Ponchos wrote:A few weeks ago when they were making "progress" and supposedly it was all KG's fault they didn't keep talking (yeah right). Talks derailed.
After that came the agree to 50% BRI first "Paul Allen" ultimatum . Talks derailed.
Last week, most progress made, then the owners suddenly walk back ALL the movement towards 50% BRI and say 47% if you want the system compromises. Talks went nuclear.
At pre-determined points, the owners have blown the talks up. They had absolutely no interest in getting a deal before the players missed paycheques. All the owners have done is stall, and they have been very successful at it.
They had no real interest in making a deal the last few weeks, therefore they were not negotiating in good faith.
I think you're confusing "not signing a deal they don't want" with "negotiating in bad faith". If your opposing party is being obstinate and you're not getting what you want, you have every right to walk away from the table when talks aren't going anywhere. Remember: the problem is negotiating in bad faith, not
not negotiating in good faith. It's not like they extended an offer, the players said, "Oh, alright" and then the owners yanked it back and said, "Nah, we changed our minds".
They don't have any interest in making the players miss paycheques: they will use that circumstance to help get what they want, if need be, but their real agenda is signing the right CBA for them. Last time at it, they signed a bad one and they've presumably learned their lessons from that experience.