I didn't see anything telling or even intelligent in that article. First he claims the players are getting 60% of revenue. Look above a couple posts for the truth. Maybe 60% of some revenue, but not all. Then he claims players salaries are going up faster than revenues which seemshard to believe when the cap increases are tied to revenue increases. Again see above. Finally he claims the owners costs are going up. This gets to the heart of the issue and the players want to see proof. I'd also like to know costs have increased so dramatically for NFL owners. We've had a down economy. For most businesses the problem is that revenue drops off and they can't reduce costs enough to offset declining revenue. That's not the problem here.
I assume that by telling, Deus meant inadvertently revealing of one of the owners' real motivations, because you're right - there's such a conspicuous lack of intelligence in what Ross was saying that you'd have to assume either he's a fool, or (more likely) that he thinks we're all fools.
The first thing he expects us to believe is that just three years ago, he spent $1.1 billion dollars to buy into a "broken business model." This guy's been a seriously shrewd investor his whole career; he's not going to suddenly decide to blindly throw a billion dollars into a business he sees coming to a revenue plateau with an unsustainable compensation system for its labor force and an inability for the owner to employ any unilateral structural changes. And there's nothing going on with the league now that wasn't already obvious and inevitable when he bought it in 2008.
The next doozy of his is saying that the leagues revenues are plateauing because they've raised the ticket prices to as high as they can go because "people can't afford to pay more for their entertainment." This is both wrong and a patronizing head-fake towards populism. If the owners cared about being affordable to the average fan, they wouldn't have pushed all the tailgaters out of the parking lot to better cater to the 8 different types of 'premium' seating, where your wife can get an in-stadium mani/pedi while your kids run around a vaguely football-themed play center, and you wait back at your leather reclining seats and have hors d'oeuvres and a glass or merlot.
But beyond that, the real whopper in his claim is that raising ticket prices has been the way the NFL has kept up revenue growth. WRONG. First of all, we all know that the NFL's ticket revenue make up a significantly smaller portion of total revenue as compared to the other major sports, both of which have many times more games in a season. The NFL's major source of revenue is the TV rights contracts, and that revenue stream has seen serious growth with every passing contract. What's more, the NFL figures to net its biggest windfall in the upcoming network contract renewal - an unprecedented 28 of the 30 highest rated shows on television in 2010 were NFL broadcasts. And what's more, whereas all other programming has been hemorrhaging 18-34 year old males, the NFL is gaining in that demo, making them one of the only games in town in terms of hitting that quadrant. The other reason the next network contract talks should be so interesting (and lucrative) is the rapidly expanding adoption of new-media content. Whether it's tv on-demand, web streaming, mobile streaming, etc, the technology finally has both the quality and penetration to figure to be a serious new platform for content delivery that, right now, the NFL is totally under-tapping, and it knows it.
Which gets to the real reason why Ross' statement is so absurdly wrong -- the way that NFL franchises have kept revenues growing is NOT by raising ticket prices, but by finding ADDITIONAL STREAMS of revenue. This is why Ross comes off as such a backwards-thinking tool in this story - it reveals him to be thinking like one of the clueless, unimaginative deadbeat owners stubbornly trying to squeeze a few more gallons out of a tapped well rather than put the energy into tapping a new vein. This explains why HE might be having trouble growing revenues faster than costs, if he doesn't have any interest in diversifying his business.
But plenty of other owners have, which is why the average NFL franchise takes in over $30 million in operating income, after expenses, and his francise is one of only 2 that lost money this year. Which is why the value of the NFL's 32 francises has increased over 350% in the past 10 years -- as in, the owners have had the value of their biggest asset more than triple. And then you have guys like Robert Kraft, who took the land around his stadium and turned it into a giant commerce center, the proceeds of which, for the most part, as non-football revenues, and legally and fairly devolve 100% to the Kraft Group.
So when Ross complains about stagnant revenue growth compared to costs, what he's really saying is that he's bad at his job, and he thinks the league's players should have to pay for it.