HailBlazers
RipCity
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Plenty of blame to go around
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/writers/sam_amick/11/15/nba.labor/index.html?sct=nba_t11_a0
Senseless NBA players, owners will look back on lockout with regret
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/20...nba.players.disband/index.html?sct=nba_t11_a1
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/writers/sam_amick/11/15/nba.labor/index.html?sct=nba_t11_a0
The players offered concession after concession...But instead of looking forward to the start of a 72-game season, we're left with this: a group of NBA players, who felt not only defeated but disrespected in this two-year process
I would be shocked if the owners blink here, perhaps calling up the players' new lawyer, David Boies, to sweeten the proposal pot and put an end to this madness. The owners will keep the gas on no matter how much damage they do -- not just to the players and the game, but to the cities with publicly funded arenas that depend on the revenue and the workers who silently suffer in these already tough times. And whether it's months or perhaps even years down the road, the players who will have paid the price will need to lick their wounds and have an overhaul of their own.
Senseless NBA players, owners will look back on lockout with regret
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/20...nba.players.disband/index.html?sct=nba_t11_a1
You may feel more anger for the owners or for the players, but if you are a fan of basketball then the bottom line is that you are angry with everybody who had anything to do with the fact that there is $4 billion in revenue on the table and they can't even talk any longer about how to share it.
For the NBA owners and players to shut down their league during the worst economic times in more than 60 years has got to be the dumbest thing they could imagine doing.
How in the imagination of any reasonable person could a player in the highest-paid league in the history of mankind begin to compare the terms of this $4 billion negotiation against the people who are unable to feed their families, who have lost their homes to foreclosure and who believe they have been neglected by employers and government?
Here is the fundamental problem, and I believe 99 percent of you will agree with me: The owners and players share too much in common. People on each side of the table believe absolutely that they are in the right, that they won't be dictated to, and that they would rather see no season in 2011-12 than to surrender to their partners-turned-enemies.

