Red_One43 wrote:TCIYM wrote: Employees have the options of working for the offered wage or of finding alternative employment.
Let's relook at this one. When I was growing up, if an NFL team drafted a player that player had to play for that team or not play at all. Same as the rules in the civilian world, if you don't like that organization or its pay, you go find another company willing to pay you the better. Well, not the same. There is no other company like the NFL. Your argument of find alternative work does not fly with the Federal Government.
The Federal Government recognized the the NFL borders on the edge of being a monopoly, so to avoid that designation the NFL amended its draft rules to allow a potential "employee" to say no to the wages and position with an employer without any penalty whatsoever. That potential employee sits out at least a year and goes back into the draft. Bo JAckson did this.
Why do you think the Federal Government ruled against the way that the NFL conducted its draft? Because finding work in an equivalent business to the NFL is impossible and that constitutes a monopoly. Monopolies are illegal in Our Great Country. The government cut the NFL some slack.
Don't forget the NFL lost its anti-trust suit agains the USFL - once again the NFL was cut slack and had t pay the USFL $1.
The NFL better hope they get a judge friendly to their position or they might stand to lose even more of their exemptions. The players aren't the only ones gambling here.
My point - There is a special owner/employee relationship between the NFL owners and the NFL players. I know that you know this, but yet, you try to argue your point using a model that doesn't fit.
The NFL owners better hope that the federal courts continue to cut them some slack on the draft period which has no constitutional support.
I think most of us agree with the draft to keep a fair playing field, but all it takes is one judge to look at the constitution and say otherwise and another to uphold it and a Supreme Court to uphold that. The courts are a gamble for everyone.