I'm not a fan of allowing owners to count their massive interest payments on their financed team purchases as expenses.
I agree
If you don't have enough liquid assets to buy a team, then don't. If I were the players I would try to get some sort of stipulation in the new CBA preventing prospective buyers from buying teams on loan. It is just as much as anything the reason owners are in financial straights currently.
Very good point.
I think it should be 67% of Net Profit with clear definitions of what constitutes basketball operating expenses. This would include staff salaries, arena costs, concession/merchandising expense, etc... That 67% would be expected to cover salaries, health care and retirement benefits (including the monies currently being directed towards older players that retired before the recent CBA agreements. I know there's concerns about how to guarantee there will be Net amounts after expenses but with the flow of money coming in, there really shouldn't be an issue. The total amount would be determined at the end of the year.
This net amount would also lump in monies from concessions, tickets, promotions, broadcasting fees, merchandising, appearance fees, etc.... including any monies the players earn at non-NBA events (because they're parlaying their NBA-related fame into extra cash).
Each team splits the remaining 33% amongst themselves in a manner they determine (whether equally or based on a percentage of monies raised or based on wins or whatever formula they like)
I'd go a step further in really levelling the playing field between teams by giving the lump sum to the players association and letting them divvy up the monies amongst the players in whatever manner they determine. This puts the onus on the players union to figure out how much a player is worth.
- I'd allow the teams to control whatever players they draft for 5-6 years. 2 rounds of drafts. Players can resign with their teams for any length of time or move on to other teams as a free agent. Money no longer becomes an issue. Teams cannot acquire more than 3 FAs in a year. This will hopefully slow any new Heatles situations.
- They can release a player at any time and acquire a player at any time prior to the playoffs. Rosters set at 15 with 12 dressing for games. Playoff rosters set a month before the season ends. Again, the player union has to determine how to pay players for partial seasons, underperformance, league experience, stat producers, role players, etc...
- They can trade anyone at any time. Since they don't have to worry about salaries, they can make trades strictly based on talent. The commissioner would have full authority to revoke trades that are too imbalanced or penalize teams that pull something underhanded to collude on stacking a particular team.
Just some thoughts. It's too radical for this league but with this type of a financial structure, it should eliminate the root cause of strikes or lockouts. I think the players union would dissolve into a cesspool of infighting but if they don't like it, let them get real jobs -- you know, the ones that Lebron mocks.