Nik? said:
cw said:
Factually, that isn't what they did. The top revenue teams contribute to the bottom revenue teams. The Leafs contribute the most to revenue sharing. So there is a variable scale. As well, there is a cap floor which allows smaller market teams to spend less. Therefore, the percentages vary with each team.
You and I both know that the revenue sharing in the NHL is so minimal as to barely register as meaningful.
You're welcome to imagine you know that but I think the facts defy any sense of reasonableness with that position. Claiming you know what I know is just a heck of a presumption.
2006 is the only year we have decent media reports quantitatively on what the revenue sharing numbers were combined with Forbes 'guesses' on team revenues and profits or losses.
Media reports quoting among others, Richard Peddie, since 2006 and the Forbes numbers since 2006 strongly suggest that the relationship of revenue sharing relative to revenue growth didn't materially change in the years that have followed. Peddie, for example, indicated the Leafs revenue sharing contributions rose with revenues during that time. EBITDA league profits have hovered around 6%.
In 2006, revenue sharing was 44% of overall league profits. That's a pretty staggering number for most reasonable business people and not "so minimal as to barely register as meaningful" when one considers profit as a rational means to contribute to revenue sharing. It doesn't materially deviate in the years that followed. In previous posts, I found 6.7% of the teams (Toronto & Montreal) took home roughly 60% of the profits after revenue sharing, leaving 93.3% of the league (the other 28 teams) to pick over the remaining 40% of profits that were left. To ignore that exponential rise in profits for the top teams and focus on the bottom five teams strikes me as myopic. We have to consider ALL the teams in between for the system to work fairly.
So this issue about "revenue sharing"
has to consider the profits available to be shared. Otherwise, all you're doing with much bigger revenue sharing is largely and pointlessly pushing losses from one team to another or leaving absolutely no or relatively little profit incentive for an owner of a decent franchise to own a team. And for those who preach a "free market" for the players, capitalism ought to exist for those who own the teams too because they're the guys providing the financing and named in the bankruptcy documents taking the brunt of the risk.
There's no question that the Habs & Leafs could afford to kick in a little more towards revenue sharing. But when you consider how much those teams sold for recently, I can also have some sympathy for limits on how much more they should kick in. They're the franchises who have largely done everything right and their "reward" is to pay for the weaknesses of their fellow franchises. For me, there are two legitimate sides to that debate. The right answer lies somewhere in between for the most profitable teams.
The bottom line on revenue sharing is that for the league to increase it substantially or in a more meaningful way, the league needs to make more profit. Given the league's respectable history of revenue increase, that's a very reasonable and basic business 101 conclusion. And the first place the league should look to improve that overall profit so they can increase revenue sharing is with their largest expense (again, using rational and basic business 101 logic): the players salaries (57% of revenues).
Since 44% of profits is according to you "so minimal as to barely register as meaningful" then you must be advocating for revenue sharing at a level pretty close to 100% of profits or more which renders the league effectively as a charity unless something else gives - like players salaries. If that's really where the NHLPA are (and I don't think for a second that it is), then the league should just do what MLS did and form a single corporation (giving the Leafs and Habs for example, a larger % to compensate them) which would effectively neuter the NHLPA antitrust stuff and break a stupid union. Again, I don't think the NHLPA and the players, armed with jointly audited numbers, are anywhere close to stupid on this - like they were with Goodenow propaganda the last time.
If the players can't see that (but again, I think they do and will), then by all means, lock them out until they do. The owners would have my full support and blessing because it would be for the long term good of the game and the sport.
In 2006, assuming Forbes took into account revenue sharing, revenue sharing paid $55 mil of $85 mil +/- of teams with losses = 62% of losses by smaller market teams. I don't think the big market teams should be on the hook for 100% of those losses. On that basis, revenue sharing is more than 2/3 rds of the way there and therefore, it's meaningful.
I don't see contributing 44% of a league profits toward revenue sharing as "so minimal as to barely register as meaningful"