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The Fehr Brothers lead NHL players in feisty labor battle

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The league, it is safe to assume, is not pleased anymore. The NHL estimated that it already lost $100 million because of the cancellation of exhibition games. That number is growing every day.

Daly, the NHL’s deputy commissioner, and Steve Fehr have been warring with words throughout the labor dispute, which has left both sides without a collective-bargaining agreement since Sept. 15.

Daly is perturbed that the NHLPA has not made a counter offer to a proposal made nearly a month ago.

“Bargaining is not ping-pong,” Steve Fehr countered late last month.

Daly said he did not expect economic issues to be discussed at Wednesday’s labor meeting with union executives in New York. He told the Los Angeles Times: “We would be happy to listen to the PA on economic or system issues, but they don’t appear to be inclined to bring anything new to the table. As long as that’s the case, I’m not sure we have more to add. They got the last two substantive proposals from us.”

Responded Steve Fehr: “For more than a month, the owners have not wanted to meet to discuss the core economic issues unless it is on their terms — that is, unless the players have yet another offer that includes significant concessions for them.”

And so it goes. The Fehr brothers playing hardball on one side, Daly and Bettman doing the same on the other.

The crux of the labor dispute is dividing revenue, which was $3.3 billion last season. The players received 57 percent in the last agreement. Donald Fehr wants them to receive 53 to 54 percent in the new CBA, while the owners have proposed a sliding scale that starts at 49 percent and drops to 47 percent.

Each percentage-point change is worth $33 million based on last season’s revenue.

Neither side is budging. And, perhaps because of their faith in the Fehr brothers, the players have hinted that they will sit out the entire season before accepting the owners’ terms.

Baseball roots

Displaying a tenacity that belies his Midwestern roots, Donald Fehr cut his teeth under the iconic Marvin Miller, baseball’s first union leader, while serving as his lead attorney in the 1970s. He later replaced Miller and had a sometimes-tumultuous 26-year reign as MLB’s union leader until he stepped down in 2009. His tenure included a strike that canceled the playoffs and World Series, a steroid smear on the game, record players’ salaries, a winning collusion case against the owners, and, eventually, 14 years of labor peace.

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