NFL Trade Rumors
NFLPA executive director JC Tretter was asked during a recent media appearance if a new collective bargaining agreement could be negotiated within the next year.
“I would say extremely unlikely,” Tretter said on The Rich Eisen Show. “I became president during COVID, which I think taught me to really view things in foreseeable chunks of time. As you move too far forward, there’s too many variables to deal with. I was elected in March, started April 1st. The first part of my job is making sure I understand what our members want, because this is a membership-ran institution. I will not be able to do that until throughout this season as I go and visit each of these 32 teams. So there is nothing that could be done until I talk to my guys and make sure I understand what they want and what they’re looking for.
“And then that’s also understanding, can I get everybody on the same page in that amount of time? Which is probably a difficult ask as well. So I think my first step is getting out and talking to all 2,500 members and making sure I understand what they care about, and then getting our guys to understand what we should be fighting for. And that’s gonna come from their feedback.“
The impetus for a new CBA just six years into an 11-year term is the NFL’s desire to expand the season to 18 games. More games would mean more inventory, which would change their negotiating position with broadcast partners. Those rights deals form the bulk of the $23 billion in annual revenue the NFL generates.
The league just signed rights deals with the networks shortly after ratifying its current CBA back in 2020. The NFL can opt out of those deals early and come back to the negotiating table, which would be the play if it has an 18-game season to negotiate with.
That could happen as early as the 2027 season, as the NFL notably has not set the date for the Super Bowl that year, leaving open the possibility of an extra week.
However, it would require buy-in from the NFLPA as a part of the collectively bargained process. Former NFLPA executive director Lloyd Howell sounded quite open to the idea of revisiting the CBA. Tretter is taking a much more measured approach so far.
*“There’s gonna be a lot of work that goes on by me and the staff and then bringing that to the executive committee and bringing that to the board [of player representatives] and making sure they have a say, making sure they understand the trade-offs and what the discussions would be. So there’s a ton of work to be done before a conversation could even start happening, let alone going through an entire collective bargaining process. Those aren’t one-month discussions. This is a 500-plus-page document of clause after clause after clause that would need to be negotiated. That is a very heavy lift on that timeline...