Gyp Rosetti
Banned
I'm curious if anyone truly knows whether the Millers, all business included, made money last year. I'm also curious if the Jazz did. I gotta think yes on the latter but I believe the NBA said they lost 300M last year.
Some of the NBA owners don't care if they lose money.
Like Cuban, etc. They have huge reserves to draw from.
They are in it to win championships.
But NBA owners cry about their collective situation.
Tradtionally the Jazz score well on the P&L statement for a small market team with no NHL franchise sharing their arena. In part it is because the team has scant debt and owns EnergySolutions Arena. Last season the team posted a loss though as the Jazz were a luxury tax payer for the first time thanks to its high payroll. In addition to paying a $3.1 million tax, the Jazz were ineligible to receive the $3.7 million check that all non-tax paying teams received. The team remained the sixth-highest NBA team in attendance during the 2009-10 season with an average gate of 19,378. The Jazz also have seen their ratings on Fox Sports Net Utah continually increase the past two years. Through December of this year the team averaged a 6.3 rating, up 50% from last year, and the network has already topped a 9.0 rating on three occasions, matching last year's full-season total.
Yeah that seems about right. Last year's paid attendance was down to 19,049 and they had no playoff games either - although with the uniform change they did probably make some extra money in merchandise sales. Can't imagine they turned in a profit with their high payroll.https://www.forbes.com/lists/2010/32/basketball-valuations-11_Utah-Jazz_322274.html
Now this was for the 09-10 season. So I think the salaries were fairly close to the same and the attendance and other income was a bit lower with the poor season. Jazz were definitely in the Luxury Tax zone. So if the Forbes formula is right they did lose a pretty decent chunk of change last year.
Anytime you pay the max to average AK's numbers and then miss many games due to injury en route to the lottery you're bound to lose money.
He also never spent as much money on salaries as Greg has been willing to the past couple of seasons.Also just for informations sake: if you read LHM's book, you know that the Jazz turned a profit every single year that he was alive. Just saying.
The Jazz lost money every year before he was the owner. I think by the 2nd season he was the full owner the Jazz turned a profit.
Most owners don't care if they lose short-term since the major profit is realized on the back end in terms of appreciation. Buy a team for several hundred million, hold for 10 years and the franchise doubles or triples in value. Whatever the Millers paid for the Jazz will be made up in spades when they sell the team and related assets. As long as cash flow isn't a problem, there's no need to fret if they "lose" $10-$15M/per. Besides, the $300M figure is what Stern WANTS us to believe. There are other revenues that aren't factored in and write-offs that probably offset a lot of that. I'm not on the side of the players but the losses are BS. I do however, favor a harder cap and a system that makes player movement more difficult - perhaps a greater difference between what the original club can offer vs. what a player can make signing with another team.Some of the NBA owners don't care if they lose money.
Like Cuban, etc. They have huge reserves to draw from.
They are in it to win championships.
But NBA owners cry about their collective situation.