Page 14-Thursday, July 9, 1981-The Michigan Daily Free agency.. ... An issue in baseball From AP and UPI NEW YORK-The chief negotiator for major league club owners testified today that the free-agent system has been a boon to baseball and is here to stay. Ray Grebey director of baseball's Player Relations Committee said there was no attempt to do away with the free-agent system a part of which has led to the current strike by major league players. "FREE AGENTS ARE here to stay," he said. "They are a benefit to baseball. I know some people in management don't share that opinion but there is no ntention or desire to attack the system." Grebey quoted Buzzy Bavasi Executive Vice President of the California Angels as an example of management philosophy in the area of compensation. "Buzzy Bavasi has said 'I don't care who I have to give up as long as I get the player I want and I'll pay him whatever he wants,' " Grebey said. COMMISSIONER BOWIE Kuhn's comment that baseball was in dire economic straits was unauthorized by the owners' bargaining committee, the owners' chief negotiator testified yesterday. Ray Grebey, director of the owners' Player Relations Committee, said Kuhn was speaking only for himself when he stated in December 1980 that inflated player salaries threaten the game. Meanwhile New York Yankees pitcher Tommy John said yesterday he feels the major league players strike may be over within three days because of his boss George Steinbrenner. "I think George can do it," said John Wednesday of the Yankees' owner. "His idea is close to what the players have been proposing since April. "And I think that the other liberal owners-the guys like (the New York Mets' Fred) Wilpon the Texas Rangers' Eddie Chiles the Baltimore Orioles' Edward Bennett Williams-will follow and create a sort of momentum. ... An issue in hockey TORONTO (AP)-The sticky problem of free-agent compensation which precipitated the major league baseball strike will be discussed at a meeting today between the National Hockey League's owner-player council and the players' association. "We think the league would be better off with total free agency," said Alan Eagleson, executive director of the NHLPA. NHL PRESIDENT John Ziegler countered "we're completely against total free agency." The combatants held their last round of talks last month in Las Vegas, Nev. with the players serving notice of termination on the equalization portion of the current collective bargaining agreement as of Sept. 15, 1982. The current agreement was to end Sept. 15, 1984. But with both the owners and players issuing termination notices the players are free to strike prior to the 1982- 83 season. WHILE TOTAL free agency-a situation under which there would be no com- pensation for a team losing a player-is Eagleson's goal he says there are "fallback positions" the players could accept. Their initial proposal, discussed more than a year ago calls for a graduated system of compensation by draft choices based on a free agent's salary level similar to that in the National Football League. Under this format ifa team lost a player making more than $150,000 it would by compensated by a first-round draft choice. If the player was in the $100,000-to- $150,000 bracket compensation would be a second-round choice and if he made $75,000-to-$100,000 it would be a third-round choice. IF THE PLAYER was making less than $75,000 there would be no compensation. "But we made that proposal last year," Eagleson says. "Now we need something that will take into account the rate of inflation ... a built-in increase on the salary brackets of 10to 15 percent a year." But the owners believe a draft choice won't attract fans at the same rate as a departed star. "WHAT WE NEED is a bridge an agreement that can carry us over the next five years," Ziegler said. Neither side expects anything to be settled yesterday. "We'll have another meeting in August another in September," Eagleson said. "My feeling is we have to keep talking if we're going to accomplish anything." ... An issue in basketball By the Associated Press Compensation for free agents the issue that brought the 1981 major league baseball season to a halt is nothing new to professional basketball. Matter of fact it's ancient history. The National Basketball Association had a compensation rule in effect for five years. Players completing their contracts could switch teams but clubs signing such free agents had to compensate these teams with player choices or cash. The two teams were expected to negotiate such compensation between themselves. If they couldn't it was set by NBA Commissioner Larry O'Brien subject to judicial review. This summer as provided in the league's agreement with its Players Association, that system was replaced by the right of first refusal whereby a team can retain a free agent by matching the best offer he receives but gets no compen- sation if it chooses not to match. About a dozen veteran free agents switched teams each year the rule was in ef- fect. In most cases the teams were able to agree on compensation themselves. Two or three each year went to O'Brien. A couple of those-involving Marvin Webster and Bill Walton-were challenged by the Players Association and became the sub- jects of lengthy legal disputes. .4 4 The newest golf fashion? Professional golfer Fuzzy Zoeller sports a new hat, fashioned from balloons as he hits a drive. Apparently, touring pros are starting to add spontaneity to their bag of tricks as Jerry Pate dove into a nearby lake recently after win- ning a tournament, thus ending a long "drought." Cowboys sued for, 100 ml lion dollars 4 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A $100 million lawsuit has been filed by a nor- thern California company against the Dallas Cowboys charging the National Football League team with pirating a new training technique which it had agreed to endorse. The suit, filed in US. District Court Tuesday by the firm of noted trial lawyer Melvin Belli, alleges that the Cowboys reneged on their promise to endorse "SyberVision" in return for trade secrets on how the technique works. SYBERVISION IS a system in which an athlete watches video tapes of his best performances in an attempt to program muscle memory. Attorney Bill Choulos, representing the San Leandro firm of Professional Development Associates, told a news conference the program was offered to the Cowboys in May on an exclusive basis in return for their endorsement. "They, in effect, took it, misap- propriated it, used it and claimed it as their own.It's as simple as that," said Choulos. "I BELIEVE it's true that we're going to be able to show that they did this deliberately and the law allows punitive damages for doing such an act," said Choulos. Cowboys vice president Joe Bailey said he had no comment on the suit, which asks $25 million in damages and $75 million in punitive damages. Steve DeVore of Professional Development Associates said the Cowboys offered to give an endor- sement of Syber Vision and that a Dallas spokesman told him the endor- sement would be worth "millions and millions of dollars." "The promise by the Cowboys was that if we gave them the trade infor- mation, they would go back and im- plement it and we would get the recognition," said DeVore. "Two weeks later, we got a telephone call from Texas that the Cowboys ... had announced their new training system and they put their1 name on it.."' 4 4 4