The NBA locked out its players yesterday, a long-expected move that put the 2011-2012 season in jeopardy and came as the NFL is trying to end its own work stoppage that began in March.
The lockout will last until players and owners can agree on a new collective bargaining agreement, one owners demand must give all teams a chance to profit.
“We had a great year in terms of the appreciation of our fans for our game. It just wasn’t a profitable one for the owners, and it wasn’t one that many of the smaller market teams particularly enjoyed or felt included in,” NBA commissioner David Stern said. “The goal here has been to make the league profitable and to have a league where all 30 teams can compete.”
Photo: Reuters
Despite a three-hour meeting on Thursday and a final proposal from the players — which NBA leaders said would have raised average player salaries to US$7 million in the sixth year of the deal — the sides could not close the enormous gulf between their positions.
“The problem is that there’s such a gap in terms of the numbers, where they are and where we are, and we just can’t find any way to bridge that gap,” union chief Billy Hunter said.
All league business is officially on hold, starting with the free agency period that would have opened -yesterday. The NBA’s summer league in Las Vegas has already been canceled, preseason games in Europe were never scheduled and players might have to decide if they want to risk playing in this summer’s Olympic qualifying tournaments without the NBA’s help in securing insurance in case of injury.
And teams will be prohibited from having any contact with their players, most of whom will not be paid until a deal is done, but insist they will hang in anyway.
The last lockout reduced the 1998-1999 season to just a 50-game schedule, the only time the NBA missed games for a work stoppage. Hunter said it is too early to be concerned about that.
“I hope it doesn’t come down to that,” he said. “Obviously, the clock is now running with regard to whether or not there will or will be a loss of games, and so I’m hoping that over the next month or so that there will be sort of a softening on their side and maybe we have to soften our position as well.” The NBA appeared headed this route from the start of negotiations. Owners said they lost hundreds of millions in every season of this CBA, ratified in 2005. League officials said 22 of the 30 teams would lose money.
So they took a hard-line stance from the start, with their initial proposal last year calling for a hard salary cap system, reducing contract lengths and eliminating contract guarantees, as well as reducing player salary costs by about US$750 million annually. Though the proposal was withdrawn after a contentious meeting with players at last year’s All-Star weekend, the league never moved from its wish list until recently, and Hunter said he believes negotiations never recovered from that rocky beginning.
The union had previously filed an unfair labor charge against the league with the National Labor Relations Board for unfair bargaining practices, complaining the NBA’s goal was to avoid meaningful negotiation until a lockout was in place.
Despite frequent meetings this month, the sides just did not make much progress.
Owners want to reduce the players’ guarantee of 57 percent of basketball revenue and were not moved by the players’ offer to drop it to 54.3 percent — though players said that would have cut their salaries by US$500 million over five years.
They sparred over the league’s characterization of its “flex” salary cap proposal — players considered it a hard cap, which they oppose — and any chance of a last-minute deal was quickly lost on Thursday when league officials said the union’s move was in the wrong direction financially.
“I don’t think we’re closer; in fact it worries me that we’re not closer. We have a huge philosophical divide,” Stern said.
Hunter said he hopes the two sides will meet again in the next two weeks, after the union has looked at some additional documents it requested.
The players’ association seems unlikely, at least for now, to follow the NFL Players’ Association’s model by decertifying and taking the battle into the court system, instead choosing to continue negotiations.
“We’ll just continue to ask our fans to stick with us and remain patient with us. As players, we want to play. That’s who we are; we’re basketball players,” Lakers guard and union president Derek Fisher said. “Right now we’re faced with dealing with the business aspect of our game. We’re going to do it the same way we play basketball. We’re going to work hard. We’re going to be focused. We’re going to be dedicated to getting the results that we want.”
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