Kin
New member
cw said:Last year, the number of playoff games was a little less than 7% of regular season games played. They would get more in ticket revenues per game. But I also think buried in the old CBA was playoff revenues got some special treatment (very vague on that) in the calculations - I'm not sure they're treated the same as a regular season game in terms of the NHLPA's take (a carry over from when the players got nothing for playing playoff games except 'prize' money from the playoffs? and as a reward to the teams making the playoffs).
Nah. Still the same split. The bonus to the teams for making the playoffs is that they take in that money but then it gets paid out across the league.
cw said:So it would alter the estimate provided above but the fact remains that the players gave up hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars - close to that $800 million number and never got close to recovering that in concessions with their stand.
I think you're underestimating the playoffs impact on leaguewide revenues. You can't, for instance, break up piecemeal the broadcast contracts but clearly the rights to broadcast playoff games represent a disproportionate chunk of change to the amount of games there are. Ditto advertising and the rest. It's not just ticket money.
cw said:As an argument over money, they lost it in terms of money pretty big.
Well, as you say there's no way to entirely pin down what the playoffs are worth so it's impossible to get an accurate figure on what the players "lost" there. I think it's less significant then you're making it out to be by quite a ways. The new pension, whose details are still being worked out, the make whole money, the extra year of free agency, the contracts that can be 40%-60% longer than the NHL wanted with more money up front. I bet when everything is totaled the actual amount it costs players is largely meaningless.
And for their part? The players seem pretty happy about the deal they got. They probably take a bit of pride in the fact that they didn't just roll over.