Roy--
Thanks for reading my piece and making your concerns known. I also appreciate your kind words about me otherwise. I hope others will read it carefully like you did before shooting from the hip.
The argument is simple: the current CBA is flawed and has only survived as long as revenues were increasing, thereby papering over the CBA's deep limitations. The deepest of these limitations is that it permits long-term contracts of great size to underperforming players. Not a problem when revenues (and the salary cap) increases at 10 percent annually. Huge problem when revenues look to decline and possibly decline sharply for years to come, in a deflationary environment.
That is the boat we are in now, and it is the first time our economy has been in this boat for 70 years. New thinking is needed. All the conventional wisdom is of limited value, and may be a hindrance.
I wrote this piece for a private audience initially and then decided to publish it. All I can say now is that owners and management in the NBA are freaking out about the future, and there is an openness to new ideas that is unusual, including this proposal.
As far as I am concerned, it beats the alternative: a massive one or two year lockout to depress palyers salaries, and/or the closing and/or franchise hopping of a third of the teams in the league. That is unacceptable to me and should be avoided. That may be the real future we face if the global economy continues on the path it is currently on. Don't get me wrong, I want a recovery as much or more than anyone, but what I want and what is going to happen are two different things.
If the players are going to give up money, and they are, my proposal takes it away from undeserving players. If there is no effort to deal with the Jerome James and Wally Szczerbiak contracts, then any effort to get players to take less money will have to come disproproationatley from young and deserving players. That all but guarantees World War III. That is a recipe for disaster.
My proposal simply gives the players and owners depression insurance. The players always get 57 percent of the gross, no matter what. Even if soem franchises are struggling. The owners are covered when revenues tank. It is no more "communist" than the current system; it is simply a recognition that the league is a monopoly, not a competitive market with ease of entry of new firms. Any connection between the NBA and free market capitalism is purely coincidental, except for public relations purposes.
In fact, the system I propose is far more a meritocracy than the current system. The teams that are best run, the most efficient, make the most profit. They are not rewarded for fielding bad teams; in fact, quite the opposite. The best players get the most money. Period. What could be more all-American than that? Getting the dead beat players off welfare while rewarding the productive players? Sounds pretty all-American to me. All the incentives here are for temas and players to do their very best.
I provide an example of how salaries could be determined that would take the pool of money and do a better job of allocating it to the most deserving players. As I emphasize in the piece, my example is meant to illustrate the point, not be the only possible system to use to implement this plan. I am the first to concede that my plan is rough and can be improved upon. It is there to get the discussion rolling.
If the economic recovery does surprisingly well, it may be the owners and players can survive this crisis without a radical change on the CBA, and without a devasting lockout. But right now the odds of that being the case are below 50-50. I hope the ownwers and players are open to fresh ideas because the old ones are inadequate to the economic crisis before us.
elrod