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Union Disputes NBA Figures, Prepared For Lockout.

Updated: July 14, 2010, 7:26 PM ET
Hunter: NBA lockout is possible


By Chris Sheridan
ESPN.com
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NEW YORK -- In response to NBA commissioner David Stern's assertion that the league lost $370 million last season, the head of the players' union claimed Wednesday that Stern's numbers are as much as $370 million off base.

Union director Billy Hunter made that statement in a telephone interview with ESPN.com, saying the commissioner's assertion of the severity of the owners' financial woes "just doesn't hold water."

His comments illustrated the fundamental differences the sides are facing as they work to negotiate a new collective bargaining agreement to replace the one due to expire next June 30.

In a nutshell, the union feels the current system is working well for everyone, while the owners feel the labor agreement needs to be drastically overhauled to enable teams to operate profitably.

The sides have started negotiations toward a new one but remain far apart, creating fears of the first work stoppage since 1998-99.

"I'm preparing for a lockout right now and I haven't seen anything to change that notion. Hopefully I'll see something over the next several months," Hunter said. "As of this moment, it's full speed ahead for me in preparing the players for a worst-case scenario."

Hunter, who also spoke Wednesday to several other news organizations, said the players do not believe the owners' claim that they lost a combined $370 million last season -- a statement Stern reiterated in public comments Monday following an owners' meeting in Las Vegas.

"There might not be any losses at all. It depends on what accounting procedure is used," Hunter said. "If you decide you don't count interest and depreciation, you already lop off 250 of the 370 million dollars, and everything else was predicated upon what they were projecting, which was a decline in attendance that didn't happen. Attendance was the second-highest ever."

In defending his position that the current system is working, Hunter said player salaries decreased 1 percent in 2009-10 after five consecutive years of growth at a time when overall league revenues reached an all-time high.

"The projected losses of $400 million were based on revenue projections made last summer, and in fact revenues did not go down, they actually increased. So for them to say there has been no shift in the environment, it just doesn't hold water," Hunter said.

"We have little confidence in their projections, because obviously the league's performance demonstrated their projections were off. We had the best Finals in years, Game 7 had highest TV rating in 12 years, the '09-10 BRI [basketball-related income] was the highest in NBA history, player salaries went down, and right now we're experiencing an all-time high in season-ticket sales coupled with the fact that the interest being demonstrated by the public is unprecedented.

"So I can't imagine at a time like this when the league is sort of riding the crest of the wave that there would be a desire on anyone's part to want to disrupt that," Hunter said. "What we should be doing is trying to come to some arrangement that both of us find to be mutually beneficial and acceptable."

Hunter was already wary of the league's projections after it warned its teams last July that next season's salary cap could fall as low as $50.4 million. It was set last week at $58.0 million, even higher than this season's.

"Clearly it causes us some concern, causes us to question their numbers," Hunter said.

Hunter said the players will offer their interpretations of the league's finances at the next bargaining meeting. He said he hasn't heard anything from the league since the union submitted its proposal for a CBA earlier this month.

Stern said that proposal basically embraced the current system, but the league believes changes are necessary and the teams that spent freely during free agency did so because it was the only way they could win. Hunter disagrees, saying owners want a system where they can spend and "receive guaranteed profits unlike any other industry in America."

Stern also said the higher-than-expected cap didn't mean things were better than they were a year ago, but Hunter points to huge increases in season ticket sales in New York, New Jersey, Chicago and Charlotte as proof otherwise.

The union is calling for expanded revenue sharing among teams, with Hunter noting that a group of small-market owners recommended it to Stern a couple of years ago. Stern has said it will come after the agreement with the players, but Hunter said it should come as part of the deal.

"Revenue sharing has to be part of the process, has to be part of the total package," Hunter said.

Hunter thinks owners who lived through the 1998 lockout won't want to risk shutting the league down again, but wonders if some newer ones might be willing to sit out for a year or two. Just in case, he's telling players to save their money and stay united.

Hunter hopes "cooler heads prevail" and it won't come to that point.

"This is a high time for the NBA, a time for celebration," Hunter said. "So we're going to do everything within our power -- I can't underscore that enough -- to try to reach an agreement."

Chris Sheridan is a senior NBA writer for ESPN.com. Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

https://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=5380427
 
With the kind of money being thrown at FA's this year, especially the marginal ones getting HUGE contracts (like Gooden, Matthews, etc.), the owners are going to have a difficult time crying bankruptcy. Let Miami win their title, then shut down the league for a few years.
 
I will say that the owners throwing depreciation into the figure smells strongly of ******** to me.
 
....both sides are greedy as all get out! But I'm old school. I'm siding with the owners. Something about guys loaded with jailhouse tats, having rap sheets longer than Manute Bol's arm, regularly shooting 4-17 with 6 turnovers.....making $150,000 per game....that bothers me!!!
 
....both sides are greedy as all get out! But I'm old school. I'm siding with the owners. Something about guys loaded with jailhouse tats, having rap sheets longer than Manute Bol's arm, regularly shooting 4-17 with 6 turnovers.....making $150,000 per game....that bothers me!!!

Yet you keep watching.
 
....both sides are greedy as all get out! But I'm old school. I'm siding with the owners. Something about guys loaded with jailhouse tats, having rap sheets longer than Manute Bol's arm, regularly shooting 4-17 with 6 turnovers.....making $150,000 per game....that bothers me!!!

Sounds like ENVY, Stop hatin
 
....both sides are greedy as all get out! But I'm old school. I'm siding with the owners. Something about guys loaded with jailhouse tats, having rap sheets longer than Manute Bol's arm, regularly shooting 4-17 with 6 turnovers.....making $150,000 per game....that bothers me!!!

Of course you do. It's the owners who should be making all the money. Not the players, who are, of course, putting forth the effort in the games. And of course, when "fans" go to the game, it's the owners they want to see!!!! By the way, when do the Greg Miller jersey's go on sale?
 
I will say that the owners throwing depreciation into the figure smells strongly of ******** to me.

Any accountant who wanted to keep his license to practice would have to. What's your idea, Kicky? Write off the cost of a new $10 billion arena in the very first year, then show large "carry-over" losses for years thereafter?
 
...I'm a playa hater, an owner hater, an NBA hater.....and assorted other types of hater...asssociated with basketball!

The way I figures it, CJ, it aint the owners so much, and it sho nuff aint da playaz. It's dem damn coaches, I tellya. Dem foolz ruins EVERYTHANG!
 
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