Do I feel betrayed? No. To feel betrayed, I would have to feel Wyc owes me something. I just can't see how he owes me anything specific.
Do I like him less, in light of his stated position on the lock-out and what he would like a new CBA to look like? Absolutely. The owners are the ones taking the game away from us fans.
He is showing himself to be as greedy as just about every other owner. Should I have expected any less? Probably not. The recent new deal he signed with CSNNE shows this. The deal was basically structured to divert as much possible potential revenue from the deal to assets which will in all likelyhood be off limits to players.
End of the day, I just can't behind anything the owners are attempting to get, because they are simply trying to cheat the players out of their fair share of the money through their position of power. Some will argue that anyones fair share is only what you can negotiate, but, that is only true if both sides are negotiating in good-faith. The owners are not. This is a lock-out, not a strike, so yes, I blame the owners.
The bolded part is more or less the problem I've had with people who say they blame the players for this.
You think the players make too much? Fine. But newsflash; they're not the ones asking for
MORE money. The owners are, or at least a system that gives them more money. And more or less, they want at least part of the additional money they're asking for to come out of the player's pockets along with said change of system that will prolly lower what the average player can make in the NBA.
So in effect, by people not taking the players' side on this, what they're really saying is that they don't support the players' right to keep the money they're already earning just cause of the old and worn out arguments of "well they already make more in one year than I might make my own life" or "I could retire off of what they make in a year".
I mean, if that's how they feel, then fine, but all the same, the players have a right to keep the money they have and not just bend over for the owners, especially when it can't be properly established whether the owners are actually losing money in the first place or not to warrant any change in the system. A union is a union, it doesn't matter how match the average person in it makes. Issues like these is why they exist, and the NBA players shouldn't be criticized for standing up for themselves.
To tie this back to Wyc, if he's really willing to lose a season, it better be because he knows it'll actually benefit the Celtics as far as being able to make sure they stay contenders.