The Official S2 NBA Lockout Thread!

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Nevertheless, those items tend to fall into place fast once there's agreement on the major issues.
 
#1 sign talks are not close to done for the night: Union to be joined by economist Kevin Murphy, who's not due for an hour.
 
Owners/players broke for dinner after 6 more hours of system talk. Next round of talks will center on BRI. Players intent on staying at 52%

If they're intent at staying at 52, then this ain't ending soon.
 
Maybe he couldn't get there in time. must be food at what he does for them to shut down talks cause he's not there!
 
Source said talks recently became "very slow", presumably on luxury tax stuff. Not getting any vibe about framework of deal tonight
 
Billy: "We're within striking distance...."

Fisher repeatedly has said that it is tougher now "AT THE END"
 
Initial word to us is that talks ending suddenly because union can't proceed w/BRI stuff without its economist, who won't arrive til the AM
 
Hunter says two sides were "wiped out" after long meeting last night, and would go as long as it takes on Friday.
 
sternq.png
 
David Stern standing in back of union's news conference, trading laughs with Hunter at podium. That's a first.
 
NBA's David Stern: "I can't tell you that we resolved anything in a big way, but there's an element of continuity."
 
Stern on tomorrow: "We're looking forward to seeing whether anything good can happpen."
 
Stern and Hunter both targeting Friday as the key day to push toward making a deal.
 
Wow. Stern says they have a real, concrete idea of what a new deal is going to look like. That's big.
 
Stern on whether need system framework before BRI: I think we'll get there tomorrow.
 
Stern says it will be a failure if sides don't reach a deal in the next couple days.
 
Stern: "There are no guarantees that we're going to get it done but we're going to give it one heck of a shot tomorrow."
 
Stern: We're prepared to negotiate over everything . We're looking forward to it. (when asked if prepared to make economic move.)
 
Mannix


Really, you can't help but be optimistic at this point.
 
Hollinger


Overall, I'd rate that press conference about an 8 out of 10 on the optimism scale.
 
Stern:

trade coming soon.
 
Maxey


one league source on current lockout talks: "have been told by a few teams that they expect to be ready to roll by nov.1st."...
 
HowardBeckNYT


One hint that NBA is planning for 82-game season: League is asking arenas to hold open dates in late April, to arena officials.
 
briancmahoney


My take: Today was largely a waiting day, tomorrow when it goes back to BRI talk is the sink or swim day. Just don't ask me which it'll be.
 
KBergCBS.........



Stern on labor deal: Friday's the day

NEW YORK – Setting up the next and most pivotal day in the NBA labor talks, negotiators will convene Friday with what commissioner David Stern described as “resolve” to finally close the gap and agree to the two key elements of a new collective bargaining agreement: the system and the split of revenues.

“I can’t tell you we’ve resolved anything in such a big way, but there’s an element of continuity, familiarity and I would hope trust that would enable us to look forward to (Friday), where we anticipate there will be some important and additional progress or not,” Stern said in a news conference Thursday night after a 7 1-2 hour bargaining session at a luxury Manhattan hotel.

“We’re looking forward to seeing whether something good can be made to happen,” Stern said.

After spending 22 1-2 hours over two days hammering out many of the details of a new system that the league believes will foster more competitive balance, the moment of truth has arrived – for the third time this month. Two times prior, the negotiators expressed confidence they were within striking distance of one or the other key issue – the system or the split – only to have the talks fall apart in spectacular fashion.

But according to several people involved in the negotiations or briefed on them, there has been a noticeable uptick in urgency to finally end the nearly four-month lockout, with the last realistic possibility to salvage games already canceled – and avoid canceling more – set to evaporate without a deal in the next several days.

In a moment of levity that also pointed to the importance of Friday’s bargaining session, Stern chimed in from the back of the room during union executive director Billy Hunter’s news conference when Hunter was asked when the important, difficult moves would be made to finally close the deal.

“Well, David Stern is sitting back there,” Hunter said. “I think he can probably tell you. Hopefully, sometime tomorrow.”

And right on cue, Stern shouted jovially from the back of the room, “Tomorrow!”

In another important moment from Thursday night’s separate news conferences – held only 18 hours after the 4 a.m. ET affairs earlier in the day – Stern was asked if the league was prepared to make another economic move Friday if necessary to get the deal done. The two sides are trying to agree on the framework of a new system of player contracts and team payrolls before proceeding with the final, most important, and interrelated piece of the negotiation: the split of BRI.
“We’re prepared to negotiate over everything,” Stern said. “We’re looking forward to it.”

The most recent formal proposals have the owners offering the players a 50-50 split of revenues, while the players have proposed a 52.5 percent share. The players received 57 percent under the previous six-year CBA. The split of revenues was not discussed Wednesday or Thursday, the parties said.

Deputy commissioner Adam Silver, who has maintained that the BRI split and system issues are “not necessarily related,” said Thursday night that “trades are often made when you have the final pieces of a deal that you need to put together.”

“We remain apart on both, so from that standpoint, we’re disapointed,” Silver said.

Hunter does not share Silver’s view that the split and system structure are unrelated, and those two viewpoints must collide one last time Friday with urgency to reach an agreement and preserve a full 82-game schedule at its highest point since the lockout began July 1.

“You definitely have to have some agreement on the system,” Hunter said. “Because if the system’s not right, then as we’ve indicated before, the number’s not going to work. And so the two are interrelated.”

But while there remain significant details to be resolved over a more punitive luxury tax system and other rules governing trades and contracts, Stern’s demeanor was decidedly upbeat after a second consecutive day of trying to bridge the bargaining gap in a small-group format that clearly has gained traction and momentum.

The rosters of negotiators were essentially the same as the 15-hour session held Wednesday into the early morning hours of Thursday. Stern, Silver, deputy general counsel Dan Rube, general counsel Richard Buchanan, labor relations committee chairman Peter Holt of the Spurs, Board of Governors chairman Glen Taylor of the Timberwolves, and James Dolan of the Knicks were joined by Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, who was flying through New York on his way home from Paris. Other than the absence of union economist Kevin Murphy (who will be present Friday) and the addition of vice president Roger Mason, the players’ contingent was intact with Hunter, president Derek Fisher, vice president Mo Evans, general counsel Ron Klempner and attorney Yared Alula.

With negative rhetoric at a minimum only a week after the negotiations collapsed last Thursday over the BRI split, team executives around the league were beginning to prepare for a deal to be consummated. Several team executives have postponed international scouting trips they'd normally take at this time of year so they can be in place if and when a deal is agreed to. If a deal is reached, it will take about 30 days before the regular season can begin: at least two weeks to write up the agreement and have it ratified by both sides, and at least a week each of free agency and training camps/preseason games.

But while Hunter said the two sides are "within striking distance of getting a deal" on the system issues and moving on to BRI, Silver cautioned that the two sides are "apart on both" the system and the split. Asked about the gap on the system issues, Stern said, "We are not close enough right now. But I expect with a good night’s sleep, we’ll both come in with resolve to get closer."

But team executives who've heard this twice before, only to see the talks blow up -- on Oct. 4 over the BRI split and Oct. 10 over the system -- remained cautiously optimistic Thursday. One executive confided that his gut tells him "this will blow up one more time." "

"There’s no guarantees we’ll get it done," Stern said. "But we’re going to give it one heck of a shot (Friday)."
 

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