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NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

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  • #31
    Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

    Adrian Wojnarowski
    @WojYahooNba

    Source involved in labor talks to Y! on today's meeting: "No real progress. A lot of jostling, a lot of back and forth...But no progress."
    Anyone surprised? I have a bad feeling this season will be a total loss.
    Stop quoting people I have on ignore!

    Comment


    • #32
      Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

      http://sheridanhoops.com/2011/10/19/...might-be-back/

      NEW YORK — David Stern has left the building. But he might be back before the night is over.

      After seven hours of talks Wednesday, Stern and owner Wyc Grousbeck of the Boston Celtics left the hotel where collective bargaining talks are being held and headed to a nearby hotel, where the league’s Board of Governors is holding its annual fall meeting.

      Both men needed to attend a briefing by Grousbeck to the league’s Planning Committee regarding proposed changes to the revenue sharing system.

      The talks continued in Stern’s absence, with deputy commissioner Adam Silver acting in his role as lead negotiator, along with San Antonio Spurs owner Peter Holt, the chairman of the Labor Relations committee.

      As of 6 p.m. EDT, the sides had been meeting for eight hours Wednesday after enduring a 16-hour session that began at 10 a.m. Tuesday morning and lasted until 2 a.m.

      For those keeping score at home, that is 24 hours of bargaining within a 32-hour timeframe.

      Arbitrator George Cohen has asked both sides to observe a gag order, and neither side has spoken publicly about what has transpired in all those hours of meetings.

      There were various sourced reports out there this morning stating that only minimal progress was made in the marathon session, but without denigrating their accuracy, I advise you to take them with a grain of salt. In a major negotiation such as this one, the sides always take baby steps before they make the simultaneous great leap toward the middle. Having a mediator there helps facilitate that great leap.

      Talks resumed at 10 a.m. after yesterday’s session lasted more than twice as long as any previous meeting, and Stern’s Grinch Deadline has now passed without any update on how the commish feels in his gut about the chances of everyone watching the big tripleheader on Dec. 25.

      All of the NBA owners, and in some cases an ownership representative (e.g. team president Larry Miller represents Portland instead of Paul Allen), are in town for the Board of Governors meeting. The only owner who attended Tuesday’s negotiating session but was absent Wednesday was Jerry Buss of the Lakers.
      Sittin on top of the world!

      Comment


      • #33
        Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

        Just a note to point out that Cohen isn't an ARBITRATOR, he's a MEDIATOR - I'd expect a newspaper to get that right.
        BillS

        A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.
        Or throw in a first-round pick and flip it for a max-level point guard...

        Comment


        • #34
          Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

          KBergCBS Ken Berger
          Mediation will continue tomorrow at 2 p.m., says one of the participants.
          35 seconds ago Favorite Retweet Reply

          AschNBA Steve Aschburner
          Mediator George Cohen due momentarily to talk w/ media. Not clear if NBA labor mtg done for Wed or on break.
          41 seconds ago
          Larry Coon
          LarryCoon Larry Coon
          ...sides talking. He needs to address media, because they're taking a break for B of G meeting & will resume Friday. @ThatKidCraftyy
          1 minute ago
          Larry Coon
          LarryCoon Larry Coon
          My guess: He's going alone because he doesn't want RT @ThatKidCraftyy: Does Cohen addressing the media mean that the meeting is over?
          2 minutes ago
          Last edited by Sandman21; 10-19-2011, 06:51 PM.
          "Nobody wants to play against Tyler Hansbrough NO BODY!" ~ Frank Vogel

          "And David put his hand in the bag and took out a stone and slung it. And it struck the Philistine on the head and he fell to the ground. Amen. "

          Comment


          • #35
            Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

            LarryCoon Larry Coon
            RT @HowardBeckNYT: Cohen says mediated talks have adjourned for tonight, due to Board of Governors meeting. Will resume tomorrow afternoon.
            1 minute ago

            daldridgetnt David Aldridge
            Cohen said "everyone is focused" on getting deal done.
            49 seconds ago

            Ken Berger
            KBergCBS Ken Berger
            Cohen shed no new light on the status of talks. He emphasized importance of confidentiality and confirmed mediation continues tomorrow.
            1 minute ago Favorite Retweet Reply
            "Nobody wants to play against Tyler Hansbrough NO BODY!" ~ Frank Vogel

            "And David put his hand in the bag and took out a stone and slung it. And it struck the Philistine on the head and he fell to the ground. Amen. "

            Comment


            • #36
              Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

              Woj tweeted that some progress was made on the BRI and that he'd have a story up soon. Nothing major though.

              Comment


              • #37
                Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

                Originally posted by Hicks View Post
                Woj hinted at some small BRI progress to be mentioned in his next article. I'm curious to see if either side budged. Not sure what else would be seen as BRI progress other than that.
                I wish guys could just keep their mouths shut, its crap like this that will cause problems. What are the Kevin Garnetts of the world going to say when they hear 50/50. Just stupid that people don't respect being silent.

                http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=aw-wojnarowski_nba_labor_talks_progress_101911

                By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo!


                NEW YORK – The NBA and Players Association have made progress on the proposed revenue split between owners and players, an important element in settling a new collective bargaining agreement and ending the lockout, league sources involved in the ongoing labor negotiations told Yahoo! Sports.


                As long expected, the two sides have moved closer to a “50-50 split, give or take a point with ranges based on revenue performance,” one source said.
                While the league’s owners and players made progress in Wednesday’s 8½-hour mediation session, one source involved in the talks was hesitant to characterize it as a “breakthrough” moment, saying system issues could again derail talks.

                The two sides will resume mediation at 2 p.m. ET following the conclusion of the owners’ board of governors meetings. The owners are meeting to discuss a new revenue-sharing plan, and what type of proposal they present to the players on Thursday will determine whether the labor talks continue to gather momentum.

                -------------------

                .... theres more, but this is the idea of it.

                Comment


                • #38
                  Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

                  http://www.cbssports.com/nba/story/1...on-the-details

                  NBA talks reach messy point where even Cohen needs a drink


                  NEW YORK -- After 24 ½ hours of meetings with NBA owners and players over two days, George Cohen went to the only place someone hoping to cling to some shred of sanity would go.

                  The hotel bar.

                  Whatever his beverage of choice, it certainly was well deserved, and presumably much needed. Though I also presume they were not ordered in the copious quantities I would've required after dealing with a negotiating logjam that makes the European bailout seem like a debate at the lemonade stand over who does the squeezing and who makes change.

                  Tuesday's bargaining session, which began at 10 a.m. and finally broke up at 2 a.m. Wednesday, had been situated precariously amid a series of unrelated owners meetings that were either vital or completely inane, depending on what level of importance you placed on the NBA first achieving a collective bargaining agreement with its players. Cohen, the top federal mediator in America, was having none of it. When negotiations bumped into committee meetings, the meetings were rescheduled so the mediation could continue.

                  Mediation, people, is the only way this problem is going to get solved. Mediation and, perhaps, hypnosis, mood-altering drugs or mind-altering surgical procedures. I am beginning to think the owners and union execs don't need mediation as much as they need meditation -- that they don't require a mediator as much as a brain surgeon. And after arriving at the Manhattan hotel around noon Tuesday and spending 22 of the next 30 hours babysitting these talks, I'm convinced all of the above would help me.



                  More on NBA lockout






                  Gregg Doyel
                  I'm supposed to be angry at the NBA owners. Which is fine. I am angry at Stern. I am angry at the players. Read More >>



                  Mike Freeman
                  When the NFL was going through its ugly lockout, no one said this publicly, but many said it privately. Read More >>



                  Related links



                  Golliver: Talks to continue Thursday
                  Berger: 'Flex tax' the best solution
                  Young: Garnett halted progress
                  Young: Lost season has draft implications
                  Lockout updates: Blog | Berger on Twitter


                  So Cohen's effort to save the NBA from itself broke off Wednesday night after 8 ½ more hours of bargaining so the league's owners could meet in another Manhattan hotel -- where they would only have each other to kick around. But it was only a respite; they'll be back at it Thursday around 2 p.m., after the owners' meetings conclude.

                  Altogether now: Back, schmack.

                  Maybe this is something, and maybe it isn't. One participant quizzed about the status of talks said there were hardly any breakthroughs, but added that he was "encouraged." Encouraged by what, the unlimited supply of oxygen? Whatever the case, further examination of the key issues that form the chasm between the two sides reveals just how difficult a resolution is going to be.

                  The two key issues remain the owners' goal of decreasing player salaries while also redistributing team payrolls and talent more fairly. The split of revenues (BRI) and the extremely messy business of flattening the payroll disparity among teams have been decoupled and recoupled during these talks in an effort to attack them independently. But even league negotiators who describe their position as two distinct goals recognize that, at some point, they have to link up together.

                  That is the point I believe these talks have reached, and it is in this intersection where hope for an NBA season ultimately will rise or perish.

                  In the absence of information due to Cohen's insistence on confidentiality, it is impossible to know for sure. But Cohen's gag order hasn't merely eclipsed details; it also has squelched the rhetoric from both sides. And in my blissful isolation from spin, I have been able to do some thinking -- and some figuring.

                  My conclusion: As simple as it would be to reconcile their differences on economics and system issues, it is when you inevitably have to merge them back together that the numbers and goals don't add up.

                  The NBA seeks first to compress overall player salaries by about $300 million a year by securing an agreement from the players to reduce their share of BRI from 57 percent to 50 percent. The players have proposed 53 percent, a significant reduction of more than $200 million a year averaged over six years -- most of the money the owners say they were losing under the previous system.

                  The final number will be somewhere in between, and progress on the revenue split has been regarded as the simplest compromise facing the two parties since they emerged from a key bargaining session Oct. 4 with an annual difference that CBSSports.com reported may have been as small as $80 million based on their unofficial bargaining positions.

                  But the owners also want to rein in the top-spending teams through various system restrictions and boost the low-spending teams with a revamped revenue sharing plan. This plan to dramatically increase revenue sharing is what owners are discussing at their separate meetings with the goal of presenting for the first time the details of their proposal to the players on Thursday. And this is where things get messy. Very messy.

                  League negotiators have spoken of initially tripling the amount of revenue sharing to help small-market teams, but team executives have told CBSSports.com such a measure doesn't go far enough. The players union agrees, and this is only the beginning of the complications inherent in the owners' dual goal of lowering salaries and redistributing team payrolls.

                  According to payroll figures for all 30 teams obtained by CBSSports.com, the seven teams with the highest payrolls last season -- those that paid luxury tax -- accounted for 28 percent of league-wide player salaries: the Lakers, Magic, Mavericks, Celtics, Jazz, Trail Blazers and Rockets. The eight lowest-spending teams accounted for 22 percent (Kings, Clippers, Timberwolves, Cavaliers, Bulls, Wizards, Thunder and Nets), while the 15 teams in the middle accounted for 50 percent.

                  The league wants a flatter curve, and though it has never articulated exactly how it wants the payrolls redistributed, it is clear that league-wide player expenses must come down in the aggregate and that the top-spending teams have to spend less while the bottom-feeders must spend more under the owners' proposals. However, it is clear from studying the salaries already committed for the 2011-12 season that it would be nearly impossible to reduce the players' share to 50 percent and flatten the payroll disparity without rollbacks on existing contracts, a concept the union has fought and the league has agreed to abandon.

                  Including the 60 draft picks (who for the sake of argument would be paid something close to the previous rookie scale) but excluding players on fully non-guaranteed deals, there are 303 players under contract for next season for a total of $1.65 billion. There are 129 free agents. If the average roster size is 14 (as required under the previous CBA), that's 420 jobs. So a reduction in the players' share to 50 percent, or $1.98 billion, would leave only $330 million to pay 117 players -- an average of $2.8 million each. So clearly, with a 50-50 BRI split in Year 1 and no rollbacks, the brunt of the salary reduction would fall on the class of 2011 free agents, with such names as Tyson Chandler, Caron Butler, Tayshaun Prince and some members of the players' negotiating committee, such as Roger Mason and Maurice Evans.

                  A 53 percent share for the players, or $2.09 billion, would leave $444 million for teams to fill out their rosters, or a more manageable $3.8 million per player. But any way you look at it, the top free agents would take a major cut compared to those who already got paid, and a significant number of role players would be out of jobs.

                  So with more than 70 percent of teams' rosters already under contract for next season, it would be difficult enough to accommodate the reduction in the players' share if all elements of the previous system remained in place. When you try to envision what would happen under a 50-50 split that also included the top seven teams spending less and the bottom eight spending more, you can begin to understand why the first place Cohen went when the mediation ceased Wednesday night was the bar.

                  How would the seven tax-paying teams reduce payrolls without rollbacks when more than 70 percent of their rosters already are under contract? Where would the eight bottom feeders get the money to increase their payrolls even as aggregate player salaries would decline by $277 million under a 50-50 split in Year 1? And of vast importance, in a so-so free agent class, how could you force Sacramento, New Orleans or Indiana to spend money on players they may not want or need just to bring their payrolls in line with the league's vision of competitive balance?

                  Messy, I told you. Messy.

                  What is clear to me, and must have become clear to Cohen after more than 24 hours of hearing this stuff, is that the owners simply cannot achieve their goals of a 50-50 split and dramatically flattened payroll disparity right away. One or the other, and perhaps both, will have to be phased in over several years.

                  At some point, the salary floor has to be raised from its previous level of 75 percent of the cap, just as a more punitive luxury tax will be needed at the top to rein in the big-spending teams. But just as the adjustments at the top will have to come over time unless existing contracts are rolled back or players are released as NFL-like "cap casualties," so, too would the mandatory increased spending at the bottom have to be phased in. This may be the only way to avoid what has befallen the NHL and its flex-cap system -- undeserving players getting overpaid in the name of competitive balance.

                  There are no magic bullets here, no easy solutions. At the very least, the two sides are talking, and as Cohen said, "Everyone is extremely focused on the core issues, the difficult issues that confront them."

                  But after spending only a couple of hours confronting those same issues Wednesday, I'm as flummoxed as I am exhausted. And so I'm going to the only place that makes sense, to the exact spot where Cohen was sitting a couple of hours before I finished writing this and asking for one of what he was having.
                  Sittin on top of the world!

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

                    Alan Hahn: David Stern not present today at Board of Governors meeting, sent home with a flu. Won't be at mediation this afternoon. #NBA about 8 minutes ago

                    Read more: http://hoopshype.com/twitter/media.html#ixzz1bLOYbntJ

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

                      Chris Broussard: Stern will participate in meeting, though, whether through speakerphone or blackberry or something. We don't know for sure how yet 1 minute ago

                      Read more: http://hoopshype.com/twitter/media.html#ixzz1bLSQXVZA

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

                        sorry if this is posted already

                        Silver: “Unclear” whether an 82-game schedule is possible
                        http://sheridanhoops.com/2011/10/20/...e-is-possible/

                        If it was too late to save a full 82-game NBA season, the deputy commissioner of the NBA would have said so.

                        Instead, he pulled a page from his boss’s playbook and gave an answer that was open to interpretation.

                        “Whether or not an 82-game schedule is possible is unclear to me,” Silver said Thursday following the conclusion of the two-day NBA Board of Governors meetings.

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

                          Agreement Close On $5M Mid-Level Exception
                          http://basketball.realgm.com/wiretap/216113/Agreement_Close_On_$5M_Mid_Level_Exception

                          The NBA and NBPA are close to agreement on a compromise on the annual midlevel exception, say sources.

                          The deal would start at $5 million per year, with annual raises over three years.

                          Two weeks ago, the NBA was proposing a $3 million starting salary for the midlevel.

                          In previous days, the owners and players agreed on starting the midlevel exception at $4.8 million.
                          Oldness comes with a smile
                          To every love given child
                          Oldness comes to rile
                          The youth who dream suicide


                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

                            NBA Labor Talks Break Off
                            http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_yl...eakdown_102011

                            By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports

                            NEW YORK – After three days of mediation, labor talks between NBA owners and players once again broke down, further jeopardizing the league’s 2011-12 season. No future meetings are currently scheduled.

                            “We understand the ramifications of where we are,” NBA deputy commissioner Adam Silver said. “We’re saddened on behalf of the game. …Ultimately, we were unable to bridge the gap that separates the two parties.”

                            While federal mediator George Cohen spent three days trying to keep the talks amicable and moving, it was clear after the latest impasse that the level of trust between the two sides has deteriorated. Players Association president Derek Fisher accused league officials and owners of lying to the media and fans.

                            “They’re interested in telling one-sided stories that are not true,” Fisher said.

                            Silver didn’t announce any further cancellations to the schedule, but league officials planned to meet on Friday with NBA commissioner David Stern. Stern, who didn’t attend Thursday’s negotiations because he was ill with flu-like symptoms, said last week he would consider canceling games through Christmas if a new collective bargaining agreement wasn’t reached by Tuesday. Those plans were postponed after the two sides made minimal progress on small labor issues in the first two days of meetings with a federal mediator.

                            Nevertheless, talks once again broke down on the proposed revenue split. Players Association executive director Billy Hunter said the league’s owners delivered the players an ultimatum that they must agree to a 50-50 split of the basketball-related income. Hunter said the players had proposed a band that would see them receive a minimum of 50 percent and a maximum of 53 percent each year, depending on how the league did financially.

                            When the owners didn’t budge on their 50-50 demand, Hunter said he and Fisher suggested the two sides table the revenue split and resume negotiations on other system issues.

                            [Related: NBA city mayors sign plea to end lockout]

                            Hunter said the owners then made clear they wouldn’t continue talks unless the players accepted the 50-50 proposal – a precondition the league has previously tried to attach to negotiations. “Take it or leave it,” Hunter said of the offer.

                            The players received 57 percent of BRI under the previous collective bargaining agreement.

                            “We’ve made concession after concession,” Hunter said. “… They knew when they presented what they were presenting to us that it wasn’t going to fly.”

                            Thursday’s mediation session came after the league’s owners met for their board of governors meeting in which they discussed a new revenue-sharing plan designed to address some of the financial disparity between large- and small-market owners. Union attorney Jeffrey Kessler said Portland Trail Blazers owner Paul Allen, a newcomer to the talks, came to the mediation session to represent the hard-line stance of the board of governors.

                            “Something happened in that board of governors meeting,” Kessler said. “Yesterday we thought we were moving toward a deal. Suddenly, today, they spend very little time negotiating. As soon as we got in there and presented our offer and without caucusing, they said, ‘We don’t have to do anything else. We can tell you right now we’re at 50 percent, and it has to be our way.’

                            “We adjourned, we came back with the players. They said, ‘We will not agree to anything else unless you agree to 50 percent. I couldn’t believe it.

                            “We were told Paul Allen was there to express the views of the board of governors, and that view was ‘our way or the highway.’

                            “They were carrying out a mandate they were given. This is a sad day for fans, because someone in that board of governors was sent to blow us off, blow the fans off.”

                            Union officials think the league’s hard-line owners – most of them in small markets who aren’t on the labor relations committee – are making it difficult for the two sides to reach a compromise. Hunter cited the Los Angeles Lakers’ Jerry Buss, the New York Knicks’ Jim Dolan, the Miami Heat’s Micky Arison and the Dallas Mavericks’ Mark Cuban as owners who are willing to make a deal.

                            “But I think there are a group of small-market owners who are dug in, and they’re carrying the day,” Hunter said.

                            [Related: Kobe Bryant, other NBA stars plan global barnstorming tour]

                            Silver and San Antonio Spurs owner Peter Holt, who heads the league’s labor relations committee, tried to characterize the players as having walked away from the talks because the owners weren’t willing to budget from the 50-50 proposal. Said Fisher: “You guys were lied to.”

                            Silver said the owners are not willing to trade a better revenue split for system issues designed to improve the competitive balance among the league’s teams. Silver and Holt said the league wants a system more similar to that of the NHL, which lost an entire season in negotiating its previous labor agreement.

                            Holt said the league remains optimistic the two sides will eventually reach an agreement.

                            “We’ve kind of worn each other out,” Holt said. “…We need some fresh air and maybe some fresh thoughts, and try to get back together.”

                            The owners and players union admitted making some progress on minor issues. Among them:

                            • The two sides are nearing a compromise on the annual midlevel exception starting at $5 million with annual raises over three years, sources told Y! Sports. Two weeks ago, the NBA was proposing a $3 million starting salary for the midlevel.

                            In previous days, the owners and players agreed on starting the midlevel exception at $4.8 million. The sides had differed on the length of contracts teams could offer players with the exception, as well as the percentage of annual increase. The players were willing to reduce the maximum length of midlevel deals from five years to four, but the owners wanted the length dropped to three years.

                            Now, they’re close to compromising on a $5 million starting salary with a maximum length of three years.

                            • The owners also are proposing a “bonus pool” of money for high-achieving young players with performance-based incentives. Under the proposal, players would be rewarded for winning Rookie of the Year and making All-Star teams and other accomplishments. The union wants young stars such as the Chicago Bulls’ Derrick Rose and Los Angeles Clippers’ Blake Griffin, who have out-earned their rookie-scale contracts, to have quicker access to more lucrative extensions. Currently, a rookie contract can be renegotiated between the third and fourth seasons, and goes into affect after the fourth and final year of the initial deal.

                            • As CBS Sports reported, the proposed amnesty clause that will allow teams to cut loose one problematic contract per team at the conclusion of the lockout will allow for teams to have 75 percent of the money taken off the salary cap over the length of the deal. The player will become a free agent, and the team will have only 25 percent of his annual salary on the books going forward. Players will still receive the full amount of money they’re owed under the contract.

                            The biggest hurdle left in discussions for the new amnesty clause, sources told Y! Sports, is how long teams will have to pay the player the money owed him. Will it be over two years, five years, seven years? The teams want the bought-out player to be paid over a longer period of time, while the union wants the money paid in shorter order. This is an area where a compromise will easily be found, sources said.

                            “It is unfortunate that after 30 hours of negotiations in front of a federal mediator that we were unable to have any major progress,” Minnesota Timberwolves forward Kevin Love said in an email to Y! Sports. “Hopefully we can get back to the negotiations and come to a fair agreement on the significant issues separating the two parties. Potentially, more games could be canceled as a result of today and it is disheartening to have no clear end in sight.

                            “Heading forward we will continue to remain united and wait for a fair deal.”

                            Yahoo! Sports’ NBA reporter Marc J. Spears contributed to this report.

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                            • #44
                              Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread

                              Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/201...#ixzz1bS5LnyII

                              On Thursday night in a Manhattan hotel, as owners and players bickered over ultimatums, the NBA was ignorant of a larger threat developing just miles away. On the southern tip of the rich island were gathered thousands of stubborn protesters representing American economic frustration. They were the people of Occupy Wall Street.

                              "We are the 99 percent,'' they have been chanting.

                              They share much in common with NBA fans.

                              In the NBA's corner of the universe, the 99 percent feel used, ignored, patronized and taken for granted. Fans are angry and they don't know how to express their demands.

                              The issues protested by the Wall Street Occupiers are far more serious than the lockout that is upsetting basketball fans. Yet the parallels are obvious. The NBA generates $4 billion annually and its players average $5 million in salary per year. Yet they cannot agree on how all of that money should be divided between the owners of the franchises and the employees. They have been arguing for more than two years without recognizing or respecting what is happening in the world around them -- not only that they should be celebrating their good fortune rather than fighting over it, but that those with far less wealth are beginning to mobilize and realize their own power.

                              There is an arrogance built into these NBA negotiations, a taken-for-granted understanding that fans will always come back. Professional football, baseball, hockey and basketball have all endured player strikes or owner lockouts that have obliterated parts or all of a season over the last several decades, and in every case the fans forgave and forgot. They always returned to watch and, most importantly, to reward the boycotters with higher-priced tickets and ever-increasing revenues.

                              But never has a league dared to shut itself down in a time like this, during a recession now generating its fourth year of high unemployment and foreclosures. The Occupy Wall Street protesters and their brethren emerging in scores of other cities in America (and around the world) are establishing their own agenda. They are refusing to argue the underlying details of the financial meltdown, and they don't claim to offer solutions. Instead, for now, they are simply demanding that they be acknowledged by those who hold the majority of money and power.

                              "Respect us,'' the protesters are saying.

                              "Or else what?'' the rich and powerful seem to be responding.


                              To which the protesters have said nothing ... yet. They are deciding how to respond and what to do amid an ominous silence.

                              The NBA has to be aware of its vulnerability here. The frustration of the Occupiers is the same kind of frustration that fans have felt during work stoppages throughout pro sports over the years. Most fans have neither understood nor wanted to understand the reasons why their games have been canceled. (Understand this much, players and owners -- fans view NBA games as their games, because one way or another they pay for the games that you think you own.) In previous years, fans have wanted to organize boycotts, but they have been undermined by their own virtue as fans. They care too much to hold on to grudges, and deep down they want to be fans.

                              Here is what has to be worrying the NBA. The owners and players ought to be frightened that fans will come to view this ongoing lockout as a symbol of something bigger. What if it strikes the larger public nerve, so that the NBA's $4 billion shutdown is turned into a high-profile example of something deeper and much more important than a game?

                              This kind of public reckoning has been forecast for a long time. How many times have you heard people complain about the rising prices of tickets, concessions and parking over the years? You hear talk that people aren't going to keep paying these prices, that the leagues are going to price out their fans. The fans have always kept paying.

                              But now the dots have never been easier to connect. This is a league that has used public money to finance its arenas -- expensive buildings that are now shuttered to the financial detriment of local governments as well as thousands of workers, and it's all because of a very simple and unbelievably greedy story. Everyone else suffers because 30 owners and 400 basketball players cannot agree on how to share $4 billion per year.

                              The Occupy Wall Street protesters are trying in their own way to tell the rich and powerful that they must be conscious of the world around them. The NBA owners and players are failing to recognize not only their citizenship but also their extreme vulnerability. They have forgotten that the NBA exists largely due to its fans.

                              America needs Wall Street. But does America need the NBA?

                              What happens to the NBA if fans decide, via word-of-mouth, Facebook and Twitter, to express en masse their long-neglected point of view? Could they influence the NBA to resolve its lockout before the season has been lost altogether?

                              The NBA owners say their business cannot grow unless they can persuade the players to create a new financial model. The larger truth is that owners and players together cannot hope to grow or maintain their business in this horrible economy as long as they show a disregard for their relationship with the public.

                              In fact, the NBA needs to be taught a hard lesson by fans. In the early 1980s, owners and players formed a partnership to rescue their league from insolvency, coming together to invent the salary cap and install drug-testing policies that helped grow the league.

                              Now that growth has become their ruin. They are no longer partners but adversaries, and no business can thrive when the owners and employees view each other as enemies. Their success has separated them from the people who pay their salaries. It should go without saying that the NBA would not exist if not for the overwhelming financial support of the millions of people who buy tickets or watch on TV -- yet that most obvious message now has to be repeated. Because the players and owners have divorced themselves from that reality.

                              The owners and players think this labor fight is between them. They may turn out to be horribly wrong.

                              Each time they meet, the owners and players emerge from their failed negotiations and declare how much they love and feel sorry for the fans. It's the one statement both sides share in common, and it couldn't be more hollow or condescending. In the end, the details of their negotiations don't matter nearly so much as the harm the owners and players are creating together.

                              The NBA had better hope that fans don't organize their own statement: You need us more than we need you.
                              Sittin on top of the world!

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                              • #45
                                Re: NEWS ONLY Lockout thread



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                                Sittin on top of the world!

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