The road to cancellation

Wednesday, February 16, 2005

Here's a look at some key dates in the NHL CBA negotiations, lockout and eventual cancellation of the 2004-05 season and playoffs.

October 1, 2003
NHL and NHLPA hold meeting in Toronto. Players offer a five percent salary rollback along with a luxury tax based system. League counters with a salary cap system with the maximum salary set at $31 million.
February 12, 2004
Former Securities and Exchange Commission chairman, who was hired by the NHL, releases a report that shows the NHL lost $273 million in 2002-03. The NHLPA disputes the findings of the report saying it is based on flawed information provided by the league. 
May 19, 2004
The NHL signs a new U.S. broadcast television deal with NBC that is much different than the previous deal with ABC/ESPN that paid out $600 million over five years. There is no up front money for the league in the NBC arrangement. Instead, it is a revenue sharing deal similar to the one the network has with the Arena Football League.
July 21, 2004
NHL presents "six concepts" for a new CBA during a meeting with the NHLPA. The PA is skeptical of the concepts but asks for more time to study certain elements of them.
August 4, 2004
NHLPA officially rejects the six concepts saying they all begin and end with a salary cap.
August 17 and August 25-26, 2004
Two sides meet. NHLPA insists on going over league finances on a team-by-team basis. PA calls it a "healthy dialogue" while the NHL says it is "irrelevant to the process."
August 31, September 1-2, 2004
The two sides meet for close to 20 hours during the World Cup. No progress is reported.
September 9, 2004
NHLPA makes proposal that again features a five per cent salary rollback along with a luxury tax, changes to entry-level contracts and revenue sharing. The NHL rejects it.
September 15, 2004
NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman holds a meeting with the Board of Governors and then announces the NHL lockout, which will begin as the CBA expires at midnight.
October 13, 2004
Seven regular season openers, including defending Stanley Cup Champion Tampa Bay's home opener against Philadelphia, are not played due to the lockout.
November 2, 2004
After some players offered different views than the NHLPA's official stance, the PA meets with about 70 players and 30 team representatives in Toronto. The players say they are more united than ever.
November 3, 2004
NHL cancels 2005 All-Star Game, which was scheduled for Atlanta in February.
December 2, 2004
NHLPA announces that it has invited the NHL back to the negotiating table.
December 9, 2004
The NHLPA makes a new proposal including a surprising a 24 percent rollback on all existing contracts. The PA stiffens its previous offer on the luxury tax and offers changes to the entry-level system, qualifying offers, salary arbitration. The league promises to respond the following week.
December 13, 2004
One day before the league and NHLPA are scheduled to meet, an NHL memo is leaked to TSN. The memo says the league will reject the players' December 9 proposal.
December 14, 2004
The NHL rejects the players' proposal and offers another salary cap based system. The system calls for a team payroll range of $34.6 million to $38.6 million. Players would get 54 percent of league revenues. The league plan also restructures the players' 24 percent rollback to take more money from higher paid players and calls for eliminating salary arbitration. The NHLPA immediately rejects the NHL's proposal.
December 22, 2004
League confirms it has scheduled a Board of Governors meeting for January 14. There is speculation season could be canceled at that time.
January 6, 2005
League cancels Board of Governors meeting because of no progress in the negotiations.
January 19-20, 2005
The NHL and NHLPA hold small group meetings in both Chicago and Toronto without the direct involvement of either NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and NHLPA executive director Bob Goodenow. Both sides indicate little progress has been made.
January 26-27, 2005
Small group meetings continue in Toronto and New York. League presents new salary cap concepts with a team payroll range of $32 million to $42 million, but it does not include a luxury tax.  NHLPA is not impressed. There is still a link between payrolls and revenues that would give players 54 percent of the revenue pie.
February 2, 2005
NHL presents its latest proposal, which includes team payrolls at $32 million to $42 million and a stipulation that team payrolls would be linked to revenues at a rate of 54%. The NHLPA rejects the proposal and calls for a meeting involving NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and NHLPA executive director Bob Goodenow.
February 3-4, 2005
Two sides meet for close to 13 hours over a two day span. Bob Goodenow of the NHLPA says no progress has been made. The NHL's Bill Daly disagrees, saying the talks were "constructive."
February 9, 2005
Gary Bettman and Bill Daly present the NHLPA with a compromise offer that would see the new CBA start with the NHLPA's December 9 proposal and then switch over to the NHL's February 2 proposal if the NHLPA's offer fails to meet certain standards. NHLPA quickly rejects the offer. Bettman sets a deadline that the two sides have to be drafting a new CBA by the weekend or the season will be canceled.
February 10, 2005
The two sides meet once again, but the meeting lasts about three hours. No progress is made and both sides head their separate ways.
February 13, 2005
The two sides meet in Washington, D.C. at the request of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service. The talks last for a little more than five hours, but no progress is reported.
February 14, 2005
NHL commissioner Gary Bettman calls a February 16 news conference as the two sides meet in Niagara Falls, New York in a last ditch effort to reach an agreement and save the season.
February 15, 2005
In an early morning news release the NHLPA announces both sides have made major concessions. The PA has proposed an "upper payroll limit" at $52 million with some exceptions and that the league, which has dropped its insistence on linking overall player costs to league-wide revenues, has offered a $40 million cap.  Later in the day the league makes a final, non-negotiable offer of a $42.5 million salary cap with no link between player costs and league-wide revenues. The players reject the league's offer and counter with a $49 million salary cap with exceptions. The league rejects the NHLPA's counter-offer.
February 16, 2005
NHL commissioner Gary Bettman officially cancels the 2004-05 season.

  



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