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?
My understanding is that revenue sharing has been discussed. I don't know what they agreed to.
https://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/7147909/nba-lockout-owners-discussing-revenue-sharing-sources-say
Your argument would carry (more) weight if the NBA average salaries were anywhere near those of the MLB and NFL.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
From a financial standpoint, I believe accountants more than the Sporting News.
But as I have stated, it is not important whether the NBA made money or lost money. If the NBA were swimming in profits and still wanted to bring down the player take in line with other leagues and limit player hijacking of the league, that's plenty understandable.
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.
Fitting that your opinion is from something that is six weeks old.
And the owners gave in all the way through the 10-year term, ratcheting up salaries to ridiculous levels. Now they want protection from that so that agents and players can't demand it. The proposal with 25% of payroll being placed as maximum payout to a superstar (vs. the 30% that agents--I mean the players--demand) is more than fair--perhaps still too excessive. The other 12 or 13 on the roster shouldn't have to share the other 70% or 75%. If Joe player were more educated, then they'd be demanding an audience from their own (dissolved) union. Now that the union is semi-dissolved, the elites and agents probably have even more power.
It's a free country. The NBA players don't have to sign it. They can fight for contracts overseas for 1/3 to 1/2 the amount. They can try to start their own league. And the owners can rebuild it from scratch without having to deal with whiny superstars and their agents demanding a whopping 30% of payroll for their star player.
This is all about the agents and the elites taking the owners hostage, and the journeymen not speaking up enough to get a deal done, partly because their representatives did not speak to them. The majority of the NBA is non-superstars for whom having more flexibility to go into the big cities might be nice but not nearly as beneficial to their careers as getting ont he court for a meager few million for a few years.
Even if it's in Charlotte.