Author Topic: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...  (Read 2187 times)

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Offline PC

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Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Topic Start: November 26, 2011, 04:12:31 AM »
Quote
NEW YORK -- NBA owners and players reached a tentative agreement early Saturday to end the 149-day lockout.

After a secret meeting earlier this week, the sides met for more than 15 hours Friday, working to try to save the season. This handshake deal, however, still must be ratified by both owners and players.

"We've reached a tentative understanding that is subject to a variety of approvals and very complex machinations, but we're optimistic that will all come to pass and that the NBA season will begin Dec. 25," NBA commissioner David Stern said.

The league plans a 66-game season and aims to open camps Dec. 9.

The NBA lockout began on July 1, but a tentative agreement has been reached to save the season. ESPN.com Topics keeps you up to date with all of the latest on the NBA's labor situation. Topics Page »

"We thought it was in both of our best interests to try to reach a resolution and save the game," union executive director Billy Hunter said.

The Christmas Day deadline created a sense of urgency because that schedule is traditionally a showcase for the league. This season's three-game slate was to include Miami at Dallas in an NBA finals rematch, plus MVP Derrick Rose leading Chicago into Los Angeles to face Kobe Bryant and the Lakers.

A majority on each side is needed to approve the agreement. The NBA needs votes from 15 of 29 owners. (The league owns the New Orleans Hornets.) Stern said the labor committee plans to discuss the agreement later Saturday and expects them to endorse it and recommend to the full board.

The union needs a simple majority of its 430-plus members. That process is a bit more complicated after the players dissolved the union Nov. 14. Now, they must drop their antitrust lawsuit in Minnesota and reform the union before voting on the deal.

Because the union disbanded, a new collective bargaining agreement can only be completed once the union has reformed. Drug testing and other issues still must be negotiated between the league and the players.

When last talks broke down, the sides were still divided over the division of revenues and certain changes sought by owners to curb spending by big-market teams that players felt would limit or restrict their options in free agency.

On Nov. 14, players rejected the owners' proposal, which included opening a 72-game schedule on Dec. 15, announcing instead they were disbanding the union, giving them a chance to win several billion dollars in triple damages in an antitrust lawsuit.

Two days later, players filed two separate antitrust lawsuits against the league in two different states. On Monday, a group of named plaintiffs including Carmelo Anthony, Steve Nash and Kevin Durant filed an amended federal lawsuit against the league in Minnesota, hoping the courts there will be as favorable to them as they have been to NFL players in the past.

Now, players will dismiss that lawsuit and get back to the business of basketball.

The previous CBA expired at the end of the day June 30. Despite a series of meetings in June, there was never much hope of a deal before that deadline, with owners wanting significant changes after saying they lost $300 million last season and hundreds of millions more in each year of the old agreement, which was ratified in 2005.

Owners wanted to keep more of the league's nearly $4 billion in basketball revenues to themselves after guaranteeing 57 percent to the players under the old deal. And they sought a system where even the smallest-market clubs could compete, believing the current system would always favor the teams who could spend the most.

Initially, the salary cap emerged as the biggest obstacle. Owners first proposed a hard cap, but players fought hard to maintain the current system that allows teams to exceed the cap through the use of various exceptions.

The league was adamant the system needed some adjustment, because the old rules gave too many advantages to teams who could afford to keep adding to their payrolls. So the league's proposals targeted the highest-spending teams, seeking to eliminate the use of the midlevel exception by teams over the luxury tax and prevent them from participating in sign-and-trade deals.

http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/7281052/nba-owners-players-get-tentative-agreement

Offline Mathguy

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #1: November 26, 2011, 05:24:58 AM »
That's too bad.  I was enjoying the fact this NBA season could be gone for good

Offline Dave B

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #2: November 26, 2011, 09:35:32 AM »
That's too bad.  I was enjoying the fact this NBA season could be gone for good


yeah me too. i was hoping for thousands of arena workers across the country to lose out on 80+ days worth of pay. not to mention people who work for tv/radio broadcasts, bar/restaurant workers, etc

Online imref

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #3: November 26, 2011, 10:13:42 AM »
good news for all those people who's livelihood depended on the NBA season, but i can't say i really missed not having basketball on TV.

Offline Lintyfresh85

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #4: November 26, 2011, 10:18:34 AM »
Too bad. Was hoping NBA would just go away.

Get over it Dave, clearly we're not wishing all those tied to the team losing jobs.... You know that.

Offline PANatsFan

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #5: November 26, 2011, 10:49:39 AM »
Reminds me of family guy when they showed the wnba's single fan cheering.

Offline sportsfan882

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #6: November 26, 2011, 11:00:53 AM »
boo

Offline UMDNats

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #7: November 26, 2011, 11:40:20 AM »
well, back to espn shoving the NBA down our throats every night

Offline UMDNats

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #8: November 26, 2011, 11:42:30 AM »
yeah me too. i was hoping for thousands of arena workers across the country to lose out on 80+ days worth of pay. not to mention people who work for tv/radio broadcasts, bar/restaurant workers, etc

well barry melrose and matthew barnaby just lost their jobs too

Offline Terpfan76

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #9: November 26, 2011, 11:45:47 AM »
good news for all those people who's livelihood depended on the NBA season, but i can't say i really missed not having basketball on TV.

This.

Offline eckseid

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #10: November 26, 2011, 11:46:53 AM »
I was enjoying not having to see basketball highlights every 5 seconds on sports center. Yay, a dunk made #1 on the top plays! Such a boring ass sport.

This is good for the arena workers, but basketball is a snoozefest.

Online JCA-CrystalCity

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #11: November 26, 2011, 12:17:30 PM »
I think several restaurants around the Boston Garden will be disappointed now that they have lost half their early bird special crowd.  KG and Allen were decent tippers.

But on the bright side - weapons sales in PG will sky rocket now that Delonte West is getting a regular paycheck.

Offline Lintyfresh85

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #12: November 26, 2011, 12:25:50 PM »
well, back to espn shoving the NBA down our throats every night

This.

ESPN is the only thing keeping the NBA popular.

Offline Slateman

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #13: November 26, 2011, 12:48:53 PM »
I was enjoying not having to see basketball highlights every 5 seconds on sports center. Yay, a dunk made #1 on the top plays! Such a boring ass sport.

This is good for the arena workers, but basketball is a snoozefest.

Agreed. College basketball is where its at

Offline cmdterps44

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #14: November 26, 2011, 12:57:15 PM »
lol Dave.

I'm sort of happy that NBA is back. It gives me something to watch on Tuesday and Friday nights whenever the caps aren't on. I do hate ESPN though. I don't want thirty topics about Lebron everyday. Plus ESPN's basketball analysts suck.

I'm just looking forward to seeing some improvement from Wall, Booker, Crawford, that Eastern European dude, and Singleton.

Offline Tyler Durden

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #15: November 26, 2011, 01:27:37 PM »
I'm also looking forward to seeing John Wall this year. 

The Wiz will suck again, though.  We're probably playing for a high draft pick.  Again.

Offline InsaneBoost

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #16: November 26, 2011, 03:57:48 PM »
Glad we'll see some Wizards games, going to enjoy watching this team build and hopefully become a power again.

Offline The Chief

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #17: November 26, 2011, 07:18:13 PM »
Again? :lol:

Offline BerkeleyNat

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #18: November 26, 2011, 07:34:46 PM »
well, back to espn shoving the NBA down our throats every night

This! I hate the NBA and it's mainly because of ESPN.


Offline BerkeleyNat

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #19: November 26, 2011, 07:36:03 PM »
BTW, Wizards is probably the worst team name in professional sports. Why couldn't they have picked something that actually has something to do with the City?

Offline d_mc_nabb

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #20: November 26, 2011, 07:40:14 PM »
BTW, Wizards is probably the worst team name in professional sports. Why couldn't they have picked something that actually has something to do with the City?

Yeah like Bullets  ;)  :?

Offline BerkeleyNat

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #21: November 26, 2011, 08:00:14 PM »
Yeah like Bullets  ;)  :?

I actually liked Bullets.  :)


Offline d_mc_nabb

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #22: November 26, 2011, 08:04:23 PM »
I actually liked Bullets.  :)



Actually not a bad name. They can't use it though, as Pollin's crusade was against just that (IIRC that's why he changed the name).

For the record, my opinion of worst nickname across the 4 big sports is the Mighty Ducks.

Offline BerkeleyNat

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #23: November 26, 2011, 08:19:52 PM »
Actually not a bad name. They can't use it though, as Pollin's crusade was against just that (IIRC that's why he changed the name).

For the record, my opinion of worst nickname across the 4 big sports is the Mighty Ducks.

I think DC was the murder capital of the country when they decided to change the name. I'm sure the name change caused the murder rate to immediately plummet.  :lol:

You're right about the Mighty Ducks. Disney should just stay out of sports.


Offline PC

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Re: Tentative deal reached ending NBA Lockout...
« Reply #24: November 26, 2011, 09:24:21 PM »
Stephen A. Smith, who was in Washington for some reason (the Capitol was in the background) was on ESPN, practically "creaming his jeans"  talking about the Heat and the Lakers and the Mavericks in the upcoming season.  He couldn't bring himself to talk about the Wizards.  I guess mentioning the Wizards is a wood killer.   :?

Just like I said during the NFL lockout, if you're a winning team playing the season is a good thing.  If you're the Packers or Mavericks or Heat or Patriots or Steelers or Lakers, having a season is a desirable outcome.  Or if you're a fan of one of those teams.

If you're a Wizards fan or Redskins fan, for example, your team might be better served by sitting out a season (or two).  :|