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Updated: May 16, 2011, 11:38 AM ET
NFL, players resume mediation
ESPN.com news services
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=6555558
MINNEAPOLIS -- For NFL owners and the players they've locked out in this dispute over the division and future of the ever-popular $9 billion business, it's time to talk again.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and four NFL owners arrived Monday morning for court-ordered mediation with the league's players before U.S. Magistrate Judge Arthur Boylan. The players' contingent was led by NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith and attorney Jeffrey Kessler.
Boylan presided over four full days of intense closed-door sessions last month under a federal gag order, with no new deal in sight.
Pittsburgh Steelers owner Art Rooney II, asked if he expected the sides to make progress Monday, said, "We would like to make progress, but it will be hard to do. We have to see what happens June 3."
The 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis has a hearing on that day to hear the NFL's appeal of U.S. District Judge Susan Richard Nelson's ruling in late April that lifted the lockout. The 8th Circuit put a temporary stay on Nelson's ruling just days later and has yet to decide whether or not to issue a more permanent stay.
Besides Rooney, the other three owners at Monday's mediation session are the Giants' John Mara, Panthers' Jerry Richardson and Bengals' Mike Brown.
Also pending is an order from U.S. Senior District Judge David Doty on the fate of some $4 billion in broadcast revenue he previously ruled was unfairly secured by the NFL in the last round of contract extensions with the networks to use as leverage in the form of financial padding for the work stoppage. Even if a lockout prevents games from being televised, the league would still get paid. The players asked that money be set aside and for hundreds of millions of dollars in damages, too.
The hearing in Doty's courtroom in Minneapolis last week was mostly lawyers arguing back and forth, but each side accused the other of "sandbagging" and neither sounded as if it's ready to concede any ground.
With all these potential momentum swings still unsettled in the court system, it's fair to assume that no significant progress will be made toward the consummation of a new collective bargaining agreement and the ensuring of a full 2011 season, even though both sides said last time the talks with Boylan were positive and productive.
Though the NFL avoided for now a chaotic free agency free-for-all when the 8th Circuit slapped the stay on Nelson's ruling and prevented the league year -- meaning sanctioned offseason workouts, signings and trades -- from beginning, the players have several more victories in court.
They could be emboldened and even less willing to budge.
Goodell has continually spread the league's message of desiring these face-to-face discussions to reach a deal, as opposed to letting the process play out in court, where the players have fared better.
"We come into this mediation session with every hope and intent to make them productive," Goodell said last week. "If there aren't two parties there willing to negotiate -- they are not willing to address the issues in a negotiation and they are sitting and waiting for their litigation strategy -- it's not likely that they're going to be productive."
Minnesota Vikings left guard Steve Hutchinson, his team's union representative before the NFLPA downgraded from union status to a trade association so players could file the antitrust lawsuit against the league, said he sees all the analysis about how the next court ruling could affect the process as mere speculation.
"I get up every morning, and I Google 'NFL stay' and see what the AP writer has with the latest scoop," Hutchinson said last week at a charity event in Ann Arbor, Mich. "That's where I get my information. But there is a gag order on everything. You're making chicken salad out of what you have."
Information from ESPN's Sal Paolantonio and The Associated Press was used in this report.
NFL, players resume mediation
ESPN.com news services
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=6555558
MINNEAPOLIS -- For NFL owners and the players they've locked out in this dispute over the division and future of the ever-popular $9 billion business, it's time to talk again.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and four NFL owners arrived Monday morning for court-ordered mediation with the league's players before U.S. Magistrate Judge Arthur Boylan. The players' contingent was led by NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith and attorney Jeffrey Kessler.
Boylan presided over four full days of intense closed-door sessions last month under a federal gag order, with no new deal in sight.
Pittsburgh Steelers owner Art Rooney II, asked if he expected the sides to make progress Monday, said, "We would like to make progress, but it will be hard to do. We have to see what happens June 3."
The 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis has a hearing on that day to hear the NFL's appeal of U.S. District Judge Susan Richard Nelson's ruling in late April that lifted the lockout. The 8th Circuit put a temporary stay on Nelson's ruling just days later and has yet to decide whether or not to issue a more permanent stay.
Besides Rooney, the other three owners at Monday's mediation session are the Giants' John Mara, Panthers' Jerry Richardson and Bengals' Mike Brown.
Also pending is an order from U.S. Senior District Judge David Doty on the fate of some $4 billion in broadcast revenue he previously ruled was unfairly secured by the NFL in the last round of contract extensions with the networks to use as leverage in the form of financial padding for the work stoppage. Even if a lockout prevents games from being televised, the league would still get paid. The players asked that money be set aside and for hundreds of millions of dollars in damages, too.
The hearing in Doty's courtroom in Minneapolis last week was mostly lawyers arguing back and forth, but each side accused the other of "sandbagging" and neither sounded as if it's ready to concede any ground.
With all these potential momentum swings still unsettled in the court system, it's fair to assume that no significant progress will be made toward the consummation of a new collective bargaining agreement and the ensuring of a full 2011 season, even though both sides said last time the talks with Boylan were positive and productive.
Though the NFL avoided for now a chaotic free agency free-for-all when the 8th Circuit slapped the stay on Nelson's ruling and prevented the league year -- meaning sanctioned offseason workouts, signings and trades -- from beginning, the players have several more victories in court.
They could be emboldened and even less willing to budge.
Goodell has continually spread the league's message of desiring these face-to-face discussions to reach a deal, as opposed to letting the process play out in court, where the players have fared better.
"We come into this mediation session with every hope and intent to make them productive," Goodell said last week. "If there aren't two parties there willing to negotiate -- they are not willing to address the issues in a negotiation and they are sitting and waiting for their litigation strategy -- it's not likely that they're going to be productive."
Minnesota Vikings left guard Steve Hutchinson, his team's union representative before the NFLPA downgraded from union status to a trade association so players could file the antitrust lawsuit against the league, said he sees all the analysis about how the next court ruling could affect the process as mere speculation.
"I get up every morning, and I Google 'NFL stay' and see what the AP writer has with the latest scoop," Hutchinson said last week at a charity event in Ann Arbor, Mich. "That's where I get my information. But there is a gag order on everything. You're making chicken salad out of what you have."
Information from ESPN's Sal Paolantonio and The Associated Press was used in this report.