Thursday, 3 February 2011

Super Bowl's soul

Green Bay Packers' BJ Raji celebrates a touchdownGreen Bay Packers take on Pittsburgh Steelers in Dallas on Sunday

The razzmatazz of the the NFL Super Bowl moves to Texas for only the second time this Sunday.

The citizens, businesses and traders of Dallas may be rejoicing at playing host to the AFC champions Pittsburgh Steelers versus the NFC champions Green Bay Packers.

But a potential storm cloud is on the horizon, as a crucial financial deal between NFL club owners and players for the coming years has to be concluded.

It is all about a "collective bargaining agreement" (CBA), which covers the financial framework of top-level American football, a thriving, multibillion-dollar business.

On 4 March, the present collective bargaining agreement between the NFL and its players expires.

If an agreement cannot be reached, there is the possibility the club owners could lock out the players from their stadiums and facilities and shut down the game.

That would mean empty stadiums and blank TV screens when the 2011 NFL competition is scheduled to restart again on Thursday, 8 September.

Any "lock-out" could remain in place until the owners get what they feel are better terms and conditions from their point of view.

The owners say that current costs outpace the NFL's revenues, and want to see a "rebalancing" between what they pay out in salaries and what their guaranteed revenue streams, such as from TV or ticket and corporate sales, bring in.

Previous NFL labour disputesThere was a 57-day long player strike in 1982No NFL games were played during this timeThis was about the percentage of gross revenues the league gave to playersThere was a one month strike in 1987For three of the four weeks of the strike, the NFL put out "replacement" teamsA collective bargaining agreement was reached in 1993

Currently, the players get about 61% of the NFL revenue, which reports have put at as high as $8bn (5bn) a season.

Clubs also believe the wider NFL landscape has changed since the 1980s, the last era of industrial unrest in the game.

They, not the players, have paid out on new stadiums - such as in Dallas where the new Cowboys stadium can hold more than 100,000 people - to ensure that revenues continue to flow in to the sport.

At the same time, the owners want to see the regular NFL season, which currently lasts for 16 games, expanded to 18.

This would not mean more games, though, as two of the current four pre-season friendly matches would be turned into regular season games.

The players, and their representative body, the NFLPA players' association, point to the boom in popularity of the NFL and consequently in its revenues, which they, as the entertainers, have helped to grow.

Cowboys Stadium in DallasThe impressive Cowboys Stadium in Dallas will host only the second Texan Super Bowl

And without these star professional players, of course, there would be no top-notch NFL on-field product.

They also say the NFL, which has seen booming revenues since 2006 according to Forbes business magazine, risks losing the fans that have driven the sport to all-time high levels of popularity if there is a lock-out.

And they assert that if such a move goes ahead there would be an economic impact across the US, not only in the sport, but in individual cities that host NFL football.

For the past year, the looming dispute has been played out against a backdrop of differing law cases between the NFL and NFLPA, as each seeks the most advantageous legal platform ahead of any shut-out.

After two player strikes in the 1980s, the two sides came together to sign a collective bargaining agreement in 1993.

That has since been re-signed five times, most recently in March 2006 when it was extended until the 2011 season.

But in May 2008, the owners decided to opt out of this agreement and the 2010 season, about to end on Sunday, was played without a bargaining agreement in place.

That meant the 2010 season has been played without a salary cap, one of the major components of collective bargaining deals.

If there is a lock-out it appears that the clubs are better placed to survive than the players.

A child plays in the snow outside the Dallas Cowboys stadium, host to this year's Super BowlThis year's Super Bowl may be the last top-flight action for some time

For, even though the club owners will not have revenue streams from things such as sales of tickets and merchandising, neither will they have to pay out large salaries to star players.

However, crucially, it appears clubs may still receive the money they get from lucrative television deals, even though no games are being played.

When any lock-out is over, the clubs could theoretically then recompense the TV channels by, for example, allowing more games to be televised in future seasons.

Meanwhile, any lock-out could end the careers of players aged over 30.

And, of course, they will not be paid while they are not working.

Meanwhile, supporters would be unable to watch their favourite teams play, either in the flesh or on TV, and could turn to rival sports such as basketball, ice hockey or baseball.

The upheaval comes in a sport whose business model is very different from that familiar to fans of European team sports.

The NFL Experience show in DallasThe NFL has a number of measures to make competition more even between teams

The National Football League is a closed shop, which has been dubbed "socialist capitalism".

There are only 32 professional football teams in the US and there are strict rules about who can own a team.

Every year they get to split up a huge amount of TV money, so there is no large gap between the richest clubs and the smallest clubs.

This distribution means each year any team can theoretically have a chance of winning the Super Bowl.

That compares with other global sports leagues where rising player salaries have seen the top players gravitate to the bigger clubs as they are

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