Tentative Deal Paves Way For Christmas Day Tip-Off
November 27, 2011
The NBA Players’ Association and league officials expect the lockout to be resolved in time for Christmas. (AFP Photo/Patrick McDermott) Related articles
NBA: James and Wade Power Heat Past Pacers 8:22am May 21, 2012
NBA: LeBron James Takes Third MVP Award 2:52pm May 13, 2012
Athletes and Anger: When Passion Boils Over 9:38pm May 8, 2012
NBA: Knicks Fend Off Elimination, 76ers Push Bulls to Brink 9:16am May 7, 2012
NBA: Stoudemire to Miss Playoff Game After Hand Surgery 9:02am May 2, 2012
Post a comment
Please login to post comment
Comments
Be the first to write your opinion!
New York. A tentative agreement to end the NBA’s crippling lockout and save the season will have owners and players scrambling to get the details in place in time for a star-studded Christmas tip-off.
“There is a lot of work to be done in a lot of places, with a lot of committees and player groups and the like, but we are optimistic that it will hold and we will have ourselves an NBA season,” league commissioner David Stern said as he and players’ association executive director Billy Hunter sat wearily side-by-side around 3 a.m. on Saturday to announce the handshake agreement.
After months of wrangling between owners and players, news that the sides had agreed on a framework for a deal even caught the attention of US President — and basketball fan — Barack Obama, who gave a “thumbs up” signal and said “Good deal” when asked about it.
Some players sounded euphoric as they took to Twitter.
“Man I just got up not too long ago and see we have a deal! I feel like my kids on X-mas day! So juiced!!” Miami Heat star LeBron James tweeted on Saturday morning. “Excited for the fans that stayed patient with us!”
However, plenty of work remained to formalize what Stern described as a “tentative understanding” that was hammered out in a 15-hour marathon meeting.
A detailed agreement must be put in writing and ratified by NBA club owners and by the more than 430 members of the NBA Players’ Association.
The ratification process for the players is complicated by the fact that they disbanded their union when talks last broke down on Nov. 14 and launched an anti-trust lawsuit against the league.
At the time Stern predicted that move could portend a “nuclear winter” for the league, which launched its own court case to prove the legality of the lockout.
Now the players must withdraw their lawsuit and re-form the union in order to vote on whether to accept the deal.
Hunter said progress had already been made on the steps to end the court cases.
“We’re happy that we’ve been able to reach a tentative litigation settlement with regard to many issues that are pending before the various courts,” he said.
The league’s labor relations committee was to discuss the agreement on Saturday, and Stern said he expected them to recommend it to owners.
If all proceeds as hoped, training camps and a free-agency signing period will open simultaneously on Dec. 9 and a 66-game season will begin on Christmas Day — 55 days after the normal 82-game season was due to begin on November 1.
In the only prior NBA season shortened in a financial fight, each team played 50 games in the 1998-99 season, which did not start until February after a deal was reached in early January.
The league will have to come up with a revised schedule for the regular season and the playoffs. Clubs will have to sort out their rosters — with some moves likely impacted by new salary and signing rules — and players who had planned to wait out the dispute overseas will have to head home.
Owners locked out players on July 1 after the previous collective contract expired.
Owners, claiming $300 million in losses last season among 22 of the league’s 30 clubs, said they needed changes in how they divided some $4 billion in revenue and stricter controls on salary spending.
The New York Times and other media reported that the proposed deal featured an approximate 50-50 split of revenues — a big cut for players who received 57 percent of basketball-related income last season. The players could get up to 51 percent if the league meets certain financial targets.
The newspaper also reported that it called for shorter contracts, smaller raises and tougher penalties on the top-spending teams, something players had bitterly opposed because it could limit their options as free agents.
NBA deputy commissioner Adam Silver said he believed the deal would achieve the owners’ aim of greater parity between the large-market teams and those with smaller budgets.
“We feel ultimately it will give fans in every community hope that their team can compete for championships,” Silver said.
Despite concessions, players’ association president Derek Fisher said he was happy to be part of reaching an agreement.
“For myself, it’s great to be a part of this particular moment in terms of giving our fans what they wanted and wanted to see,” Fisher said.
According to the current plan, the season will tip off with a mouth-watering triple-header on Dec. 25, when Miami visits Dallas in a rematch of last season’s championship series, plus Boston at New York and Chicago at Kobe Bryant’s Los Angeles Lakers.
Amid the general enthusiasm, a few sounded a cautious note.
“Haven’t crossed the finish line yet,” Orlando guard J.J. Redick wrote on Twitter, “but there’s definitely a reason to be optimistic.”
Agence France-Presse
- Lady Gaga Angers Thai Fans With Fake Rolex Comment
- Lady Gaga Refuses to Tone Down Her Shows: Manager
- Djoko Says ‘I Don’t Care’ About FPI Demonstration
- Indonesia Set to Cap Bank Owners’ Stakes: Sources
- If You Don’t Like It, Don’t Watch, Djoko Says of Gaga
- Indonesia's Chief Justice Demands SBY Explain Corby Clemency
- National Exams' ‘Fantastic’ Passing Rate Suspicious: ICW
- 'Stop Treating Indonesia as a Beggar Nation,' Australian Academic Urges
- New Traffic Flow Around Kuningan Intersection
- Malaysian Authorities Seize Copies of Irshad Manji’s Book
-
1:21pm | Indonesian Police Consider Ton...
http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=4535&Itemid=202 There have long been questions in Jakarta over -
1:20pm | AGO Slow in Responding to BPK ...
Amazing isn't it, and the kids from Islamic boarding schools are sent onto the streets to protest against Western Devil Performers. The Devils in -
1:15pm | Jakarta Police Prepare to Depl...
Fudloli Mohammad Ruham might I suggest that you and your pupils, who's minds you have perverted with lies, read this - http://www.looktothestars.o -
1:06pm | Djoko Says ‘I Don’t Care’ Abou...
What President? what Democracy? what rights? This Country is going down fast without leadership at all. With no Countryman who takes their hearts i -
1:06pm | Jakarta Police Prepare to Depl...
I dont know about a pop concert. These jerks have turned this into a bloody pantomime. If this stupidity goes on much longer I can see LGG c -
12:34pm | AGO Slow in Responding to BPK ...
Because the government is not serious about fighting corruption and the corruptors know that there is little chance of them getting caught and even -
12:17pm | Indonesian Police Consider Ton...
padt - as always spot on - In Indonesia it is always a case of 'follow the money'. -
12:03pm | Indonesian Police Consider Ton...
thanks padt; unfortunately the site is blocked by my Indonesian IP provider. Quite odd...
