
It’s been a few days since we last checked in on the NBA Lockout, so why don’t we take a look at the progress being made… haha, made you look, stupid. There’s no progress being made, which is spectacular for the NBA’s incredible momentum from this year’s Finals. Mainly because that momentum is dead. The casual fan’s death rattle is sounding like a feeding bell at the Kardashian manor, and now the owners, league officials and players are all acting like children fighting over a toy.
Those of us who still give a crap what these guys do, let’s all say it together – there’s not going to be a season. Very well done, friends. Now how about a little rundown?
- The league is striking first against the looming threat of the players’ antitrust lawsuit, as the NBA has sued the players’ union for a “declaratory judgment that the lockout of players does not violate antitrust laws,” according to Reuters. Basically, the owners are trying to protect their wealthy asses, because the antitrust lawsuit could cost them three times as much as they’re paying players now.
- NBA Players’ Union representative Derek Fisher and David Stern are going to meet 3 or 4 times for negotiations during August. That’s all. August has 31 days and the season starts in November, but they’re only going to meet over 1/10th of the month. Nice to see that there’s a fire under these guys to avoid a catastrophic collapse that would make the NHL and MLB strikes look like a sorority pillow fight.
- Speaking of Fisher and Stern, coming out of their most recent meeting, Fisher was at least cordial when he acknowledged that the two sides are light years apart.
“I think Peter and Glen Taylor, Mr. Stern, Adam Silver are articulating certain things in the room, expressing their desire to get a deal done. But where their proposal lies makes it hard to believe that.”
Stern? F*ck cordial.
“I don’t feel optimistic about the players’ willingness to engage in a serious way.”
Also:
“I think it’s fair to say that we’re in the same place as we were 30 days ago,” Stern said. “And we agreed we’d be in touch to schedule some additional meetings.”
Fantastic. That’s some good commissioning right there. Basically, as CBS Sports’ Ken Berger points out, Stern is doing what most of us expected him to do and using the NFL Lockout’s resolution as his jumping off point. But it’s a case of apples and oranges. The NFL was never claiming that 22 teams were losing money. The NFL is a profit monster, and the players just wanted a better return on their efforts. The NBA is a stuck pig and owners are begging for a do over on their own stupidity.
Ultimately, Stern and the owners want the players to cut their salaries down, and obviously the players don’t want to do that. And with a mutual “We’ll meet when we feel like it” attitude, this league is not operating this year. At least it will be considerably more fun when the contracts of Dwight Howard, Deron Williams and Chris Paul, among others, expire with no chance for their current teams to salvage them.


The NBA is dead. Long live the NBA.
Can these guys skate? Winnipeg and the NY Islanders are still well under the salary cap floor.
Lost in the middle are the men of the WNBA.
As a Mavericks fan, I’m kind of glad my team is going to be Defending Champions into perpetuity.
I still believe Howard will still end up on Orlando. But yeah, if the NBA were to miss a year, and that killed say, 4-6 teams, that wouldn’t be the worst thing in the world.
As a Bulls fan I want NBA action, as a realist I want this season obliterated and the spoiled players asses handed to them. Time to make NBA players equal to NFL guys, need to be able to cut Boozer thanks.
Did the NBA players learn nothing from the 2005 NHL lockout?
But I mean after the lockout they’re going to have different owners and GM’s, right? Oh I see, they’re not. Huh.
Right, I fully expect at least 8 teams to overpay mid-level players right after the league re-opens in 2013. Carry on.
“From where we sit, we’re looking at a league that was the most profitable in sports that became more profitable by virtue of concessions from their players with an average salary of $2 million,” Stern said. “Our average salary is $5 million, we’re not profitable, and we just can’t seem to get over the gap that separates us.”
Maybe if guys like Greg Oden and Joe Johnson weren’t HANDED ludicris amounts of money relative to their skill by stupid, stupid owners, the average salary might be a little bit lower. Are you really gonna blame these guys for taking these contracts?
“Here you go, Mr. Oden, $80 million even though you’ve started fewer than half a seasons worth of games, just in good faith because we like you.”
“No thank you, I would love to accept $80 million to play Xbox and eat tacquitos but the league is losing money.”
So does this mean the Cavs would have a guaranteed top 5 pick in next years draft? If so….fuck this season.
What, you mean I won’t get to watch neck tatooed jerk offs palm the ball, walk, and have mystery fouls called by crooked refs every time down the floor next year? Yeah, well the NBA is not really FANTASTIC! It sucks, and Stern needs to go.
So the problem boils down to owners grossly overpaying and wanting a do-over so the “going rate” for players is more in line with the kinds of profits (or losses) the owners are experiencing with ticket/retail/ad revenues. Right? Here’s a thought, just start offering less money. If all of the owners decide that a 3-star player is worth $2M a year instead of $10M, then isn’t that the same as the market adjusting? Collusion? Sure.
But that doesn’t seem unfair. Let them keep their current insane contracts (you’re welcome, Gilbert), after all, you both signed them. But once those deals start running out, the players will be faced with a new job market that doesn’t quite pay what the old one did. Players can hold out for more money or go to Greece all they want. That’s what we call free enterprise.
Players can’t be blamed for making way too much and owners can’t be blamed for wanting to start being smarter with their money. But contracts should be contracts. Deal with it till they expire.
NBA is the one with the African-American guys, right
After that last season end I would love to be able to watch games in 11/12 season but it seams it is less about the game and more about the pay. All about money. I just hope guys will be in some kind of form for next year’s summer Olympics