The start of the National Lacrosse League season is in jeopardy, according to a letter written by league commissioner Nick Sakiewicz to Professional Lacrosse Players Association president Peter Schmitz.
“In light of your repeated advice to me and the League, both in writing and orally, that the players of the PLPA on your instructions will not be (and have not been) attending training camps or submitting to physicals until and unless an agreement on a new CBA is reached, and with the impending commencement of the 2018-19 season now only three weeks away, we obviously must face the reality that we are unable to operate our league as scheduled,” Sakiewicz wrote in a letter dated Nov. 12 and tweeted by Calgary Roughnecks transition player Zach Currier.
Sakiewicz gave the players a hard deadline of Wednesday to agree to the league’s last offer, proposed on Oct. 31. The PLPA countered with a one-year proposal that would act as a stopgap while both sides continue to negotiate a long-term deal, which the NLL reportedly rejected.
“Unfortunately, Wednesday, November 14 is the last possible date that we can make the necessary arrangements to fly players in for training camps and formulate rosters necessary to commence the season,” wrote the commissioner.
“Accordingly, we are unfortunately constrained to advise you that unless the PLPA agrees to the League’s proposal of October 31, 2018 by 5:00 PM EST, Wednesday, November 14, 2018, the first two weeks of the seasons and all games contained therein must be and will be immediately and irreversibly cancelled.”
The news is the latest in a dispute that started when the players opted out of the last Collective Bargaining Agreement in November of 2017. Training camps have already been delayed around the league, while multiple scrimmages have been canceled.
The 2018-19 season is scheduled to begin Dec. 1 with three games: Saskatchewan at Georgia, Toronto at Buffalo and Calgary at Colorado.
The NLL released a statement following the release of the letter, while Schmitz responded in an appearance on Lax Sports Network.
“We believe we must create a partnership for growth with the players, but we must grow together with a strategy that fits within a reasonable business model,” the league wrote. “A guaranteed 400% increase in expenses without a corresponding guaranteed revenue increase is not something as stewards of the league we should be doing.”
Schmitz told LSN the Oct. 31 proposal offered the players ticket-based revenue, while the players want to benefit from other sources as well.
“Not just tied to ticket revenue, which is what’s been offered, or drop count, which is essentially turnstile count, which is essentially just one of the five buckets of revenue that’s generated off the players’ backs, we want that expanded to the other four, which includes sponsorship, concessions, parking and merchandise sales,” Schmitz said.
The NLL has never canceled games due to a labor dispute. That perfect streak appears close to ending.
“We’re certainly hitting the danger zone for the first couple of games,” Schmitz said.
The complete NLL statement appears below.