It took 32 days for the NHLPA to make a counterproposal to the NHL's July 13 proposal.
That occurred Tuesday, and it took the league less than a day to analyze it, understand it and dislike it. That was the message delivered during an hour-long meeting with the union on Wednesday – a day that ended with news scrums with each side's head honcho that did nothing but douse any semblance of optimism from the day before.
Make no mistake: a second NHL lockout in eight years is a very real possibility.
Both NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman and NHLPA Executive Director Don Fehr made it very clear there is a "wide gap" between two sides that see the world very differently.
"There's a pretty substantial monetary gulf, … and when you start with the proposal that the owners made, how could there be otherwise?" Fehr said. "I mean, consider what the proposal was. It is 'Let's move salaries back to where they were before the lockout started, back the last time.' That's basically what it was.
"'We had a 24 percent reduction last time, let's have another one.' That was the proposal. That's what creates the gulf."
A hard cap remains in the union's counterproposal, but that's about the only thing the league likes. The league is not fond of the relatively small reduction in the revenue pie the players are willing to take over a three-year period (roughly $465 million total compared to $450 million a year the owners want, said Fehr; or in Year 1, a $69 million salary-cap ceiling proposed by the players compared to a $55.3 million ceiling from the owners), the league's not fond that so far the union is not willing to modify the contractual system (term limits, arbitration, free agency age), the league isn't fond of the (what Fehr called) "significant, expanded, more aggressive and more targeted revenue sharing" ($250 million a year in the player proposal, $190 million in the owner proposal) and the league will definitely not go with an agreement that reverts back to the current collective bargaining agreement in four years.
"It wasn't particularly responsive to our proposal, and I think it's fair to say that we value the proposal and what it means in terms of its economics differently than the players' association does," Bettman said. "I think there still are a number of issues where we're looking at the world differently. I'm not sure that there's yet been a recognition of the economics in our world, and I mean the greater world and the sports industry, taking into account what recently happened with the NFL and the NBA.