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http://deadspin.com/the-nba-players-union-just-announced-its-ready-to-make-1690834612#
The National Basketball Players' Association announced today that it has rejected the league's "cap smoothing" proposal, an idea floated by commissioner Adam Silver that was supposed to be an artful way of dealing with the massive influx of cash that will be coming into the league once the new TV deals kick in. The NBPA's decision to reject the proposal brings far-reaching implications, and is just the latest signal that Michele Roberts's union actually means business.
What it means for the cap
The NBA's current $930 million per year TV rights deals expire after the 2015-16 season, at which point the league's new deal—worth $2.6 billion per year—will kick in, bringing with it a spectacularly large flood of cash. That big of an increase in revenue would have a profound effect on the league's salary cap, because the cap figure is an agreed-upon percentage of league revenue. This season's salary cap sits at $63.065 million, but that would jump to an estimated $88 million in 2016, once all those TV billions start flowing into the league's coffers. That $25 million or so jump is huge—you can fit an entire LeBron James salary in there with about $5 million left over.
The National Basketball Players' Association announced today that it has rejected the league's "cap smoothing" proposal, an idea floated by commissioner Adam Silver that was supposed to be an artful way of dealing with the massive influx of cash that will be coming into the league once the new TV deals kick in. The NBPA's decision to reject the proposal brings far-reaching implications, and is just the latest signal that Michele Roberts's union actually means business.
What it means for the cap
The NBA's current $930 million per year TV rights deals expire after the 2015-16 season, at which point the league's new deal—worth $2.6 billion per year—will kick in, bringing with it a spectacularly large flood of cash. That big of an increase in revenue would have a profound effect on the league's salary cap, because the cap figure is an agreed-upon percentage of league revenue. This season's salary cap sits at $63.065 million, but that would jump to an estimated $88 million in 2016, once all those TV billions start flowing into the league's coffers. That $25 million or so jump is huge—you can fit an entire LeBron James salary in there with about $5 million left over.

