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NFL, Players Union Extend Deadline

  • 03-06-2006
NEW YORK (AP) -- For at least a few more days, dozens of high-priced NFL players still have jobs.þþNFL labor talks took a new twist Sunday night when the league and its players' union agreed to postpone free agency another 72 hours, giving the sides more time to work out a deal on a contract extension.þþThe decision came just four hours after negotiations had broken off, leaving many veterans in danger of becoming salary-cap casualties. Owners will meet Tuesday in Dallas to decide whether they want to take the union's latest offer.þþFree agency originally was supposed to start Friday, but was pushed back to 12:01 a.m. Monday. Now, it's set to begin at 12:01 a.m. Thursday.þþIn the meantime, the deadline for teams to get under the salary cap also was delayed.þþThat gave the Oakland Raiders a reprieve -- they thought they'd be forced to release quarterback Kerry Collins, saving $9.2 million in cap space. The New York Jets cut center Kevin Mawae, who is 35 and missed the final 10 games last season with a triceps injury.þþAnd according to an official with knowledge of the deal, linebacker LaVar Arrington agreed to a buyout of his contract with the Washington Redskins, the team believed to be in the most cap trouble. The team said the departure of the three-time Pro Bowler would provide ''much needed salary cap relief.''þþOther big names also could go if teams try to squeeze under a salary cap of $94.5 million. If a deal is reached, the cap could go as much as $10 million higher -- in other words, allowing teams to keep some of the players.þþAmid all the labor back-and-forth came news that running back Shaun Alexander was staying put: The league's MVP agreed to return to the NFC champion Seattle Seahawks for $62 million over eight years, with $15.1 guaranteed, according to his agent, Jim Steiner.þþThe union broke off Sunday's bargaining session.þþ''The talks ended after the NFL gave us a proposal which provided a percentage of revenues for the players which would be less than they received over the last 12 years,'' said Gene Upshaw, executive director of the NFL Players Association. ''After suggesting we extend the waiver deadline from six o'clock to 10 this evening, they gave us a new proposal which was worse than their prior offer. Quite naturally, we rejected that proposal and saw no need to continue meeting.''þþBut Harold Henderson, the NFL's executive vice president for labor relations, said the union rejected a proposal that would have added $577 million for players in 2006 compared to 2005 and $1.5 billion in the six years of the extension.þþ''It's an unfortunate situation for the players, the fans and the league,'' Henderson said.þþAfter a conference call between owners and league officials, including commissioner Paul Tagliabue, the league announced the extension.þþ''The NFL and the NFL Players Association have agreed to extend the start of the 2006 league year for 72 hours -- until 12:01 a.m., EST, Thursday, March 9 -- in order to allow the NFL clubs to meet in Dallas on Tuesday to consider the NFL Players Association's offer,'' the NFL said.þþShortly afterward, Upshaw said: ''The NFL negotiators called us tonight after our negotiations broke off to indicate that they will take our complete package to the owners for an approval vote on Tuesday.''þþ''We have therefore agreed to extend the free agency deadline until midnight Wednesday in order to provide time for that vote to be accomplished,'' he said.þþThese negotiations were by far the most difficult since the NFL and the union first agreed to free agency and a salary cap in 1992, ending years of labor unrest that included player strikes in 1982 and 1987. The contract has been extended several times since then, most of the time with ease.þþEven now, the contract doesn't expire until 2008, but this would be the last year of a salary cap -- 2007 would be uncapped, which could lead to wild spending by some teams and little by others, creating a haves/have-not situation similar to the one in baseball.þþOne reason these talks were more difficult is that the players asked for a change in the system.þþUntil now, they received their money primarily from television and ticket revenues. This time, they requested their share from all team revenues, including outside money generated by everything from parking fees to stadium naming rights.þþThat led to difficult negotiations, in part, because the teams themselves are having their own dispute over that money because of the disparity in outside income made by low-revenue teams like Buffalo and Indianapolis and high-revenue teams like Dallas, Washington, New England and Philadelphia.þþUnion leaders had suggested it would be hard to reach agreement on a labor contract until the owners settled their own differences.þþBoth sides seemed ready to compromise Sunday, largely because of the pressure of impending free agency.þþNegotiations appeared to be at a standstill last Thursday, when the owners took just 57 minutes to reject the union's last offer. But seven hours later, the sides reversed course and started talking again.þþUpshaw said he still thinks revenue sharing is the key, although Henderson said it was never discussed. Upshaw also said the players would do as well or better sticking with the current agreement.þþ''Under our previous cap agreement, we got just less than 60 percent of all of the revenues. The NFL now wants us to cut that percentage to less than 57 percent. Given the enormous revenue growth the NFL is experiencing, I am not about to give back gains which we have made in the past. It is clear to me that we will do much better under our current CBA in 2006 and particularly in 2007, the uncapped year,'' Upshaw said.þþ

Source: NY Times