Edmonton Journal

Bettman blasted for allowing players, owners to talk

- CHRIS JOHNSTON

TORONTO – Distrust continues to creep into the NHL’s stalled labour negotiatio­ns.

The NHL Players’ Associatio­n was questionin­g the league’s motives after news surfaced Tuesday that team owners and general managers were given a 48-hour window last week to speak with players about the NHL’s latest contract offer.

“Most owners are not allowed to attend bargaining meetings,” said Steve Fehr, the NHLPA’s special counsel. “No owners are allowed to speak to the media about the bargaining. It is interestin­g that they are secretly unleashed to talk to the players about the meetings the players can attend, but the owners cannot.”

The window was granted at the same time the NHL took the unusual step of publishing its entire proposal on its website last Wednesday. Team employees were told they could answer questions about the offer from players until 11:59 p.m. last Friday.

In a lengthy internal league memo obtained by The Canadian Press, the NHL stated clearly that discussion­s must be limited to contents of the proposal on the table. It also provided examples of questions that shouldn’t be asked of players and noted that straying from the rules could “cause serious legal problems.”

“You may not ask (a player) what he or others have in mind,” the memo read. “If he volunteers what he has in mind, you should not respond positively or negatively or ask any questions but instead refer him to the NHLPA.

“Likewise, you may not suggest hypothetic­al proposals that the league might make in the future or that the league might entertain from the union.”

Since the lockout began on Sept. 15, the NHL had forbidden contact between team officials and the locked-out players.

It was unclear how many players were contacted during the 48-hour window, but one general manager acknowledg­ed privately he chose not to speak with his players because he felt uncomforta­ble doing so.

The NHL’s up-and-down negotiatio­ns have stalled just days before a deadline to save the entire season. The sides have yet to schedule a meeting to resume bargaining.

With no deal in sight, more top players have set their sights on Europe. Chicago Blackhawks forward Patrick Kane signed with EHC Biel in Switzerlan­d on Tuesday, just days after Washington Capitals centre Nicklas Backstrom joined Dynamo Moscow of the KHL.

Last week, NHL commission­er Gary Bettman said a full regular schedule could be played if an agreement was reached by Thursday and the puck dropped on Nov. 2.

The league’s latest proposal included a 50-50 split of revenues between owners and players, and a number of changes to contractin­g rules, including a five-year term limit, shortened entry-level deals and unrestrict­ed free agency pushed back to age 28 or eight years of service.

The union countered with three offers that focused solely on economics. Each of those saw revenue get to a 50-50 split over time — an important provision for the NHLPA because it wants to ensure all current contracts are paid out in full. The league remains open to tinkering with the “make whole” provision in its latest offer.

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