NBA players and club owners met for talks in small groups on Tuesday as an ongoing lockout approached three months with no sign of a new contract, while the planned Nov. 1 start of the season looms.
After about two hours of meetings, negotiations were halted until yesterday with progress needed to spark more sessions before the weekend.
“So long as there is reason to keep discussing, we will keep discussing, undeterred by the calendar or weekends or things like that,” NBA commissioner David Stern said. “We will know more after tomorrow’s session.”
Club owners want to reduce the players’ portion of US$3.8 billion in annual revenues from 57 percent to less than half and seek a firm salary cap rather than the exception-filled current payroll model.
Players want to avoid a hard salary cap and while they have offered to trim their share to 54 percent, they are far apart of revenue divide numbers with NBA management.
“We’ve talked extensively in ideas and concepts,” said players’ union president Derek Fisher of the Los Angeles Lakers. “These are things that if we can get into the range of, get into the zone of, then maybe we can put a deal together.”
The NBA has already called off 43 preseason games through the middle of next month and training camps that had been set to start on Monday. Two more weeks of preseason games are next on the cut list.
“The calendar is not our friend,” Stern said.
If a deal cannot be struck in time for the season to begin on Nov. 1, the league would have a shortened season for only the second time in its history after a 1998 financial dispute led to a season that was trimmed to 50 games each.
RECORD DEFEAT: The Shanghai-based ‘Oriental Sports Daily’ said the drubbing was so disastrous, and taste so bitter, that all that is left is ‘numbness’ Chinese soccer fans and media rounded on the national team yesterday after they experienced fresh humiliation in a 7-0 thrashing to rivals Japan in their opening Group C match in the third phase of Asian qualifying for the 2026 World Cup. The humiliation in Saitama on Thursday against Asia’s top-ranked team was China’s worst defeat in World Cup qualifying and only a goal short of their record 8-0 loss to Brazil in 2012. Chinese President Xi Jinping once said he wanted China to host and even win the World Cup one day, but that ambition looked further away than ever after a
‘KHELIFMANIA’: In the weeks since the Algerian boxer won gold in Paris, national enthusiasm is inspiring newfound interest in the sport, particularly among women In the weeks since Algeria’s Imane Khelif won an Olympic gold medal in women’s boxing, athletes and coaches in the North African nation say national enthusiasm is inspiring newfound interest in the sport, particularly among women. Khelif’s image is practically everywhere, featured in advertisements at airports, on highway billboards and in boxing gyms. The 25-year-old welterweight’s success in Paris has vaulted her to national hero status, especially after Algerians rallied behind her in the face of uninformed speculation about her gender and eligibility to compete. Amateur boxer Zougar Amina, a medical student who has been practicing for a year, called Khelif an
Crowds descended on the home of 17-year-old Chinese diver Quan Hongchan after she won two golds at the Paris Olympics while gymnast Zhang Boheng hid in a Beijing airport toilet to escape overzealous throngs of fans. They are just two recent examples of what state media are calling “toxic fandom” and Chinese authorities have vowed to crack down on it. Some of the adulation toward China’s sports stars has been more sinister — fans obsessing over athletes’ personal lives, cyberbullying opponents or slamming supposedly crooked judges. Experts say it mirrors the kind of behavior once reserved for entertainment celebrities before
GOING GLOBAL: The regular season fixture is part of the football league’s increasingly ambitious plans to spread the sport to international destinations The US National Football League (NFL) breaks new ground in its global expansion strategy tomorrow when the Philadelphia Eagles and Green Bay Packers face off in the first-ever grid-iron game staged in Brazil. For one night only, the land of Pele and ‘The Beautiful Game’ will get a rare glimpse into the bone-crunching world of American football as the Packers and Eagles collide at Sao Paulo’s Neo Quimica Arena, the 46,000-seat home of soccer club Corinthians. The regular season fixture is part of the NFL’s increasingly ambitious plans to spread the US’ most popular sport to new territories following previous international fixtures