NHL LOCKOUT Will players' new proposal get negotiations moving?
The fate of the rest of the season may hinge on contract talks resuming today.
TORONTO (AP) -- Any hope of saving the NHL season hinges on whether the next proposal by the players' association stirs serious negotiating.
All the last offer yielded was three months of silence and hundreds of canceled games.
When NHL officials and union leaders return to the bargaining table today, it will mark their first talks since Sept. 9.
That's when the players' association put forth a luxury tax-based system that was rejected by the league because it didn't provide the cost certainty the NHL seeks.
Commissioner Gary Bettman imposed a lockout a week later that has already wiped out 382 games -- and forced the cancellation of the All-Star game.
Back to the bargaining table
A two-day window is blocked out for talks, but if things don't go well today, there will be no need for another session Friday.
With the season slipping away, the NHLPA invited the league back to the table and promised to be armed with a new proposal in an effort to keep the NHL from becoming the first major North American league to lose a full season.
"We are looking forward to the meeting and are very confident that our proposal will provide a basis to end the owners' lockout and resume NHL hockey with a new CBA that can work for both owners and players," Vancouver forward Trevor Linden, the NHLPA president, said in a statement Wednesday.
Arenas have been given the go-ahead by the league to free up dates previously reserved for hockey on a 45-day rolling basis, which as of now means there won't be any NHL games before the middle of January.
Salary cap issue
The league is committed to getting a deal that provides a link between player costs and team revenues. The players' association contends that the league will only be satisfied with a salary cap, something the union says it won't ever accept.
But the league and the union have different definitions of what constitutes a salary cap.
So until there can be some basic understanding, it seems, there will be an impasse.
"I think our positions are very clear and I don't think it would be constructive to this process to either attempt to bargain publicly or to engage in speculation as to what the offer may or may not be," Bettman said.
The previous plan put forth by the NHLPA included a 5 percent rollback on current contracts, a luxury tax framework that would target the spending of specific teams, and a revenue-sharing system.
Players also offered changes to the entry level system they say will generate $60 million in savings to clubs. That proposal came after a series of negotiating sessions in which the union rejected six concepts put forth by the league and took a three-day sidestep in talks to examine each of the 30 teams' finances.
Details of the new proposal have not been released, but that might be because it was still being formulated this week.
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