Saturday, 15 September 2012

And So It Begins

When I started writing here on HBIC, I never thought I'd be suffering through another lockout again. After losing the entire season in 2004-05, I thought we might have finally come to our financial senses in the NHL and found harmony amongst the players and owners. Instead, we saw revenues and the salary cap ceiling jump every year, and now we find the owners looking for cost certainty again. With neither side at the negotiation table today, the lockout will indeed take place, and the risk of losing another hockey season now becomes very real.

There's no guarantee that we're looking at a lost season right now. Training camps were supposed to open in the next week or so, and they still can if both sides are committed to getting a deal done. But that's the fly in the ointment over all of this, right?

I started writing this article out of pure anger and resentment towards the sport I love, but I came to the realization that I'm doing nothing more than regurgitating the same rhetoric over and over that the media is. I'm not connected to anyone on the inside, and I surely have no media credentials to get me an invitation to the NHL Offices in New York City. Instead, I'm going to spare everyone my rants about Bettman, Fehr, the NHL, the NHLPA, millionaires, billionaires, and every point of negotiating contention that we've come across over the last month of hockey headlines.

So what exactly am I writing about?

I want your over/under, readers. The last lockout went for 310 days before the NHLPA flinched and came to an agreement that the owners apparently thought would bring economic stability. Because it feels like 2004 all over again, I want to know...

OVER/UNDER: Does the NHL lockout in 2012 fall short or go longer than the 310-day lockout in 2004-05?

Hit me with your thoughts in the comments, readers. Personally, I see this one dragging on for a long, long time again.

Until next time, keep your sticks on the ice!

2 comments:

  1. The (in)activity of the negotiations suggests that the over is the safe bet. This has been said a few times, but this is the third lockout in 20 years, all of which (unsurprisingly) happens to be under Gary Bettman's watch. Not even Bud Selig has had that track record with baseball.

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  2. I don't see it going as long as last time because I don't think either side wants to lose another full season. The sport really suffered after the last stoppage, and has a long way to go before it is mainstream again. They can't lose the casual fans who give it any attention.

    And I hope they include the opportunity for NHL players to keep participating in the Olympics. I know it doesn't help the NHL any, but it's great for the sport of hockey since it is such a global game.

    My hopeful prediction for the lockout length is a mere 47 days!

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