By Lindy Rumer
WASHINGTON, United States (TheSportsNEXT) September 26, 2012: The city of New York will be hosting the next round of negotiations between the NHL owners and the NHL Players Association (NHLPA) on Friday in what would be the first talks since the NHL lockout commenced.
The NHL commissioners heralded lockout on September 15, 2012 after NHL and NHLPA failed to reach a conclusion in a series of negotiations to find common grounds on players’ revenue generation formula.
The Friday’s round of talks would primarily focus on secondary economic issues but experts are looking at it as a start of an ice-melting process if both the parties end on the same page.
NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly and NHL Players' Association special counsel Steve Fehr already has had a meeting on Tuesday in Toronto which gave birth to Friday’s negotiations. The last time when the two sides discussed issues was on September 12, 2012 and since then it has been nothing but frustration for the NHL fans.
The NHL 2012 Lockout is the third lockout since 1993 when Gary Bettman became NHL commissioner and training camps were to open on September 16 for the fresh and new NHL season but the talks collapsed on September 12 which resulted in the stalemate.
The last NHL lockout had occurred in 2004-05 when it ate up the whole season and eventually ended with players made to accept a salary cap.
Nothing much is expected to happen on Friday because the NHL and NHLPA are firm on their respective stances over revenue generation formula but the other economic issues which are also vital for an agreement would be put on the table of negotiations.
Steve Fehr told local reporters Tuesday that pension and medical plans, schedule rules, drug testing, and the grievance procedure are the topics which would be negotiated in New York on Friday.
NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly told reporters after Monday’s talks, "Obviously, we've got to talk before you can get a deal, so I think it's important to get the talks going again. But you also have to have something to say. I think it's fair to say we feel like we need to hear from the players' association in a meaningful way because I don't think that they've really moved off their initial proposal, which was made more than a month ago now."
The NHL, which has 3.3 billion US dollars in annual revenues, is not going to make a single dough this year if the talks failed to bear a result and NHL experts have already started fearing losing the whole season to the lockout.
The NHL owners want to cut down on players’ share of hockey-related revenues from 57 percent to somewhere around 47-49 percent, which are still around 4 percent more than what they originally offered, i.e. 43 percent.
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