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Who is making the dumber move here?


Author Poll
BasketballJones
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I get the feeling most UKers are more sympathetic to management/owners than players. But maybe I'm wrong. Poll time!

In your opinion, which entity is making the worse move here? Or are both parties being stupid? (Mutual assured destruction?)

12 votes
52.17%
Players
5 votes
21.74%
Owners
6 votes
26.09%
Both


Author Thread
AnubisADL
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11/14/2011  8:14 PM
Both are losing.

However, I now see owners like Cuban, Dolan, and Arison putting some heat on the hardline owners since they have more to lose. The players already agree on the 50/50 split which is HUGE for the owners. These other System concessions are a piss in the bucket for the owners.

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Sangfroid
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11/14/2011  8:24 PM
The owners are sticking it to the players throughly. Leave some shreds on the carcass of what was once a favorable agreement to the players end. 280 million back yearly to the owners for 10 years is a substantial give back. Not to mention the escrow (slush) fund that ensures the owners are never in the red again, no matter what foolish moves they make. We, the fans, should not have to put up with this crap, AND have to pay for the privilege.
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Moonangie
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11/14/2011  8:50 PM    LAST EDITED: 11/14/2011  11:59 PM
I side with the players, but both are making a terrible mistake. But I think the players negotiated in good faith and compromised a ton, whereas the owners are mostly douche bags.

The biggest loser, though, has to be Stern, at least as far as reputation goes.

The biggest winners? International leagues, since they will now have a opportunity to radically remake themselves as the NEW center of hoops. They will now have their pick of the best players from the USA. Heck, I might even watch a few games.

Nalod
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11/14/2011  10:45 PM
I am siding with the owners but I really don't like this current deal on the table and am ok with the players not taking this one, so Im kind of stuck.

The "freedom" aspect I don't like to be taken away but am ok with them making a bit less. Get in line, not everyone is making more money.

I guess I am split on the issues.

nixluva
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11/14/2011  10:56 PM
The players conceded the most as usual so I feel for the players but this is not a move I agree with. I think that 50% of 4 billion is better than 100% of nothing and that goes for both sides. The owners should never have let it come to this.

People don't realize how much this will cost the owners too! Credit ratings, franchise values and share prices will drop! What for?

crzymdups
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11/14/2011  11:15 PM
this whole thing was one of the stupidest displays i have ever seen. both sides displayed unbelievable arrogance and probably both think they got the last laugh. i wonder when they'll wake the hell up and realize the only thing they did was vaporize the $4 BILLION the NBA would have made this year.
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Nalod
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11/15/2011  12:06 AM
crzymdups wrote:this whole thing was one of the stupidest displays i have ever seen. both sides displayed unbelievable arrogance and probably both think they got the last laugh. i wonder when they'll wake the hell up and realize the only thing they did was vaporize the $4 BILLION the NBA would have made this year.

4 billion will go elsewhere. Its not lost.
SupremeCommander
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11/15/2011  5:11 AM
I think they're both losing. I think the players are losing more though.

This business really isn't a business and the owners will make money at their true business. The players need this and they only have 10-15 years to make money *best case*. That's a substantial loss of lifetime earnings.

But, whatever. I have football, hockey, college basketball, and the winter meetings to follow. Fuck these guys

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Markji
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11/15/2011  6:14 AM    LAST EDITED: 11/15/2011  6:16 AM
Both sides.

Selfish - Selfish - Selfish.

Me - Me - Me.

I want - I want - I want.

What about the tens of thousands of innocent, working class people who have been put out of work, or lost significant income, due to the selfishness of both the rich owners and well-to-do players. Or the cities that spent hundreds of millions of dollars to build arenas for the NBA not to play in now.

The difference between fiction and reality? Fiction has to make sense. Tom Clancy - author
jrodmc
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11/15/2011  9:07 AM
Players get paid to play. Extremely handsomely. Please don't feed me the shiiit that they have a limited window, the spectre of injury, the uniqueness of their skill set, blah blah blah. I play pick up ball with a guy who lasted a year or two with the Nets; he's as dumb as a post, but he managed to take care of what he made and now he's living the life. 15 acre horsefarm and a McMansion and a couple of no-show jobs and fund raising gigs. Do I begrudge him for what he has? No. And neither do I begrudge owners who have hundreds of millions and employ tens of thousands with a team that they own. The player dude can't help it that he's 6'11" and Jimmie Dolan can't help it that he was born rich.

The NBA is a league of teams, not players. This is not golf, it's not tennis, it's not movie making. While your select cream at the top of the player A-list may have their own brand and may have aspirations of personal empire building, bottom line is they are employees of teams that are owned by owners that belong to a league. If you work for Walmart and their CFO decides it will look good on the balance sheet and be part of his bid for Financial Wizard of the Year to cut your benefits, you can beeatch and moan, you can accept it and be happy you have a job, or you can go work somewhere else. That's freedom in a market-based, capitalist society. Welcome to reality. The rest of the "it's not fair" syndrome is a batch of entitlement driven, victim mentality BS.

As has been stated several million times over the course of this major cluster dump of a lockout, the owners own the keys, not the players. You don't like the NBA, go play somewhere else. Oh, and have fun and don't get hurt, since it seems they don't pay that well in Turkey and Israel and China. Especially over the long haul. Why haven't more players followed Deron?; precisely because it's awfully tough to play overseas while you're staring over your shoulder hoping the real thing comes back. Poor Kobe. Only 1 million or so a month; how's he gonna feed his kids?

What I don't understand, is why haven't we seen scab players yet? Let the Stats and Melos go overseas, and move all the NBDL guys and undrafteds up, cut ticket prices and run a minor league operation for this year. At least the thousands of workers could go back to work.

Bonn1997
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11/15/2011  9:57 AM
That's freedom in a market-based, capitalist society

Therein lies the fundamental problem
jrodmc
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11/15/2011  11:16 AM
Bonn1997 wrote:
That's freedom in a market-based, capitalist society

Therein lies the fundamental problem

This just in from Russia: it still appears communism isn't working.

China left a message: they will start printing your money for you starting next week. Yet, for some reason, there's not a long line of people trying to get into the People's Republic.

EuroUnion: Greece and Italy on sale, Cheap!

Bonn1997
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11/15/2011  11:32 AM
jrodmc wrote:
Bonn1997 wrote:
That's freedom in a market-based, capitalist society

Therein lies the fundamental problem

This just in from Russia: it still appears communism isn't working.

China left a message: they will start printing your money for you starting next week. Yet, for some reason, there's not a long line of people trying to get into the People's Republic.

EuroUnion: Greece and Italy on sale, Cheap!


Yeah, full-scale communism is about as bad as our unregulated capitalism on steroids.
Nalod
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11/15/2011  11:48 AM

Welfare states in Eurozone don't work. It was a nice dream: 32 hour work week and retire with full benefits at age 52. 6 week vacation too!
Moonangie
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11/15/2011  12:26 PM
jrodmc wrote:Players get paid to play. Extremely handsomely. Please don't feed me the shiiit that they have a limited window, the spectre of injury, the uniqueness of their skill set, blah blah blah. I play pick up ball with a guy who lasted a year or two with the Nets; he's as dumb as a post, but he managed to take care of what he made and now he's living the life. 15 acre horsefarm and a McMansion and a couple of no-show jobs and fund raising gigs. Do I begrudge him for what he has? No. And neither do I begrudge owners who have hundreds of millions and employ tens of thousands with a team that they own. The player dude can't help it that he's 6'11" and Jimmie Dolan can't help it that he was born rich.

The NBA is a league of teams, not players. This is not golf, it's not tennis, it's not movie making. While your select cream at the top of the player A-list may have their own brand and may have aspirations of personal empire building, bottom line is they are employees of teams that are owned by owners that belong to a league. If you work for Walmart and their CFO decides it will look good on the balance sheet and be part of his bid for Financial Wizard of the Year to cut your benefits, you can beeatch and moan, you can accept it and be happy you have a job, or you can go work somewhere else. That's freedom in a market-based, capitalist society. Welcome to reality. The rest of the "it's not fair" syndrome is a batch of entitlement driven, victim mentality BS.

As has been stated several million times over the course of this major cluster dump of a lockout, the owners own the keys, not the players. You don't like the NBA, go play somewhere else. Oh, and have fun and don't get hurt, since it seems they don't pay that well in Turkey and Israel and China. Especially over the long haul. Why haven't more players followed Deron?; precisely because it's awfully tough to play overseas while you're staring over your shoulder hoping the real thing comes back. Poor Kobe. Only 1 million or so a month; how's he gonna feed his kids?

What I don't understand, is why haven't we seen scab players yet? Let the Stats and Melos go overseas, and move all the NBDL guys and undrafteds up, cut ticket prices and run a minor league operation for this year. At least the thousands of workers could go back to work.

You make a very good case here re: reality. I have a hard time arguing against it, even though I hate it vehemently. In a lot of ways, the players are making a foolish move here, but there is still a possibility that the owners come back again in the next few days with a slightly more reasonable offer. If not, foolish or not, the players can always tell them to fo *bleep* themselves.

Also, your "minor league" idea is very smart and could be the start of a permanent minor league that becomes an opportunity mill for lesser players to earn some scratch and get exposure. The NBA really needs such a thing and this could be a good time to implement it.

Moonangie
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11/15/2011  12:37 PM    LAST EDITED: 11/15/2011  12:39 PM
Another point-of-view in today's Times...

November 15, 2011
For the N.B.A., the Battle Goes to Court
By LYNN ZINSER
The N.B.A.’s idiocy finally hit the big fan on Monday, spraying whatever tiny shards remained of the league’s credibility into the ether. The players finally had enough of the league’s collective “bargaining” and hit the red button sitting in front of them, even as you got the sense they had no idea what the red button meant. To them, it represented their only way to fight back against owners intent on crushing them and braying about it afterward.

Yes, if you read the exasperated reactions to the news that the players decided to dissolve the union, there is plenty of blame to go around on all sides. Michael Wilbon of ESPN.com gives each side a dose of anger, and Ian Thomsen of SI.com argues that each will regret their brinkmanship. Clearly, it took two to turn a tango into an M.M.A. brawl. But please do save extra scorn for the owners. After all, this is a lockout, which means at heart, it is the owners’ baby. They are billionaires screaming to be saved from the countless bad decisions the old system let them make. Sure, it’s hard to feel sympathy for players making millions, but they do have relatively short careers and windows to capitalize on their talents. Owners can keep screwing things up well into their golden years.

The worst part of it all, writes Adrian Wojnarowski on Yahoo.com, is that a deal was all but reached when the owners and Commissioner David Stern doubled down on the bully tactics, and ego and a lack of leadership on both sides turned it into doomsday. Jason Whitlock of Foxsports.com believes that the league used the news media to turn the sentiment against the players, but went too far. So the players reacted with whatever weapon they could reach for, but even they, as Ken Berger writes on CBSSports.com, are unlikely to understand what they have wrought. The fate of the season and the labor deal will now rest with the courts, and sits largely in the hands of a lawyer, David Boies, who a few months ago was arguing for the N.F.L. that decertification by the N.F.L. players union was illegal. It’s a lawyer’s version of playing Twister...

DrAlphaeus
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11/15/2011  1:02 PM    LAST EDITED: 11/15/2011  1:03 PM
Reading the "it's not personal, it's business" posts from a lot of you guys has definitely toned down my emotional pro-player approach to the issue. I just think the pro-owner — or pro-"reality" — folks need to do the same. The owners hold the keys to the truck they own, but they can't load it, drive it, and unload it themselves. So great, they now have a truck they own that carries no payload.

Their franchises are worth what they are because the league currently has a virtual monopoly of the world's most talented & entertaining players. Replacement players will cause revenues, team values and sponsorships to plummet. So obviously the Walmart comparison falls flat: you can't just hand Kobe's blue smock to the next person who fills out an application. A percentage of the players are elite practitioners of their craft and aren't replaceable: at least not immediately due to labor law, and not practically in terms of common sense. Even obscenely-paid employees are protected by labor law. We aren't the ones who decide whether the NBA has broken any laws, the courts are.

I don't know who is making the dumber move because I can't predict the future. Both parties are playing their hands, led by the most "hardline" members of their constituencies. So while I should not begrudge the owners for what they own, I can't begrudge the players for their position either. And I think it's easier to make the argument that the players have a "nobler" cause, in trying to make a deal that's fair for the future players who aren't even in the league yet. The owners are only thinking about future owners in terms of profits from a team sale... or maybe they are thinking of future owners in terms of their heirs. Who knows.

Baba Booey 2016 — "It's Silly Season"
jrodmc
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11/15/2011  1:36 PM
Worldviews can be a terrible thing.

Players thinking about future player salaries are noble, owners thinking about future owner's/heirs profits are evil.

And the Walmart analogy wasn't that Walmart would be the same quality without better employee benefits; the analogy pertains to the fact that the players think they should have equal share in running an asylum that they don't own.
Who's loading or unloading the truck and the forecasted value of the owner's now empty truck isn't the point. Would Kobe be Kobe if there was no NBA? Can you tell me honestly that you'd be rabidly following the Italian League if that's where he'd been for the last decade?

Nalod
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11/15/2011  1:39 PM
DrAlphaeus wrote:Reading the "it's not personal, it's business" posts from a lot of you guys has definitely toned down my emotional pro-player approach to the issue. I just think the pro-owner — or pro-"reality" — folks need to do the same. The owners hold the keys to the truck they own, but they can't load it, drive it, and unload it themselves. So great, they now have a truck they own that carries no payload.

Their franchises are worth what they are because the league currently has a virtual monopoly of the world's most talented & entertaining players. Replacement players will cause revenues, team values and sponsorships to plummet. So obviously the Walmart comparison falls flat: you can't just hand Kobe's blue smock to the next person who fills out an application. A percentage of the players are elite practitioners of their craft and aren't replaceable: at least not immediately due to labor law, and not practically in terms of common sense. Even obscenely-paid employees are protected by labor law. We aren't the ones who decide whether the NBA has broken any laws, the courts are.

I don't know who is making the dumber move because I can't predict the future. Both parties are playing their hands, led by the most "hardline" members of their constituencies. So while I should not begrudge the owners for what they own, I can't begrudge the players for their position either. And I think it's easier to make the argument that the players have a "nobler" cause, in trying to make a deal that's fair for the future players who aren't even in the league yet. The owners are only thinking about future owners in terms of profits from a team sale... or maybe they are thinking of future owners in terms of their heirs. Who knows.

well put! THe agents are really driving this thing now and thats very scarey. They are the usual suspects when it comes to the irrational.

For all we know the owners may just been wanting this all along figuring the deal they really want would be faced with bad relations but if you take it to the courts then a 3rd party decides and thats the end of that. Seems from various articles that players don't really know what to expect from the actions but think the owners would cave if put under pressure.

The owners seem to be negotiating as if to demonstrate good faith. Not getting your way does not constitute good faith, coming to the table does. I'd even say the Union never put it to vote and there seems to be some cracks in the union that would have liked to have voted. Im not sure the union can demonstrate good faith themselves. I don' know.

The league has a virtual monopoly because of the CBA and the money it pays. League owns the TV contract, the teams and controls the leases on the buildings. Cities voted to help them fund, and free enterprise sprang up to capture the game goers by putting up restaurants and bars. Nobody forced them to do so. I feel bad for them. Business is tough enough!

I suppose a new league can now be formed if so inclined. Can't imagine how that flies. NY team can play in the Meadowlands or the Nassau Coliseaum! No private jets, no state of the art private owned practice facility, no big fat contracts either.

I don't think replacement players are in the mix but if there was ever any way to it the players just opened that up. Some players will cross over and play, and once that happens others will follow suit.

If some do, then it blows a hole in their arguement.

I hope the players know what they are doing!

DrAlphaeus
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11/15/2011  1:48 PM
jrodmc wrote:Worldviews can be a terrible thing.

Players thinking about future player salaries are noble, owners thinking about future owner's/heirs profits are evil.

And the Walmart analogy wasn't that Walmart would be the same quality without better employee benefits; the analogy pertains to the fact that the players think they should have equal share in running an asylum that they don't own.
Who's loading or unloading the truck and the forecasted value of the owner's now empty truck isn't the point. Would Kobe be Kobe if there was no NBA? Can you tell me honestly that you'd be rabidly following the Italian League if that's where he'd been for the last decade?

I put noble in quote, tongue was firmly planted in cheek. Good point about Kobe though. I might be following local playground ball or academic ball instead though.

Baba Booey 2016 — "It's Silly Season"
Who is making the dumber move here?

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