Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

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  • cdawg44
    MVP
    • May 2003
    • 2936

    #796
    Re: Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

    Originally posted by OSUFan_88
    Just so we are clear, most of the weaker sister of the NHL could become viable if/when they turn it around. The only franchise that seems to not be able to make money, no matter what, is Phoenix.
    Well, Carolina made a deep run to the Eastern Conference Finals versus Pittsburgh in 2009 and still only barely broke even that season with a GREAT and loyal fan base. Even when teams win and win big, its very hard for these non-traditional markets to compete with a crappy Toronto, Calgary and Edmonton. If these teams start winning big, forget about it.

    There is just a reality here in Raliegh that you can't charge 100-150 bucks for nose bleed seats for a hockey game like you can at other places. Doesn't mean the market isn't viable, it's just the economic reality.
    "If you have a linebacker on him, you might as well start singing their fight song." -- WSU coach Bill Doba on Reggie Bush

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    • OSUFan_88
      Outback Jesus
      • Jul 2004
      • 25642

      #797
      Re: Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

      Originally posted by cdawg44
      Well, Carolina made a deep run to the Eastern Conference Finals versus Pittsburgh in 2009 and still only barely broke even that season with a GREAT and loyal fan base. Even when teams win and win big, its very hard for these non-traditional markets to compete with a crappy Toronto, Calgary and Edmonton. If these teams start winning big, forget about it.

      There is just a reality here in Raliegh that you can't charge 100-150 bucks for nose bleed seats for a hockey game like you can at other places. Doesn't mean the market isn't viable, it's just the economic reality.
      Carolina has been pretty successful, though. Their attendance isn't that bad. But if they need to, I'm not opposed to relocation of some cities. OTOH, Dallas has been wildly successful in non-traditional markets. So I cannot blame them.
      Too Old To Game Club

      Urban Meyer is lol.

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      • ImTellinTim
        YNWA
        • Sep 2006
        • 33028

        #798
        Re: Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

        Dallas has been when they were making the playoffs, but their attendance numbers have been dismal the past couple years.

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        • cdawg44
          MVP
          • May 2003
          • 2936

          #799
          Re: Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

          Originally posted by OSUFan_88
          Carolina has been pretty successful, though. Their attendance isn't that bad. But if they need to, I'm not opposed to relocation of some cities. OTOH, Dallas has been wildly successful in non-traditional markets. So I cannot blame them.
          Carolina's attendance isn't an issue. It just the ownership needs to raise prices here, but they refuse because they know they'll run off some fans. We haven't made the playoffs since the ECF run in 2009, but people still show up because tickets are reasonable and the ownership group cares about and is sensitive to his fanbase economic realities. People pay 200 bucks for Duke Basketball tickets, not Hurricanes games. We just can't generate the revenue through ticket sales that some of you guys favorite teams can. My beef is with Bettman, he swears up and down he wants teams in non-traditional markets to grow the game, but won't put in the measures necessary to make it work long term.
          "If you have a linebacker on him, you might as well start singing their fight song." -- WSU coach Bill Doba on Reggie Bush

          My Teams:
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          • OSUFan_88
            Outback Jesus
            • Jul 2004
            • 25642

            #800
            Re: Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

            Originally posted by ImTellinTim
            Dallas has been when they were making the playoffs, but their attendance numbers have been dismal the past couple years.
            Well, they have been kind of crappy, but again, the market isn't the hell hole that Phoenix is.

            And I'm sure there are some Phoenix fans on this board, and I'm sorry, but you should be more angry at you fanbase than anything else. I fear what their numbers are going to look like post lockout.
            Too Old To Game Club

            Urban Meyer is lol.

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            • Money99
              Hall Of Fame
              • Sep 2002
              • 12696

              #801
              Re: Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

              Originally posted by mgoblue
              Yeah, I understand...just gets frustrating after a while. At least this one is a longer agreement...

              I'll deal with it and just laugh at the stupid owners who find ways around rules that are supposed to protect them.
              As long as there are stubborn jack*ss owners like Jacobs around, there will always be work stoppages.

              From all accounts, it was the big money teams like Boston and Calgary that drove this lockout. Those teams were making buttloads of money and were angry they only got 43% of it. Next lockout they'll try to get another 5% from the players.

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              • skydog71
                MVP
                • Jul 2004
                • 1772

                #802
                Re: Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

                Ironically, teams like Phoenix earn the other owners more money than teams like Toronto. I know it sounds crazy, but bear with me...

                If the league removed the Leafs, league revenues would drop by $200 million. Since the salary cap is tied to league revenues, it would drop by $200 million * 50% / 29 teams = $3.44 million/team. So each team could pay their players $3.44 million less, and since there is very little revenue sharing, most of this money would just go directly into the owners' pockets.

                On the flipside, if the league removed a team with revenues of $29 million below the league average, each team would see their salary cap go up by $29 million * 50% / 29 = $500,000/team. So if you contract a poor revenue generator, all of the other owners end up having to pay their own players more.

                Leagues like the NFL with significant amounts of revenue sharing don't have these issues of course. But I think this is one of the reasons that the richer NHL clubs are so content to have money losing franchises in non-traditional markets. It drives down the salary cap, enabling big market teams like the Leafs and Rangers to churn out ridiculous profits.

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                • mkharsh33
                  Hall Of Fame
                  • Nov 2006
                  • 12785

                  #803
                  Re: Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

                  You want better teams (in any professional sport)? Have fewer of them... As competition increases, so does fan interest... I could live with 26 NHL teams.
                  STEELERS INDIANS CELTICS

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                  • pietasterp
                    All Star
                    • Feb 2004
                    • 6248

                    #804
                    Re: Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

                    Originally posted by mkharsh33
                    You want better teams (in any professional sport)? Have fewer of them... As competition increases, so does fan interest... I could live with 26 NHL teams.
                    I know what you are saying, but the NFL seems to do fine with 32 teams. I don't think the NHL needs fewer teams per se, but rather systemic changes in the way the game's finances operate. One would think that with 2 work stoppages in a decade, the serious issues could be straightened out for the long-term health of the game. I guess one would be wrong...

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                    • ImTellinTim
                      YNWA
                      • Sep 2006
                      • 33028

                      #805
                      Re: Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

                      The NFL is also a money factory where 20 of its 32 teams are worth a billion and their TV deal is worth about threlveteen gagillion dollars. They seem to have struck a perfect balance of parity where everyone can be successful at any time as long as you hire a competent front office. The product on the field is also exciting to casuals.

                      The NHL stretched itself too thin with expansion and until they admit they were wrong about it, this is what we're stuck with.

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                      • slickdtc
                        Grayscale
                        • Aug 2004
                        • 17125

                        #806
                        Originally posted by ImTellinTim
                        The NFL is also a money factory where 20 of its 32 teams are worth a billion and their TV deal is worth about threlveteen gagillion dollars. They seem to have struck a perfect balance of parity where everyone can be successful at any time as long as you hire a competent front office. The product on the field is also exciting to casuals.

                        The NHL stretched itself too thin with expansion and until they admit they were wrong about it, this is what we're stuck with.
                        I actually went about reading that number like it was a real word...
                        NHL - Philadelphia Flyers
                        NFL - Buffalo Bills
                        MLB - Cincinnati Reds


                        Originally posted by Money99
                        And how does one levy a check that will result in only a slight concussion? Do they set their shoulder-pads to 'stun'?

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                        • phenom1990
                          MVP
                          • Mar 2008
                          • 4789

                          #807
                          Re: Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

                          Originally posted by ImTellinTim
                          The NFL is also a money factory where 20 of its 32 teams are worth a billion and their TV deal is worth about threlveteen gagillion dollars. They seem to have struck a perfect balance of parity where everyone can be successful at any time as long as you hire a competent front office. The product on the field is also exciting to casuals.

                          The NHL stretched itself too thin with expansion and until they admit they were wrong about it, this is what we're stuck with.
                          To add on to that most of the NFL media contract money comes from their national TV contract. The only thing an individual team controls is the preseason games and the games on the radio. So the market size is less significant. In the other sports, the local media contract is a much much significant piece of the pie.

                          Second, football is seen as much more conducive to gambling than any of the other sports. So as much as people say they love the sport, they also like gambling which gives people a reason to watch the game.
                          "Ma'am I don't make the rules up. I just think them up and write em down". - Cartman

                          2013 and 2015 OS NFL Pick'em Champ...somehow I won 2 in 3 years.

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                          • pietasterp
                            All Star
                            • Feb 2004
                            • 6248

                            #808
                            Re: Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

                            Reasonable points phenom and ImTellinTim.

                            I offer a few counterpoints:

                            The NFL is what it is in large part because owners decided 30+ years ago that revenue sharing was the best path to prosperity for the league as a whole. It is true that the national TV contracts have helped that revenue sharing significantly, but mostly in terms of letting the wealthiest teams keep more of their revenue (while the huge cash piles they get from the national TV contracts have helped cushion the bottom lines of the "poorer" teams without taking as much from the top teams).

                            Market matters in the NFL; that's why some teams are worth much more than others, and they are mostly the big-market teams. They just have a huge national contract that limits what the rich teams have to share with the poorer teams, but this is a relatively recent phenomenon (and a big reason for the lockout last year). A certain number of teams have always been subsidized to a greater or lesser extent by the wealthiest few teams in the league, the only difference is that now that subsidy comes from the TV contracts as opposed to out of the pockets of the Maras and Krafts.

                            The parity in the NFL is a direct result of that revenue sharing model.

                            I believe the MLB is essentially a local TV contract-driven revenue model, and they seem to do reasonably well.

                            The NHL needs more significant revenue sharing in my opinion; it addresses a lot of problems including parity and financial disparities between teams. It will be like the early years of the NFL revenue sharing for a while, but eventually, over the course of time, they can reduce the amount the richer teams have to subsidize the poorer teams. The wealthiest teams have to lead the way on this, though - that's how the NFL got to where it is today.

                            I don't buy the argument that the NFL is popular because lends itself well to gambling...that certainly helps, but the bottom line is people gamble on it because they enjoy the sport, not necessarily the other way around. I mean, there is no more gambling-friendly spectacle in the world than horse-racing, and that sport is dying (if not dead) in this country.

                            All of the above is conjecture on my part; I know it is difficult to compare sports leagues as they are so unique and have different challenges. But I am one of the few defenders of NHL expansion, in theory if not in actual execution. I'm a believer in expanding the markets, it just has to be done correctly and with conviction.

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                            • Money99
                              Hall Of Fame
                              • Sep 2002
                              • 12696

                              #809
                              Re: Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

                              Originally posted by ImTellinTim
                              The NFL is also a money factory where 20 of its 32 teams are worth a billion and their TV deal is worth about threlveteen gagillion dollars. They seem to have struck a perfect balance of parity where everyone can be successful at any time as long as you hire a competent front office. The product on the field is also exciting to casuals.

                              The NHL stretched itself too thin with expansion and until they admit they were wrong about it, this is what we're stuck with.
                              Not to mention gambling. Gambling has helped the NFL into a new stratosphere of TV ratings.

                              Originally posted by pietasterp

                              I believe the MLB is essentially a local TV contract-driven revenue model, and they seem to do reasonably well.
                              There's a tonne of money in regional deals for MLB franchises, no doubt.
                              But the MLB just struck a deal with several outlets that will pay a collective annual amount of $1.5B.
                              Not exactly swiss cheese.

                              The NFL has a perfect setup as far as it's TV schedule (mostly only 2 days), shortened season and connection to college football.
                              It's also incredibly TV friendly. It was made for TV. Ever go to a live game? You really notice how there's only an average of 7 minutes of action in a game.
                              On TV, you get replays, analysis, funny commercials to fill that time. Not to mention you have plenty of time to restock on food and beer and have enough time to run to the bathroom.

                              But gambling certainly helps this sport. No doubt about that.
                              Last edited by Money99; 01-11-2013, 04:30 PM.

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                              • Fiddy
                                Twitch/YouTube: Fiddy14
                                • Jul 2002
                                • 12712

                                #810
                                Re: Lockout/CBA Discussion Thread

                                Originally posted by mkharsh33
                                You want better teams (in any professional sport)? Have fewer of them... As competition increases, so does fan interest... I could live with 26 NHL teams.
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