mook
The 2018-19 season was the best I've seen
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http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/ian_thomsen/02/13/stern.all.star/index.html
Hard to believe the players won't eventually cave on this. You compare their salaries to any other sport and it's hard to argue they aren't being overpaid.
Of course, on the flip side the owners are still seeing the value of their team appreciate. So while they may not make money on a franchise, they can always register huge gains just by selling to some other well-healed organization or person who wants the ego trip of owning an NBA franchise.
David Stern's smile was meant to take the edge off his knifing statement."This year,'' the NBA commissioner told reporters in Dallas on Saturday, "we are projecting a league-wide loss of about $400 million."
A $400-million loss cannot be expressed as good news, and in the context of Stern's initial negotiations Friday with the players' union, it rang out like the gavel of a judge as he sternly regained control of the proceedings. Over the previous four years, added Stern, the league has been losing at least $200 million annually.
The current collective bargaining agreement is supposed to be paying the players 57 percent, but league sources say they are raking in more than 60 percent thanks to the excessive salaries paid out by the 13 franchises that have surpassed the luxury-tax threshhold this season.
....
Hunter had acknowledged the union would respond with its own proposal after hearing Stern suggest that the players accept salary cuts equal to 40 percent of revenues, as well as partially guaranteed contracts no longer than four years and a hard cap. That wish-list was so off-base, said Hunter, that the owners agreed to "tear up" the proposal and start over.....
Stern has promised to open all of the books and let the players see the red ink for themselves. Both sides can argue all they want, but nothing can change these two starting points: The owners can withstand an anticipated 2011 lockout far longer than the players, and the public will ultimately support a reduction in player salaries.
....
In other words, Stern is going to tighten the message that is coming from his side of the bargaining table.
"We will manage to get to a place where we always get to," he Stern. "There is always a deal, and we plan to make a deal this time, too."
An eventual deal? Definitely. A lockout after next season? Highly likely.
Hard to believe the players won't eventually cave on this. You compare their salaries to any other sport and it's hard to argue they aren't being overpaid.
Of course, on the flip side the owners are still seeing the value of their team appreciate. So while they may not make money on a franchise, they can always register huge gains just by selling to some other well-healed organization or person who wants the ego trip of owning an NBA franchise.

