Originally published March 16, 2010 at 7:39 PM | Page modified March 17, 2010 at 3:44 PM
Comments (0)
E-mail article
Print
Share
Sounders FC owner Joe Roth: work stoppage could kill MLS
Sounders FC majority owner Joe Roth doesn't see the current labor dispute in Major League Soccer ending well, especially if the players union follows through with its plans to strike if a new collective-bargaining agreement isn't reached before the start of the season next week.
Seattle Times staff reporter
Latest from the Sounders FC blog
VIDEO: Kasey Keller's commercial for the Olympia Auto Mall NEW - 2/09, 09:07 PM
Joe Roth has seen this all before.
The Sounders FC majority owner has been involved with numerous labor disagreements in more than 30 years as a Hollywood executive.
None of them ended well.
Roth doesn't see the current labor dispute in Major League Soccer ending well, either, especially if the players union follows through with its plans to strike if a new collective-bargaining agreement isn't reached before the start of the season next week.
In fact, Roth said, a strike could ultimately bring the death of the league.
"From an entertainment standpoint, we haven't made enough of an imprint in the national psyche," Roth said. "We're all jaundiced because we're in Seattle, where it's a big deal. But I don't think there will be a national outcry, like with the NFL, if somehow we weren't out there for a year ... I just don't think that we can afford, in terms of the public eye, to take a year off."
Roth compared the clash between MLS ownership and players union with that of the Hollywood studios and the Writers Guild of America, which resulted in a writers strike from Nov. 2007 to Feb. 2008.
No one benefited, he said. Everyone suffered.
Roth, who produced the recent movie "Alice in Wonderland," also disparaged the potential timing of a strike. Not only is the World Cup this summer, which always focuses more attention to the sport, but a fragile economy might result in little sympathy for professional athletes.
"The part of it that's infuriating is the threat of a strike comes at a time in the country where everybody's taking a haircut," Roth said.
Destructive and misguided. Those are a couple of adjectives Roth used to describe a potential strike. A work stoppage, he said, would further ruin the players' relationship with league owners, who have invested, and lost, millions of dollars in MLS.
"What happens if they strike? A strike happens, and then what happens?" Roth said. "What happens then? The issues don't get any clearer. People don't change their minds. The sides don't change. Then it just becomes someone waiting someone out.
![]()
"I have been on both sides of these things. I think I'd have a hard time waiting out a billionaire. I just don't see how it profits anybody, a work stoppage. Again, it will leave a bad taste (in the mouths) of the only people that really matter ... the fans."
Roth said he doesn't think the players fully understand the league's economic situation, or choose not to accept it. Only a couple MLS franchises make money, Seattle and Toronto. Coupled with low television ratings and sagging attendance, he said it is hardly the time to radically reform the league's structure.
"They are way ahead of the reality," Roth said of the players.
But that doesn't mean the players don't have cause to demand some changes. Roth said, with the help of a mediator, many compromises have been made in "lifestyle issues."
Further changes need to occur incrementally and be worked out at the negotiating table, according to Roth. And concessions will have to be made by both sides to avoid a work stoppage.
'We're going to either all go down the road together, or we're all going to say, 'What a missed opportunity' and get on with life," Roth said.
Joshua Mayers: 206-464-3184 or jmayers@seattletimes.com
UPDATE - 8:54 PM
Sounders lose to another expansion team
Strikers are striking out in preseason
Cascadia trio talks Year 1 of rivalry
Timbers surprise Sounders in exhibition
Sounders FC's reincarnated Northwest rivalry is the talk of MLS

Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
nwautos
Turismo upgrade "Gran Turismo 5: XL Edition" for PlayStation 3 has features such as new car-tuning settings, new NASCAR vehicles, better replay video...
Post a comment
- Lakewood cop accused of embezzling $150K meant for slain officers' families
- 3 big health insurers stockpile $2.4 billion as rates keep rising
- Agency set to investigate handling of 911 call about Josh Powell
- Quick decisions: How Washington hired its new football staff
- Historic day for gay marriage as another fight looms
- Justin Wilcox's versatile defensive style is the right fit for Huskies | Jerry Brewer
- It's Terrence Time: Enigmatic Ross leads Huskies
- Social worker recounts minutes before Powell fire
- $25B settlement reached over foreclosure abuses
- Club promoter convicted in brutal 2010 murder of Des Moines prostitute
- Gay-marriage bill passes House, awaits Gregoire's signature
434 - Historic day for gay marriage as another fight looming
346 - Sheriff's office unhappy with 911 dispatcher in caseworker's call
282 - 3 big health insurers stockpile $2.4 billion as rates keep rising
235 - Source: NY, California to sign mortgage settlement
210 - Oregon live game thread
153 - Pac-12 picks ... including the UW game
140 - Lakewood cop accused of taking donations for slain officers' families
111 - Department of Justice owes the Seattle Police Department an apology
88 - Thursday morning links --- and a video!!!
72
- State Medicaid program to stop paying for unneeded ER visits
- 3 big health insurers stockpile $2.4 billion as rates keep rising
- One man's audacious pursuit of sailing history
- Darren Berg gets 18-year sentence for Ponzi scheme
- $25B settlement reached over foreclosure abuses
- A wandering gene's destructive path | Book review
- 'Gauguin and Polynesia': dazzling mix-and-match | Art review
- UW opening incubator facility for startups
- Controversial principal at Lowell Elementary takes job in Tacoma
- Lakewood cop accused of embezzling $150K meant for slain officers' families










