- Joined
- Dec 22, 2005
- Messages
- 16,446
- Reaction score
- 7,794
Yet here is the post you wrote verbatim:
Nowhere do you mention that you think it is a request. You clearly say that the players are entitled to see the owners financials because other unions see the financials of the public companies they work for.
Yes, there are thousands of public companies that share their audited financials. However, do you see public companies going around releasing proprietary information in these financials to their shareholders? Of course not. Companies like Coke or Apple are required to release their financials because they have public shareholders who require visibility. However, they do not release information like the recipe to Coca Cola or the specs to the newest iPad or iPod. All they release are historical financial data, detail driving the historical data, and some extremely high-level statements about future strategies.
In the NFL, a team's management could and should view financial standing as proprietary information in regards to their overall team strategy. Having their financial information released could easily compromise their strategy since players and other teams would then have greater leverage in negotiations. Players negotiating with teams that have strong financials could hold out for the best possible deal if they know the money is available. Teams with a better financial standing could strongarm weaker teams in terms of trades. For example, if Team B was interested in trading a 2nd round pick for a player catches wind that Team A is struggling financially and cannot resign that player, then Team B would either offer a worse pick or may not offer a pick at all.
A fine example of a team that refuses to release any info publicly is BB and the Patriots. Why? Because he doesn't want to give any team any sort of advantage over his team whether it be in trades, the free agent market, or on gameday.
I was using "entitled" in two different contexts. The distinction is between using "entitled" as "entitled because they have a legitimate and demonstrated need" (as I was using it in the earlier post) and "entitled without having to demonstrate a legitimate need," as you imputed, fairly enough, that I was using it in my subsequent post.
I believe that the Players are NOT "entitled" in the latter sense, but that they ARE "entitled" in the former sense. Since I introduced the word, I should have been more careful in using it and you were right to call me out. I hope I have clarified the distinction as I see it. Sorry for the confusion.
Your second point hinges on the use of the word "proprietary." Your Coke example is useful. Coke doesn't publish its "secret formula," but it publishes hundreds of pages of relevant financial and risk-related information. In the same way, I wouldn't expect the Patriots to reveal their Draft Day or Game Day or Player strategies (part of their "secret formula"), but I would expect them to divulge the same kind of information related to income, expenses and the balance sheet as Coke is required to do.
But, going further, you are taking the very interesting position that in the case of the NFL, financial standing related to the basics of profit and loss (emphasis on "the basics") should be considered proprietary because its revelation might influence the behavior of others in a way that is adverse to the interests of the revealing party. Interesting.
There are many degrees of what is or has to be revealed in the public sector, where companies strive to put out no more than they have to in a 10K or 10Q or Investor Presentation. But, there is a baseline of data that all companies, which seek public investment, are required to reveal.
Even though I'm not sure it's the argument the owners are making (I think they are arguing that as Private Companies they simply don't have to reveal their financial data. Period.), it's an interesting point that you raise and its resolution might, I imagine, be at the heart of the decision of the legal case and its appeals.
My own view is that it is not reasonable to make that argument when it comes to baseline information about a Franchise's financial strength. For the sake of debate, I'd accept as an ad hoc definition of "baseline" what is included in the Green Bay Packers financials, which someone was kind enough to post. I'd take that information, as amplified by information that is typically provided in an SEC filing, as a baseline that it is reasonable to reveal.
In the final analysis, the courts will decide this and you and I are writing what amount to (rather uninformed) briefs in support of one side or the other.
I think the Owners are playing with fire here, because they risk having to reveal a lot more than they might have gotten away with in an informal arrangement with the players. It's not out of the question that an aggressive judge could, because of their privileged Anti-Trust status, require them to disclose all of the information that a public company discloses, which would include the salaries of the top employees by name as well as a lot of supporting detail that they might just prefer to keep private.
You raise some good points, then. The players have clearly decided that they are more likely to be better off through litigation than pure negotiation and I tend to agree with them.
If the owners "blink" in any way before this goes to court, we will know that they were right.
Last edited:












