Stop lying, NBA. The Minnesota Timberwolves and the New York Knicks aren't going to be on equal footing just because the league keeps more of the money its been paying in salary. Everybody knows that, so I wish they would stop pretending that the lockout is about something it's not.
I don't think it's a lie at all. I think Stern and Silver have both stated that there are two issues: the finances, and competitive balance. Their public position is that they're trying to improve both.
I mean, if this was *just* about money, the lockout would be over now, because the owners got their 50/50 split. However, what's holding it up are "competitive balance" system issues that lessen the gap between big and small market teams.
Yes, but, the "competitive balance" system issues seem to me to be more of an issue between owners of large market vs. owners of small market teams rather than an issue of players vs. owners.
I agree with this for the most part. But, there's always a but, some system issues to solve situations like players predetermining a situation where they can manipulate the system to all end up playing together needed to be addressed.
I fully agree with the owners in that regard and also in reducing their risk with long term exorbitant contracts for players that decide to mail it in like Eddy Curry or Gilbert Arenas or Drew Gooden. I liked the lowering of the length of contracts, especially the full MLE. Some of those contracts have been the worst ever given out(Jarred Jeffries, Travis Outlaw, Drew Gooden, etc.)by the NBA owners.
I think there definitely has to be a major financial incentive for players to remain with teams that originally drafted them to allow small market teams to keep their superstars and remain competitive. I also think some changes needed to be made to stop stuff like The Decision from happening.
So in those respects, I agree with what the owners were striving for in system changes. But I also think that the best way to keep competitive balance is for full fledged revenue sharing which I imagine a very strong group of about 10 teams(some being the cornerstone teams in the league)are solidly against.
People like to point to Eddy Curry and Gilbert Arenas as examples of typical NBA contracts, but the truth is those guys are far from typical. Sure, there are players who don't live up to their teams' or the fans' expectations, but really I see very few who are just taking the money and "mailing it in."
As far as the "Decision" stuff goes, hey, I don't like Lebron James or how he handled that travesty of a circus, but "free agent" means that the player is free to choose where he plays. There are no system changes that are going to turn the city of Cleveland into the city of Miami.
As a fan, I don't have a problem with the way "competitive balance" plays out on the court under the current system. San Antonio and OKC are a couple of examples of teams in small markets that have had on the court success, while the Knicks and the Clippers are a couple of examples of the opposite. No one can claim that there's any where near a direct correlation between where a team is located and the product it manages to put out on the court.
When the league and the owners talk about "competitive balance," it seems to me that they are talking more about competitive balance in terms of profit and loss rather than competitive balance on the court. Now that they have already gotten that $300 million back from the players that they claim they lost last year, they could go ahead and share that money amongst themselves however they see fit and go ahead and play the games. But, no, somehow that's not enough for them. They want to control where the players can go and how long they can sign contracts for and the like, as well.
I guess I'm probably in the minority among fans, though, that I don't see the on the court system as broken. I see it as a good, competitive league with a lot of great players and different and interesting ways to build good, entertaining basketball teams.