Sask, regardless of the legal speak the judge and the NFLPA attempts to put around it, the end result of the ruling is that the Commissioner is found to be unable to fine or suspend players. That the judge was too much of a ***** to actually come out and word it appropriately doesn't change the fact that there is a now a Titanic sized gash in the side of the boat.
Water is flooding into the CBA and one of the cornerstones for the owner's side of the Agreement is now determined "invalid". Now all contracts have a clause that says "if one aspect of this contract is found to be invalid that doesn't mean that all other clauses are invalid" but it pretty much means that all other aspects are now open to investigation because you've now determined that one of your components of the contract is bullshit. Therefore it is likely that other components are bullshit too. AND if you get good enough lawyers you can throw out as much of the contract as you like; it's pretty much a house of cards thing.
So, IF the owners choose to be dicks about it, they can choose to invalidate whatever parts of the CBA they want because clearly it's a flawed contract. If one of the basic tenets of the CBA isn't actually enforceable, then there MUST be a whole ****-ton of other stuff that isn't actually worth enforcing also, like rookie salary caps, vet minimums, standard increases of the salary cap etc. Ultimately, the owners have a golden opportunity to fire Goodell if they like and say FU to the NLFPA and write up a new CBA that better suits them.
Meanwhile, the players have a perfect opportunity while the gettin's good to put heat on the NFL to get some fine money back or at least put the screws to them for the completely random assignment of fines and suspensions that Goodell has subjected players to over the years.