Calgary Herald

NHL negotiatio­ns set to resume

- CHRIS JOHNSTON

After watching negotiatio­ns go off the rails in a very public setting last week, the NHL and NHL Players’ Associatio­n are heading back undergroun­d.

And they’ve invited some company.

The sides are set to resume talks at an undisclose­d location Wednesday with U.S. federal mediators Scot L. Beckenbaug­h and John Sweeney rejoining the process. They f irst met with league and union leaders Nov. 27-28 before deciding they couldn’t help negotiatio­ns along.

The NHLPA continued to push for mediation when players and owners gathered in New York last week and the NHL eventually agreed. However, deputy commission­er Bill Daly acknowledg­ed Tuesday that he would carry “no expectatio­ns” into the next session.

Some traction was made during the last round of negotiatio­ns when owners and players met directly — commission­er Gary Bettman and NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr were both kept out of the room — although talks broke down in spectacula­r fashion shortly after Fehr met reporters on Thursday night and announced that agreements had been reached on most of the main issues.

Even though the NHL subsequent­ly rejected the union’s offer and pulled its own off the table, the NHLPA leader stuck by his comments when he spoke to the Canadian Auto Workers in Toronto over the weekend.

“My comments from a couple of days ago stand on their own,” Fehr said Saturday. “I think we were very close.”

The biggest change since the sides last met with mediators is the NHL’s willingnes­s to increase the amount of deferred make-whole payments to $300 million US — a jump of $89 million from what had previously been on the table. The league also dropped proposed changes to rules governing unrestrict­ed free agency, arbitratio­n and entry-level contracts while the NHLPA began entertaini­ng the introducti­on of term limits on deals and increasing the overall length of the CBA.

In short, they moved closer together during three up-anddown days of negotiatio­ns and the mediators will rejoin the process at a more progressed stage than they left it.

Non-binding mediation has been used by the NFL and NBA during recent work stoppages without success. The Washington-based Federal Mediation and Conciliati­on Service was also involved during the lockout that cancelled the 2004-05 NHL season, with Beckenbaug­h attending sessions back then as well.

Last week, Bettman indicated that he didn’t think mediators would be able to help bridge the gap in negotiatio­ns and questioned why the union continued to ask for their presence after claiming a deal was at hand.

“We’re not interested in mediation,” Bettman said Thursday. “We went through it a week and a half ago. It was of no value because of the position of the parties. When the mediators weren’t available this week, we did what we felt was our own informal mediation in terms of trying to move the process forward, giving where we could.

“It’s an interestin­g question, because if we were so close (to a deal) why would we need mediation?”

From the league’s point of view, three main issues remain in negotiatio­ns: the length of the CBA, rules governing term limits on contracts and the transition rules to help teams get under the salary cap.

There are also a handful of secondary issues that have yet to be agreed upon.

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