I like this explanation, it definitely is a respectable opinion to have on the situation. Personally, I disagree that a new system is nessecary for the owners to be profitable though.
I think that a reduction in BRI split (somewhere around 52-53% for players), shorter contract gaurantees (3yrs for new teams, 5yrs for same team), concessions on allowing owners to decuct certain expenses from total revenue, along with more comprhensive revenue sharing would be sufficient. Fixes to the current soft cap would also be needed, but a hard cap is not, in my opinion.
Like I've previuosly stated, I think the owners goal is to go for more than just being profitable, but to take away as much as possible from the players. Thus why they want a completely new system.
I don't disagree with this, although, I would reword (spin) that last paragraph. When you say that the owners goal is to "take away as much as possible from the players," it infers malice towards the players. I don't think there is any malice at all from the owners towards the players (at least in the actual negotiations).
That's why I would change it to that the owners are not just trying to make the league profitable, they are trying to negotiate a system that makes the league as profitable AS POSSIBLE for them. They are not driven to take things away from the players, they are (like every businessman), trying to maximize their own profit.
That is why they have started so low in the negotiations. They need to start that low, in hoping that the players will cave, and give them more than they need (again, how every negotiation works), but in reality, they will not miss games, if they are able to get to that middle ground, where they are just making a reasonable profit.
I think the players, for their part need to realize that all the owners are doing here is negotiating, and, instead of getting offended that the owners are starting off with lowball offers (again, standard business practice), they should be sitting down with them, and trying to make progress through meetings.
Now, maybe it is just the optimist in me, but I take the response to yesterdays meeting as reason to believe the players have done just that. In finally getting across the table from each other, and with both sides ready to actually try to work something out, as the loss of games looms, they have decided to stop the feigned indignance over a pretty standard negotiation tactics, and start to actually try to find a middle ground, rather than just playing chicken.
Now, this could still last a lot longer, because there are probably legitimate disagreements over what the middle ground is...but if they have really reached the point where they can discuss this stuff without being offended by each other, then there should be reason to be optimistic.