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The Fehr Brothers lead NHL players in feisty labor battle

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NHL players know his background — and probably wish he had represented their union in the 2004-05 labor war, one in which the owners imposed a salary cap and a 24 percent rollback in players’ salaries after the entire season was canceled.

“I think the union is much better this time around,” veteran Flyers defenseman Kimmo Timonen said. “We’re more informed, we’re more open. We know what’s going on.”

Fehr, an Eagle Scout and high school debate champion in his younger years, successfully fended off the salary-cap aspirations of baseball owners. The average player salary in MLB was $289,000 when he became baseball’s union leader. When he retired from his baseball post, the average salary had climbed to $3.24 million, according to ESPN.

Steve Fehr was one of the baseball union’s lead labor negotiators during some of his brother’s tenure with MLB and is still general counsel for the players’ union. Last December, he was hired by the NHLPA on the same day as his brother.

A former agent for some of baseball’s top players, Steve Fehr was the lead counsel in some of the players association’s collusion cases against MLB, getting the league to agree on a $280 million settlement in 1990.

In a Sporting News interview last month, Donald Fehr said that his brother “has many fewer hard edges than I do” and that it was “an extraordinary thing” to have him by his side for more than 20 years in their legal battles against MLB and now against the NHL. “When you are involved in bargaining, it really helps to have somebody who, first of all, is knowledgeable, is observant, knows how the game is played ... (and) knows you inside out and backwards, and perhaps, most importantly, is capable of telling you, probably more often than you want to hear, that you are full of (it).”

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