The extended contract provides that DirecTV will

The extended contract provides that DirecTV will pay a substantial cost if the season of 2011 does not end in cancellation and up to 9 percent more, at College Football 25's discretion, if the 2011 season is cancelled. Of the total amount payable in the event of a cancelled season 42% of that fee will be non-refundable. The remaining amount will be credited towards the following season. Op. 27. 71-72; Goodell Direct Test. 11. This means that College Football 25 could receive substantially more from DirecTV in 2011 if the company locks out the Players as well as if it does not.
Wait, what? Essentially, in layman's terms it is that the College Football 25 was ready for a lockout when it was negotiating its contract with DirecTV in 2008. anticipating that a College Football 25 Coins work stoppage could occur. The contract language offered that the College Football 25 an insurance policy of a sort, giving the league an unending stream of revenue and a buffer to allow the owners to keep a lockout in effect for whatever time it takes.
Fans should be angry at both College Football 25. for a deliberate work stoppage, and DirecTV in facilitating it. College Football 25's plan. DirecTV wanted the College Football 25 as well as the rights to its RedZone Channel and Sunday Ticket as well as Sunday Ticket, and bending to the dictates of the league in talks in 2008. The league leveraged that and created a situation in which it would be beneficial to lock out the channels to the owners.
Seem fair? It's not fair, of course. In an objective perspective: Why does any organization ever receive more money for deciding to shut down operations than it does not? The fact that the College Football 25 negotiated its TV contracts knowing full well it was in charge of a lockoutand was able to secure streams of revenues that would keep on and even increase in the event of a lockout -- is the most obvious picture we've ever seen of how College Football 25 planned for the CBA negotiations. And it isn't pretty.
With the ruling and the publication of Doty's opinions it is a public relations nightmare for the College Football 25. The ramifications in the court of public opinion and at the bargaining tables, where you can see that College Football 25 suddenly has a level playing field, are a serious problem for the league. If it encourages both sides to make a real effort to negotiate a deal, perhaps this is all positive in the end.
San Francisco 49ers defensive lineman Ray McDonald was arrested at 2:48 a.m. on Sunday for the crime of domestic violence, according to a report from Damian Trujillo of NBC Bay Area. San Jose police have confirmed the arrest to Trujillo. McDonald will be the first player to try out College Football 25's new domestic violence policy, which could mean that the 49ers player will be facing at the very least a six-game suspension.
"McDonald was arrested with out incident and is booked into Santa Clara County Jail on felony domestic violence charges," the San Jose police department informed Matt Maiocco of Buy NCAA Football Coins CSN Bay Area.
Posted in Default Category on August 08 2024 at 11:22 PM
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