Hockey legend Orr defends NHL players in contract dispute
Urges players to hold out for more
CBC News
Posted: Aug 10, 2012 3:32 PM AT
Last Updated: Aug 10, 2012 4:50 PM AT
Bobby Orr scoring the Stanley Cup winning goal in 1970. (Canadian Press archives)Hockey legend Bobby Orr is standing up for National Hockey League players, who are being threatened with a lockout next month if they don’t reach a new collective agreement.
The former all-star, who is now a player agent, says the owners are making a lot of money and the players should not accept what’s currently being offered.
“Players want their fair share, and that's what it's all about and I think it's very unfair if fans — until they understand and see everything what's out there — that they suggest that the players are being greedy,” said Orr, who is in Moncton for the Chevrolet Safe and Fun Hockey Festival this weekend.
“If we go back to the last collective bargaining agreement, the talk after that was, ‘Gee, the players really got beat on this one.’ So all of the sudden the owners have come back — I know they're negotiating, they're posturing and so on, but what they put out there, there's no way the players can accept something like that.”
On Thursday, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman said unless a new collective agreement is reached by Sept. 15, the players will be locked out.
The players are planning to deliver a counter proposal to the NHL on Tuesday, when the two sides meet in Toronto.
Donald Fehr, the head of the National Hockey League Players Association, has said there is a “meaningful gulf” between the two sides. But he believes there is ample time for the parties to reach a deal, he has said.
The players have repeatedly suggested the sides could continue bargaining while proceeding under the old agreement, but the NHL would not likely go for that because it would take away a major bargaining chip for the league.
The NHL is proposing to cut players' share of revenues to 46 per cent from 57, which could mean as much as $450 million less.
The league is also seeking to restrict free agency.
Share Tools
Latest New Brunswick News Headlines
- Man suffers serious injury climbing out of moving car
- A man suffered serious injuries after falling out of a moving vehicle while trying to climb onto the vehicle's roof early Saturday morning. more »
- Joe Oliver challenges Trudeau's west-east pipeline 'tone'
- Federal Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver is accusing Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau of trying to be on both sides of the west-east pipeline proposal. more »
- Fredericton mom told to stop breastfeeding at public pool
- A Fredericton mother is speaking out after a lifeguard asked her to stop breastfeeding her daughter at the indoor public pool. more »
- MS liberation therapy fund should end, Parrott says
- Independent MLA and retired surgeon Jim Parrott is calling on the provincial government to stop spending taxpayers' money on a controversial treatment for multiple sclerosis. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Will Rob Ford's supporters leave Ford Nation?
- The growing controversy over a purported video alleging to show Toronto Mayor Rob Ford smoking crack cocaine may be testing the faith of even his most die-hard supporters. But experts say Ford's policies may trump whatever personal issues he's facing, and that his supporters may rally behind him.
more »
- Hockey Canada votes to ban bodychecking in peewee hockey
- Hockey Canada's board of directors voted to eliminate bodychecking from peewee-level hockey on Saturday in Charlottetown. more »
- Neil Macdonald: How serious is Obama about curbing the drone surge?
- In a key speech this week, the U.S. president set out a host of supposed new safeguards for America's controversial practice of remote-controlled rough justice. But as Neil Macdonald writes, the underlying rationale for drone use has not fundamentally changed. more »
- Repairing the damage in this week's Generation Why
- How does one get through the days and weeks following a natural disaster, a senseless tragedy, or even a crash-landing back on Earth? In this week's issue of Generation Why, several contributors recommend stories about repairing the damage, and trying to move forward. more »
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford denies using crack cocaine
- The mayor of Canada's largest city told a packed news conference that he doesn't use crack cocaine and isn't a crack addict — and new allegations surfaced Saturday involving Ford's brothers. more »
- Fredericton mom told to stop breastfeeding at public pool
- Dog taken amid allegations of abuse reunited with family
- Heavy rainfall forecast prompts flood warnings
- Joe Oliver challenges Trudeau's west-east pipeline 'tone'
- MS liberation therapy fund should end, Parrott says
- Saint John carpenters lowest paid in country
- Rothesay man charged with 2nd-degree murder
- Teen dies after falling from moving vehicle
- Wet, windy weather prompts flood warnings

