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・ 1992 New York Jets season
・ 1992 New York Mets season
・ 1992 New York Yankees season
・ 1992 New Zealand National Soccer League
・ 1992 New Zealand NBL season
・ 1992 New Zealand rugby league season
・ 1992 New Zealand rugby union tour of Australia and South Africa
・ 1992 Newsweek Champions Cup - Singles
・ 1992 Newsweek Champions Cup and the Matrix Essentials Evert Cup
・ 1992 Newsweek Champions Cup – Doubles
・ 1992 NFL draft
・ 1992 NFL season
・ 1992 NHK Trophy
・ 1992 NHL Entry Draft
・ 1992 NHL Expansion Draft
1992 NHL strike
・ 1992 NHL Supplemental Draft
・ 1992 Nicaragua earthquake
・ 1992 Nigerian Air Force C-130 crash
・ 1992 NK Rijeka season
・ 1992 North American IRA arrests
・ 1992 North Atlantic Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
・ 1992 North Indian Ocean cyclone season
・ 1992 North Star Conference Women's Basketball Tournament
・ 1992 Northeast Louisiana Indians football team
・ 1992 Northern Illinois Huskies football team
・ 1992 Northern Transvaal Currie Cup season
・ 1992 Norwegian First Division
・ 1992 Norwegian First Division (women)
・ 1992 Norwegian Football Cup


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1992 NHL strike : ウィキペディア英語版
1992 NHL strike

The 1992 NHL strike was the first strike action initiated by the National Hockey League Players' Association (NHLPA) against the National Hockey League's (NHL) owners. It was called on April 1, 1992 and lasted ten days. The settlement saw the players earn a large increase in their playoff bonuses, increased control over the licensing of their likenesses and changes to the free agency system. addition, the season was expanded to 84 games and included provisions for each team to play two games per season in non-NHL cities. As a result of the strike, the owners removed John Ziegler as President, replacing him with Gil Stein. The strike fundamentally altered the relationship between the league and its players.
==Background==
The NHLPA was formed in 1967, and led by Alan Eagleson, who served as executive-director. Eagleson remained in that position until December 1991, when he was forced to resign after the players became uneasy with the relationship he had with the league's owners.〔Pincus, 2006, p. 169〕 Three years later, in November 1994, the Law Society of Upper Canada charged Eagleson with numerous offences, accusing him of embezzlement, providing unauthorized loans using union funds to his friends and associates and of colluding with the NHL's owners.〔McKinley, 2006, p.301〕 In 1996, he faced similar charges from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and later the Federal Bureau of Investigation in the United States. In 1998, Eagleson pleaded guilty to the charges, earning him a C$1 million fine and eighteen-months in jail.〔McKinley, 2006, p.302〕
Eagleson was succeeded as NHLPA executive-director on January 1, 1992 by former player agent Bob Goodenow.〔 He had served as deputy director of the NHLPA since 1990, and had spent his time instructing the players on the issues the union faced in its relations with the league. As executive-director, Goodenow was tasked with negotiating a new collective bargaining agreement, which had expired prior to the start of the 1991–92 NHL season. Goodenow met with NHL President John Ziegler as the two attempted to negotiate an agreement on a range of issues including how free agency worked, the arbitration process, playoff bonuses and pensions. The issue of how to share trading card revenue was considered to be one of the greatest stumbling blocks the two sides faced.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「1992 NHL strike」の詳細全文を読む



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