Originally posted by ICU81MI
But while the top earners are attractive for cuts, there is something to be said for dividing the players. The NFL could aim for the higher profile, higher paid players (of which there are fewer, but accounting for a significant portion of salaries) or they could aim for the lesser paid players, who earn less money but are far larger in number. The NFL proposal likely affects them all, but could be probably be engineered to attract one group over the other. The NBA did this with their Union.
On the other hand, the NFL has hired a law firm known for battling unions with lockouts, the same firm that led the NHL lockout of a few years ago. So this one might look much different than the NBA model.
And as always, the owners do not have the exact same set of interests in this. The high revenue teams do not want to share local revenue, the increase in which was a huge boon to the Patriots, Redskins and Cowboys under new ownership (Jones, Snyder, Kraft). Some of that they now send to the lower revenue clubs. The lower revenue clubs dislike the total revenue percentage the players get and need the local revenue (called supplemental) sharing to cover the higher player costs. I surmise (no proof available) that the plan is that the high revenue clubs get to kill supplemental revenue sharing if they can lower or eliminate the salary cap floor. They already tried to implement the end of supplemental sharing once the new league year starts with no cap, but they were blocked by a Federal Court for the duration (I think) of the CBA (end of 2010 season).
Also, be careful with articles talking about the end of revenue sharing. The only revenue sharing up for debate currently is the supplemental (local) revenue. Things like stadium naming right, concession sales, sponsorships, advertising, local radio and TV, etc. The majority of income involved in revenue sharing is National TV deals and licensing, and that gets split evenly and has for decades.

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