National Football League
NFL, union meet in Washington
National Football League

NFL, union meet in Washington

Published Feb. 9, 2011 12:00 a.m. ET

The NFL and the NFL Players Association met Wednesday in Washington and plan to meet again Thursday, as the sides hope to make progress toward a new collective bargaining agreement.

The sides broke down into smaller groups to negotiate Wednesday after Saturday's two-hour full session, the NFL Network reported.

Further talks are planned for later this month, as the sides try to avoid a lockout being declared by the owners when the current labor agreement expires March 4.

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell described Saturday's session as "beneficial," adding that a "number of" owners and players participated. That was the first formal negotiating session between the sides since Nov. 22.

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The current agreement was signed in 2006 and was supposed to last until 2012, but the owners exercised an opt-out clause to end the deal two years early.

The major issues on the table are health benefits for players after they retire, how to split about $9 billion in annual revenues, creating a new rookie salary scale, and the NFL's desire to increase the regular season from 16 games to 18.

The NFL has said that if a lockout goes into effect and lasts through September, when the regular season starts, the league will lose up to $1 billion in gross revenues. If regular-season games are canceled, the league says the financial hit would be an additional $400 million per week.

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