Chris-L
Well-Known Member
...this is about hip hop, posses, strip clubs, illegitimate babies, capping people, jailhouse tats, AND money!
Hey, there's that guy.
...this is about hip hop, posses, strip clubs, illegitimate babies, capping people, jailhouse tats, AND money!
My understanding is that revenue sharing has been discussed. I don't know what they agreed to.The CBA is with the league. What happens to the money after that is their problem. Moreover, we're moving more and more to systems like MLB and the NFL, who have revenue sharing. Why haven't the teams agreed on a plan like that yet if they're working towards a hard cap?
No, I'm a fan who believes that (1) a union who still ends up with average salaries far above that of any other major sport and (2) that the real sticking points heavily affect the superstars (and their agents) who feared that the existing deal would actually be approved if it had been put to a vote, so the whiny elites whispering in D-Fish's ear stopped that very unionesque step from happening.You're either a true employee who has completely given in to never having any say in his company, or a business owner who expects his employees to live this way and doesn't understand a union.
In terms of your self-assessment of your financial acumen, I can't say I disagree with you. However, I invite you to research the concepts of ROI from both an operational and investment capital ("exit value") standpoint.This only shows a definition, not how it applies. I'm no financial genius by any stretch of the imagination, but the fact that they can buy a franchise for one price, and sell if for a higher amount tells me if you lose money, it's only pretend money you never had in the first place.
The problem is that the owners' profitability was not satisfactory, and the players' profitability (average salary) was exorbitant on both a relative basis and an absolute basis. Just like a union protects employees from getting hosed, an agreement among partner-owners protects the owners. And "hosed" does not equal a $5 million average salary.100% correct. If the players would have given in before a lockout there would be no damage. But on the other side of that, if the Owners would have given in before the CBA expired there would be no damage. It is at least as much the owners fault as the players fault.
From a financial standpoint, I believe accountants more than the Sporting News.Huh... an NBA story, illustrating the NBA loosing money, from NBA.com, just before labor agreements start. Imagine that. And you totally missed my statement entirely.
Fitting that your opinion is from something that is six weeks old.I want a season just as bad as anyone on this board. Really. But both sides have to negotiate, and I'm not seeing that out of the owners. This really sums up my opinion on the matter.
Women: lose > loose?
Still true?
Fitting that your opinion is from something that is six weeks old.
The players have already agreed to take a cut of more than 10% in their salaries. Anyone who sides with billionaires operating in a cartel, who frequently receive handouts from local and state governments, and have been completely unwilling to suffer ANY losses during the worst economic downturn since the depression (instead demanding that their employees subsidize any and all risk they could possibly bare) needs to consider just how brainwashed they are.Anyone who sides with the players, who are making more money in one year than most of us will make in our entires lives, who complain when there are people without homes, jobs, and health insurance, and who refuse to take a "cut" in the face of economic hard times that is leading to more people without jobs and other necessities, needs to reevaluate their role models and priorities.
If you are referring to this Forbes article, then it doesn't lend much credence to your feeble claim about profitability. This article underscores the string of losses and claims that revenue sharing is the only way to profitability. [Or to bring the players' salaries in line with other leagues, at least BRI-wise.]I'd hardly call Forbes a "sporting news" source.... and oh damn! The owners sure "stuck it out" to keep their company going. They sure have given up so much.
What has changed is that it has become more clear that the agents and superstars hijacked the negotiations, as evidenced by the fact that the NBA proposal wasn't even put to a vote, some players weren't even contacted about the proposal, and that the NBA proposal still would've given the players the highest average salary among major professional team sports. By far.If something would have changed in six weeks, I'd be glad to review. The only differences now, is a federal mediator came in and couldn't get anything done, owners gave an ultimatum rather than further negotiations, players called their bluff and de-certified, forcing the owners back to the table with new offers. Which is where we are now. SHOULD my opinion have changed over the last six weeks?
Isn't a union kind of like a cartel, too?The players have already agreed to take a cut of more than 10% in their salaries. Anyone who sides with billionaires operating in a cartel,
. . . which has enabled the players to receive higher salaries than they otherwise would have received . . .who frequently receive handouts from local and state governments,
. . . except that they already have suffered losses--a majority of the teams have, in fact. Including our beloved Utah Jazz.and have been completely unwilling to suffer ANY losses during the worst economic downturn since the depression
The strength of your lamentation relies in part on whether their salaries were in line with comparable employees in other entities. However, their salaries were far about that, so your claim is bunk. BTW, is it really a subsidy if the players aren't paying anything--and if the remainder of their salaries are intact, above-average and still relatively guaranteed? Sounds more like bringing costs in line, which still doesn't happen even at 50/50.(instead demanding that their employees subsidize any and all risk they could possibly bare) needs to consider just how brainwashed they are.
Whole lotta "rich people never do wrong" bologna