Twinkie defense wrote:I don't think the owners have acted in bad faith or reneged though... the players and the League agreed to a time when the collective bargaining agreement would come to an end, and the end came. They (League + players) could have extended the old CBA, they could have agreed to a new one in advance of the expiration date, or one side *or the other* could have simply stopped business until a new agreement was in place.
They should have gotten a new agreement in place before the old agreement expired, but I'm not surprised they didn't do that, since there was really no compelling reason to get a deal done until there is a threat of the overall revenue pie shrinking. And in fact, a lockout is logically consistent with the owners' stance - they say they can't continue with the old agreement because they're losing too much money. If they then extended the old agreement and started handing out more "bad" salaries, that undermines their position that the old deal was so bad.
They didn't need to "lock" the players out (could have just kept on in the negotiations) just like the players didn't "strike". Lockouts and strikes have a very negative connotation when it comes to negotiations and basically set a negative tone to discussions. It basically establishes a "hardball" tactic and essentially puts somewhat of a bad taste in the oppositions mouth and makes things more confrontational rather than "friendlier". Seems more as if the owners are just trying to break the union rather than negotiating some form of settlement.








