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david falk's blunt warning about the future of the nba
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djsunyc
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2/23/2009  10:22 AM
Powerful Agent’s Blunt Warning About Future of the N.B.A.
By HOWARD BECK
Published: February 22, 2009

David Falk speaks in adages and anecdotes, every catchphrase and tale conveying a lesson from nearly four decades as an elite N.B.A. agent. The stories come in rapid-fire fashion, their themes accentuated by an All-Star cast of characters, including Michael Jordan, Patrick Ewing and David Stern.

As Falk intently delivers this oral history, the lessons coalesce in one stark, alarming prediction: the N.B.A. and its players are heading for a profound labor battle.

The nation’s economy is buckling. Too many teams are losing money. League revenue is flat, and the salary cap is about to shrink for only the second time in its history.

The N.B.A.’s system is broken, Falk says, and fixing it will require radical measures that almost guarantee a standoff in 2011, when the collective bargaining agreement expires.

“I think it’s going to be very, very extreme,” Falk said, “because I think that the times are extreme.”

How extreme? Falk said he believed Stern, the commissioner, would push for a hard salary cap, shorter contracts, a higher age limit on incoming players, elimination of the midlevel cap exception and an overall reduction in the players’ percentage of revenue. And, Falk said, Stern will probably get what he wants.

“The owners have the economic wherewithal to shut the thing down for two years, whatever it takes, to get a system that will work long term,” he said in an extensive interview to discuss his new book. “The players do not have the economic wherewithal to sit out one year.”

Falk’s comments will surely irritate the players union and many of his fellow agents. But then, his new book is called “The Bald Truth” for reasons beyond his smooth head.

In 35 years as an N.B.A. agent — and for much of that time, its most powerful agent — Falk has earned a reputation for brutal honesty. In fact, Chapter 3 of his book is titled, “Blunt is Beautiful — Stay True to You.”

In recounting the twists and turns of his career, Falk critiques N.B.A. owners, other agents, former clients and even his mentor, Donald Dell, who gave Falk his start at ProServ in 1974.

Nothing is as striking, however, as his bleak assessment of the N.B.A.’s economic system. Falk’s view matters more than most. Throughout the 1980s and ’90s, he was the N.B.A.’s top power broker, as the adviser to Jordan, Ewing, Alonzo Mourning, Dikembe Mutombo and a host of other stars. He sold his agency, FAME, for $100 million in 1998, but he reopened it in 2007 as a boutique agency.

Falk despairs over the current state of the agent industry, saying “there’s rampant cheating going on” and “the quality of the representation is low.” He blames the union, which certifies agents but provides almost no oversight. A union spokesman declined to comment.

While Falk is no longer the most active agent, he remains highly influential. He is still close to Jordan — now a minority owner of the Charlotte Bobcats — and represents a handful of stars, including Mutombo, Elton Brand and Mike Bibby. (His client list also includes Duke Coach Mike Krzyzewski and the former Georgetown coach John Thompson.)

Sometimes a foe of Stern, Falk is also an unabashed admirer, calling him “the greatest commissioner in the history of professional sports.” Falk does not seem nearly as impressed with Billy Hunter, the executive director of the National Basketball Players Association. The two have had a tense relationship. Falk foresees a rout in the next round of negotiations.

In a joint appearance during All-Star weekend, Stern and Hunter acknowledged the dire state of the economy and its effect on the N.B.A. Stern said publicly for the first time that the salary cap — which is tied to league revenue — would probably decline next season. Privately, league officials are bracing for a major decline in the cap in the 2010-11 season. Stern and Hunter said they had begun preliminary talks for a new labor deal.

Their conciliatory tone sounded promising, but Falk seemed skeptical. In his view, the union botched negotiations in 1998, which led to the three-month lockout, the only labor stoppage in league history. The union tried to stave off a luxury tax and maximum player salaries but ultimately had to accept both in order to strike a deal in January 1999 and save the season.

“The players lost 40 percent of their salaries, and they got a worse deal in January,” Falk said. “So as we approach 2011, my overwhelming feeling is, let’s not make the same dumb mistake as in 1998.”

The players, he said, must recognize that the owners have the ultimate leverage. Many are billionaires for whom owning an N.B.A. team is merely a pricey hobby. Some of them are losing “enormous amounts of money” and would rather shut down the league for a year or two than continue with the current system.

So Falk is urging the union to take a more cooperative approach.

“And if we don’t do that, in my opinion, there’s an overwhelming probability that the owners will shut it down,” he said.

Naturally, Falk has strong opinions about what is ailing the league. He believes too many average players make too much money, while the stars — Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, Dwyane Wade — do not make enough. Falk would eliminate the cap for the superstars and, at the other end, abolish the midlevel exception, which allows teams to give $30 million deals to role players.

Unlike most of his peers, and the union leadership, Falk is an advocate of the age limit, which Stern won during collective bargaining negotiations in 2005. Falk said the limit, now 19 years old, should be raised to 20 or 21.

His reasons are purely practical. The influx of underclassmen to the N.B.A. has eroded fan familiarity and the quality of play, Falk said. An age limit will create more polished and prepared rookies, while the N.C.A.A. provides free advertising for future N.B.A. stars.

“The single biggest factor contributing to the success of the N.B.A. over the last almost 30 years has been the N.C.A.A tournament,” he said, listing a dozen great moments in tournament history. “Every guy in that era, from ’79 to about ’95, who came in the N.B.A., all the fans knew on a first-name basis. It got to the point, when Duke won twice in the ’90s, people said they knew how Grant Hill wore his socks.”

Changes to the salary cap and the age limit sound like sacrifices from the player’s side. Falk does not see it that way. To understand his view, consider an early chapter from his own career.

Early in his relationship with Jordan, Falk offered to drastically cut his marketing fee in exchange for an upfront payment on his negotiating fee. Jordan was initially resistant, but he agreed when he realized the arrangement would save him $10 million over the long term.

As Falk tells it, his boss, Dell, was aghast. But to Falk, the gesture was about gaining Jordan’s trust and loyalty, which would pay dividends in the long term.

“There wasn’t anything better I could have done with $10 million at that time,” Falk writes.

That, essentially, is the message he has for the players union. The players and the owners have effectively been partners since the salary cap was instituted in 1982. The players’ earnings are dependent on the league’s financial health. And in Falk’s view, the players will have to make short-term concessions if they want the league to thrive.

“The only logical way over the next 25 years that players are going to make more money is to grow the pie,” Falk said.

Of course, in his opinion, the players will have little choice but to give the owners what they want. The situation, Falk said, is analogous to the negotiations he conducted on Jordan’s behalf with the Chicago Bulls in 1984. Jordan held all of the leverage, and the Bulls knew it.

Falk recalls the statement made by Rod Thorn, then the Bulls’ general manager, on the occasion of Jordan’s signing: “There was a lot of give and take in these negotiations. We gave, and they took.”
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djsunyc
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2/23/2009  10:25 AM
2010 plan could be in serious jeopardy for many teams.

if there's a $50 mil hard cap, how do you tie yourself up to a free agent making $17-20 mil of that? teams may have to make a big splash this offseason and hope for a sign and trade with pieces already in place. b/c if you strip down and just clear space to sign a big name, it's going to be tough to surround him with quality players unless there's a drastic shift in contracts and guy's prices go way way down.

from the knicks POV, i think they have to re-sign lee and utilize expirings to make a sign and trade this summer...
Cosmic
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2/23/2009  10:26 AM
I don't see how Stern will get all that to go through. It'd be nice if he did but I can't see it happening.

Meanwhile, as pointed out, Falk is on a book tour so this piece is likely overly dramatized for effect. Yet the basics involved aren't unrealistic.

The NBA is headed for trouble due to the economic downturn. A lot of teams are in very bad financial shape and we are either going to be facing contraction (which, IMO, we SHOULD DO, at least 2 teams worth) or these players are going to have to stop making insane amounts of money.

http://popcornmachine.net/ A must-use tool for NBA stat junkies!
Cosmic
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2/23/2009  10:28 AM
Posted by djsunyc:

2010 plan could be in serious jeopardy for many teams.

if there's a $50 mil hard cap, how do you tie yourself up to a free agent making $17-20 mil of that? teams may have to make a big splash this offseason and hope for a sign and trade with pieces already in place. b/c if you strip down and just clear space to sign a big name, it's going to be tough to surround him with quality players unless there's a drastic shift in contracts and guy's prices go way way down.

from the knicks POV, i think they have to re-sign lee and utilize expirings to make a sign and trade this summer...

If there's a hard cap of 50M - a max contract won't be worth 20M dollars. It'll be worth 30% of the hard cap that is set (15M). Maybe less.

Or, as pointed out, maybe a franchise player tag enters the NBA, and that player doesnt count against the hard cap? (whatever they were alluding to there).

Regardless, watch for the usual suspects here and on other Knick forums, to salivate over this article, in an attempt to trash Walsh, for well, what...is anyone's guess.
http://popcornmachine.net/ A must-use tool for NBA stat junkies!
djsunyc
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2/23/2009  10:31 AM
Posted by Cosmic:
Posted by djsunyc:

2010 plan could be in serious jeopardy for many teams.

if there's a $50 mil hard cap, how do you tie yourself up to a free agent making $17-20 mil of that? teams may have to make a big splash this offseason and hope for a sign and trade with pieces already in place. b/c if you strip down and just clear space to sign a big name, it's going to be tough to surround him with quality players unless there's a drastic shift in contracts and guy's prices go way way down.

from the knicks POV, i think they have to re-sign lee and utilize expirings to make a sign and trade this summer...

If there's a hard cap of 50M - a max contract won't be worth 20M dollars. It'll be worth 30% of the hard cap that is set (15M). Maybe less.

Or, as pointed out, maybe a franchise player tag enters the NBA, and that player doesnt count against the hard cap? (whatever they were alluding to there).

Regardless, watch for the usual suspects here and on other Knick forums, to salivate over this article, in an attempt to trash Walsh, for well, what...is anyone's guess.

2010 happens before the CBA expires. so max players will get current max dollars. this hard cap can't take into effect until 2011 at the earliest.
djsunyc
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2/23/2009  10:32 AM
i think the 2010 plan needs to be tweaked. i think knicks should be buyers. they have the resources to get quality players and go the pistons 02-present route than the super-duper star route. with d'antoni, that may be good enough to get deep into the playoffs.
NYKBocker
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2/23/2009  10:56 AM
Hard cap will have a hard time working in the NBA unless they also stop guaranteed contracts like the NFL. Either that or have contracts be guaranteed but the life of the contract be max of 3 years. This protects the NBA from stupid GMs and owners.
franco12
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2/23/2009  11:00 AM
NBA owners should offer to scrap the cap in exchange for non guaranteed contracts.

Players Union should be about maximizing dollars for all players, not just overpaid crybabies like Marbury or pathetic losers like Jerome James & Eddy Curry.
djsunyc
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2/23/2009  11:02 AM
what this means is there will be a lockout in 2011. which may mean that whoever signs in 2010 won't matter since 2011 season may not happen. teams will need to re-adjust their strategy and capitalize. knicks are one of the few teams that can fiscally afford to. isiah was ahead of his time
BRIGGS
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2/23/2009  11:13 AM
I disagree with his stance on the MLE--no one says you have to use it for 6 years 36mm unless there is a worthy player. You can break it up over two players--you can shorten the length. It's up to the team to use it wisely and a team who does not use it wisely--i.e Jared Jefferies Jerome Jmes eisley Weatherspoon--the Knicks--then they should pay for their mistakes.
Also I would like to see a compromise on the age limit to sophomores only or 20 years old--whichever comes first. I think nineteen is still a little to young. Going to school for two years is not a bad thing. If you are hurting for money--you have the European option. But 20 years old--to me makes the most sense. If I was an NBA vet--why would i want 19 year olds anyway--that's possibly my job they are taking. 2 years after HS you are more mature--you have either gone to school or gone to Europe--both a growing experience. That's something i would be willing to give up from the player's side. It makes a lot of sense to give back things that don't hurt current $$$ packages. As far as ahrd cap--that may be too bad in the short term. IF bank CEO's have to take less--if the revenues are suddenly not there--then they can pay what they can afford. I would be willing to take a hard cap of 63-65mm if Im a player--most teams payrolls are right aroudn there anyway. Giving into a hard cap isnt that big of a deal. If Im a player I would do that as well--but I would barter that injured players who can no longer play need to come off the cap 1 year instead of 2. They get paid from insurance anyway--that extra year hurts players--look at Portland--they lose out next year because of MIles.
RIP Crushalot😞
PresIke
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2/23/2009  12:58 PM
Posted by djsunyc:
Posted by Cosmic:
Posted by djsunyc:

2010 plan could be in serious jeopardy for many teams.

if there's a $50 mil hard cap, how do you tie yourself up to a free agent making $17-20 mil of that? teams may have to make a big splash this offseason and hope for a sign and trade with pieces already in place. b/c if you strip down and just clear space to sign a big name, it's going to be tough to surround him with quality players unless there's a drastic shift in contracts and guy's prices go way way down.

from the knicks POV, i think they have to re-sign lee and utilize expirings to make a sign and trade this summer...

If there's a hard cap of 50M - a max contract won't be worth 20M dollars. It'll be worth 30% of the hard cap that is set (15M). Maybe less.

Or, as pointed out, maybe a franchise player tag enters the NBA, and that player doesnt count against the hard cap? (whatever they were alluding to there).

Regardless, watch for the usual suspects here and on other Knick forums, to salivate over this article, in an attempt to trash Walsh, for well, what...is anyone's guess.

2010 happens before the CBA expires. so max players will get current max dollars. this hard cap can't take into effect until 2011 at the earliest.

su, if the cap figure drops, the max salary players can earn will also drop.

what it could mean, i think, is that those players may then not opt out of their contracts in 2010, and just wait to get a new deal in 2011.
Forum Po Po and #33 for a reason...
tkf
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2/23/2009  12:58 PM
I agree with faulk and this is where I am with him 100%
Naturally, Falk has strong opinions about what is ailing the league. He believes too many average players make too much money, while the stars — Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, Dwyane Wade — do not make enough. Falk would eliminate the cap for the superstars and, at the other end, abolish the midlevel exception, which allows teams to give $30 million deals to role player

I said this before, when guys like michael Redd get 80+ million dollar deals, then really, what are guys like kobe worth? guys who fill seats wherever they go? too many average to just bad players make a shyt load of money. Kirk Hinrich has a damn near 50 mil deal, I mean come on!!!!! Larry hughes makes 12 mil a year? WTF.. this kind of salary structure will Kill the NBA... the whole thing needs to be re-worked..
Anyone who sits around and waits for the lottery to better themselves, either in real life or in sports, Is a Loser............... TKF
MS
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2/23/2009  1:04 PM
These guys are already way overpaid. Everyone wants max dollars and doesn't deserve it. It's a huge problem that Larry Hughes who isn't even an All Star is making 13 million, and you have injured players that kill a teams ability to add talent because of bloated contracts.

5 year deals should be the maximum.

Team's have to offer big dollars or lose players, I think with a reduction in salary it would be much better for everyone, coaches, teams, quality of basketball.
King1
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2/23/2009  1:20 PM
Looks like we are going to get to see Plan B down the road. I also dont think Bosh is a player that can carry a team. I think he is a piece but he isnt in the same breath as Lebron and Wade
PresIke
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2/23/2009  1:22 PM
i think we are likely to see a push from the owners is to end guaranteed contracts, like the nfl, or only allow for 2-3 or 4 years guaranteed, with team options for every year following up tp extended 6-7 year deals.

the fact of the matter is that it is exactly contracts like hughes, curry, marbury, k-mart, jerome james, jeffries, etc. that make it VERY hard for teams to improve, and hurts the overall value of the league.

players will want some protections and should get some.

however, teams get stuck with bad contracts and can't improve until the deal runs out, or are fortunate enough to find another taker (which is still just passing on the problem).

[Edited by - PresIke on 02-23-2009 1:23 PM]
Forum Po Po and #33 for a reason...
BRIGGS
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2/23/2009  1:23 PM
Posted by King1:

Looks like we are going to get to see Plan B down the road. I also dont think Bosh is a player that can carry a team. I think he is a piece but he isnt in the same breath as Lebron and Wade

Agree. Lebron James or Wade---anything else is just a piece. Okla city is building a team that will compete quicker than people will believe. When you get a high draft pick--you must execute
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sebstar
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2/23/2009  1:24 PM
More socialism for old, rich white people. Please save us from our incompetence and greed!!!!

What ever happened to free market principles and ideals from the Good Ol' USA? The same people that run up on the Hannity show bashing Barack Obama and the inner city screaming "WELFARE QUEENS" and "Socialist tax rates" are the same cats that whine about the Yankees payroll and how much money NBA players are making. Hypocrites.

If a GM is stupid enough to give Larry Hughes 13 mil, then thats his American right. Why do we need rules and legislation to save him from himself?

Not surprised Falk is poppin' this kind of junk now. He's already MADE his money.
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fishmike
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2/23/2009  1:25 PM
you can only have a hard cap if the play contracts become non guarenteed like in the NFL. I dont see how that applies to the NBA in any way shape or form. NFL is about system and the team. NBA is about stars. NFL rosters have such massive turnover its impossible to follow the league. There are some marketable stars even they come and go.

I think it should be like baseball with no cap at all and a luxury tax. I think you should have longer rookie contracts followed by 2 RFA years and the last being arbitration eligible. I think when you sign another team's FA you should owe them some kind of compensation whether it be cash, your 2nd rounder, draft position or some formula of all 3.

The NBA is not one economic entity. Everyteam is not the same and should not have to be run the same. And there IS parity in baseball. Tampa, Marlins, Twins, Padres, Rockies have all shown you can get to a world series in a small market with a modest payroll.

If you think $20mm a year is too much to pay for a player than dont.

This year in baseball a lot of good players took massive paycuts.

Last lockout the owners cried about the massive contracts than immediatly started giving out massive contracts.
"winning is more fun... then fun is fun" -Thibs
djsunyc
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2/23/2009  1:26 PM
Posted by PresIke:
Posted by djsunyc:
Posted by Cosmic:
Posted by djsunyc:

2010 plan could be in serious jeopardy for many teams.

if there's a $50 mil hard cap, how do you tie yourself up to a free agent making $17-20 mil of that? teams may have to make a big splash this offseason and hope for a sign and trade with pieces already in place. b/c if you strip down and just clear space to sign a big name, it's going to be tough to surround him with quality players unless there's a drastic shift in contracts and guy's prices go way way down.

from the knicks POV, i think they have to re-sign lee and utilize expirings to make a sign and trade this summer...

If there's a hard cap of 50M - a max contract won't be worth 20M dollars. It'll be worth 30% of the hard cap that is set (15M). Maybe less.

Or, as pointed out, maybe a franchise player tag enters the NBA, and that player doesnt count against the hard cap? (whatever they were alluding to there).

Regardless, watch for the usual suspects here and on other Knick forums, to salivate over this article, in an attempt to trash Walsh, for well, what...is anyone's guess.

2010 happens before the CBA expires. so max players will get current max dollars. this hard cap can't take into effect until 2011 at the earliest.

su, if the cap figure drops, the max salary players can earn will also drop.

what it could mean, i think, is that those players may then not opt out of their contracts in 2010, and just wait to get a new deal in 2011.

i see that, but these guys are up for max dollars in 2010. so they will re-sign under the current max contract which will still be in the $15-17 mil range minimum b/c why take a chance on a fixed cap and possible further lowering of the cap #? in the new 2011 CBA, they won't know what "max" truly means but they do right now. in fact, some of them may choose to sign extensions *this* summer instead. i don't think guys like lebron + wade + bosh signed these 3 year deals anticipating a recession. they probably thought the new CBA along with the new tv contract will allow them to make more money...but i think they miscalculated.
fishmike
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2/23/2009  1:28 PM
something would have to give like in hockey, when players had to give up a certain % of their current deals in order to fit in the new CBA
"winning is more fun... then fun is fun" -Thibs
david falk's blunt warning about the future of the nba

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