretend that the Nets being profitable is a crucial and fundamental issue when it comes to the continued existence of the franchise and that it drove Bruce Ratner's decisions with regards to the operation of the team when it wasn't. The only way the New York Rangers can be profitable if, given the choice, they intentionally run at a loss is if profitability is guaranteed.
It's a clear case of billionaires trying to have their cake, eat it and then go in for pie. If you use a sports teams to generate profit in another business and your overall investment is profitable you can't then turn around and demand cuts in labour costs because otherwise your future involvement is in jeopardy. If I own a sports team and they lose five million dollars annually but because I own that sports team I make 50 million dollars annually elsewhere you seem to think that I should be able to cry poor about that five million dollars even if I clearly ran the team without regard to it.
And, just so we're clear and you don't come back with legal stuff, you can do a lot of the things I said you can't do, it just makes you a scumbag.
Nolan, MSG and Cablevision own a bunch of sports TV rights. The Rangers were hardly the only piece that made it for Cablevision. As well, they can lose rights like Cabelvision did with the Yankees, Nets & Mets. So there's some overstatement of that claim. It goes both ways and more than just one team is usually involved.
There is absolutely no doubt there are business synergies going on with sports teams, venues, broadcasting, etc. And I would agree that a broadcaster can take on a sports team and not care as much about the bottom line because it's small relative to the bigger financial picture. But that doesn't mean they throw money all over the place mindlessly and don't care at all about their bottom line either. If that were the case, why bother with bickering about a CBA and not just give the players all the money they want? You can't have it both ways in the same argument.
But convince me that the unions do not know that stuff is going on and don't take it into account when they're haggling their CBA. They're not stupid.
It's kind of like the earlier Forbes problem. No set of numbers are going to be perfect. The bickering about this and that - where does this dollar or that dollar go - could be endless and insane.
So they define league and league related revenue dollars and work with that number to haggle a rate. It's up to them to determine if that rate is going to be 40%, 75% or somewhere in between.
Coming back to hockey, when you get past the few teams at the top, there is not a ton of broadcast and synergistic revenue for the balance of the NHL teams. That's simply a pretty blunt fact.
When those total league revenues are $3 billion and after the Leafs take their cut, the 29 other teams get to divide up $44 mil in profits, I think those owners have a legit beef - in revenue sharing and with the level of players payroll.
As for the waivers/AHL contracts complaint. That's money the players make. And it's only 3.1% of their basic payroll. GMs make mistakes and I don't see how one can legislate in a CBA that they won't make mistakes with contracts.
At the end of the day, the unions know all of the above and then some. It's up to them to haggle the best deal they can. If they don't like it, they can strike or go elsewhere to work. They're not going to get tons of sympathy from the fans because they're already being paid insane sums of money to play a game we enjoyed as kids.