GVC
Well-Known Member
Consider what I was responding to, and how simplistic the arguments in favor of the owners have been in this thread.Who said unions were bad? I support unions, but I've seen first hand what can happen when a few people in a union get too much power and let their egos get in the way of making sensible decisions. This whole situation is a lot more complicated than simply union vs. management or players vs. owners IMO. Truth be told, I think the star players and rich owners/big market teams would both be thrilled to have a situation where there was no cap at all. I believe those two groups have more interests in common than lumping all the owners together.
I support the owners side because their position best represents teams like Utah. I feel bad for the majority of players who are going to end up getting screwed in all this, but I can't support the rich owners/star players. That's the way I see things. This is really a case of small market teams vs. rich owners/star players.
From the start, what has seemed fairly obvious to me (and just about everyone else) is that the players would have to cave. The owners know this, and largely due to functioning as a cartel, are able to extort more from the players (that is, as one brow has pointed out, salaries would almost certainly be higher if the market for their services were freer). Why did the NBA move another team to New Orleans? Memphis? How successful has the WNBA been? The Dleague? Moving into Europe (in the short run)? The league talks about these as investments, and yet they're all very risky gambles. During a downturn, you're pretty well ****ed on any extremely risky decision. The owners are demanding the players make concessions to assure positive profits for all, despite these extremely risky behaviors during the worst economic conditions since the depression. That people buy into this cartel of bullies being a shining example of honest, American, free market capitalism is crazy. ****ing crazy.
With that said, you can't ignore the realities that the players face. Everyone knew from the very start that the players would have to make concessions. If there is no season, however, make no mistake, the owners are to blame.
How does the owners' position best represent a team like Utah? The Jazz have been successful because they've been run extremely well relative to other NBA teams. They understand that gate receipts matter, that poor FA decisions are hard to correct, that stability in the FO leads to a better on court product. They'll be successful as long as they continue to act intelligently, regardless of the outcome of these current negotiations. Other NBA owners seem like complete retards next to Larry, love him or hate him.
I don't hate a hard cap, but I actually think it hurts well-run teams, as it will almost certainly lead to more player movement (rosters are smaller, so more big changes will have to be made to stay under said hard cap). The stability advantage is diminished for Utah. Stiffening the hard cap line, and making minor adjustments to the exceptions, should help Utah.
I also can't bring myself to think about this issue so selfishly. If the players only received 10% of BRI, that would help the Jazz even more. Would I support the owners in that proposal? No. Would you?
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