http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/10/sport ... .html?_r=1
But the path the N.F.L. Players Association chose — decertification, coupled with an antitrust lawsuit — remains a weapon in the basketball players’ arsenal should negotiations fail.
Moderators: Chris Porter's Hair, floppymoose, Sleepy51
But the path the N.F.L. Players Association chose — decertification, coupled with an antitrust lawsuit — remains a weapon in the basketball players’ arsenal should negotiations fail.


Sleepy51 wrote:Eventually, they will. I have no doubt that the owners will get most of what they want from this lockout. And as a fan, I dread that reality. When the players break, it is going to hurt the fans in the long run.
Sleepy51 wrote:billinder33 wrote: Interestingly, it's classic case of social wealth distribution vs winner-take-all capitalism.
On what humanistic grounds are the owners entitled to a "social distribution of wealth?" This is not healthcare. It's not education. Human civilization does not descend into Hobbsian carnage if a few NBA teams are shutterred for failure. The only wealth distribution being considered is to redistribute players wealth among already preposterously wealthy owners, who also dip into the non-voluntary fan pocket through tax breaks and public financing of stadium schemes . . . none of which do the players get to participate in.

billinder33 wrote:Sleepy51 wrote:billinder33 wrote:NBA players getting close to 60% of the gross revenue in a business that has huge operational expenses seems high to me. In the restaurant business (granted not a exactly an apples to apples comparison), about 33% is typically labor, 33% COGS, and the remaining third split between fixed costs and owner profit. While NBA franchises don't have much if any in the way of COGS, operational expense is through the roof - arena leases, travel expense, marketing, etc, and that doesn't even factor in the labor that is NOT associated with player salaries like coaching, scouting, and training, marketing personnel, backoffice staff, etc.
Player salaries would be more accurately considered COGS (especially when they are being depreciated as property.) The core NBA product is PLAYERS PLAYING basketball. Not jerseys or nachos. 58% of revenues are spent procuring the raw commodity that the NBA sells.
Obviously there are differences, but looking at another company who's product is a commodity (XOM Exxon Mobile)
http://investing.businessweek.com/resea ... ker=XOM:US
They had sales of $342BB and cost of sales of $231BB. That's a 60% cost of goods sold.
Different businesses have very different investment and operating profiles. I would venture that the restaurant business has very little in common with a $400MM sports/entertainment complex.
I'm not sure that's a fair comp either. Oil companies are typically low margin on mass volume industries. Plus, what comprises that COGS line item? 3rd party consulting contracts to companies like Halaburton? Drilling platforms? - one would think that would be operational, but when you look at their income statement, non-S&M non-Depreciation operating expenses are 12% of revenues, which I find difficult to buy into.
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Jester_ wrote:Can we trade Draymond Green for Grayson Allen?
Sleepy51 wrote:
The thing is, I look at those two examples and I would see the NBA player workforce as MUCH more like Drillers, consultants and subcontractor relationship than I would see it like dishwashers.
But either way, if we accept that the NBA's player workforce is labor and not COGS (which I don't, based on the tax treatment and nature of the relationship) then the miniscule COGS line item goes a long way towards offsetting the massive labor expense.
There is a value judgement that I really really am not comfortable with in dismissing the character of professional athletic "labor" to liken it to dishwashing or bartending (both jobs I have done in my own life.) I wonder why as a society so many of us are willing to financially reward and spectate and take from this one particular branch of highly specialized labor while simultaneously holding highly paternalistic and contemptuous opinions of it.


billinder33 wrote:One more comment on COGS. If we put things like contractors and drillers into COGS, then we should do the same on the NBA side and put coaching, staff, scouting, D-League operations, and other nebulous aspects of the product as part of the discussion of player salary percentages as well.
That's the slippery-slope of using COGS as a percent. If you throw the kitchen sink into COGS on the corporate side, you have to do the same on the NBA side to get comparable numbers, and then find a way to deduce player salaries from that amalgamation. To me, splitting out direct labor is a much easier way to look at the number.
Jester_ wrote:Can we trade Draymond Green for Grayson Allen?

floppymoose wrote:I don't really care about what the %'s are in other businesses. To me it's much simpler than that. The players are the product. If the player slice of the pie is small enough that the owners are guaranteed to make money no matter how stupid they are, that to me is the definition of the player's pie being too small. That some teams are losing money while others are making money sounds like the correct state of affairs as far as the player/owner split goes. There is nothing stopping most teams from making money right now aside from their own poor decision making. The remaining teams can be either revenue shared into profitability, moved, or bought out by the league and contracted.
Jester_ wrote:Can we trade Draymond Green for Grayson Allen?

Jester_ wrote:Can we trade Draymond Green for Grayson Allen?

Sleepy51 wrote:
I understand that was your objective in bringing up the restaurant business, but my response was about the fact that the NBA has minimal costs other than player salaries. Where your restaurant example had 33% in labor and 33% in COGS, the NBA does not have 58% in labor and another 33% in COGS (unless that fancy paper they print tickets on is REALLY expensive.) The higher player salaries are offset to some degree by much lower COGS. The TOTAL of all expenses is not a far off as the way your original example insinuated.
Back to the basketball stuff, we aren't that far apart. I want a hard cap. I just also want contraction. I would also be perfectly willing to see the players go without a minimum salary. Seriously, I would be absolutely fine with the 15th man needing a summer job. I think he should need one. Because he's not likely to stay on a roster for long anyway and needs something to fall back on.
I think within that really basic framework, a lot of the other problems take care of themselves. What I do not want is for players who ARE driving revenue, who ARE increasing franchise values that they do not participate in to be limited in what compensation they can seek in exchange for their exceptionally valuable services. Lebron James does not owe Rob Kurz financial security anymore than the taxpayers of Lousisiana owe the next Hornets owner guaranteed ticket sales.
floppymoose wrote:I don't really care about what the %'s are in other businesses. To me it's much simpler than that. The players are the product. If the player slice of the pie is small enough that the owners are guaranteed to make money no matter how stupid they are, that to me is the definition of the player's pie being too small. That some teams are losing money while others are making money sounds like the correct state of affairs as far as the player/owner split goes. There is nothing stopping most teams from making money right now aside from their own poor decision making. The remaining teams can be either revenue shared into profitability, moved, or bought out by the league and contracted

Jester_ wrote:Can we trade Draymond Green for Grayson Allen?
Sleepy51 wrote:Oh boy...
Rob Kurz and minimum salary really arent essential to my argument that was kind of tongue in cheeck. The point was that I do not mind if player salaries come down, includimg Damp's salary. I just do not support any measures to reduce those salaries that restict player's opportunity. The salaries should be reduced by responsible spending decisions by owners. Makin good decisions and living with the results does not require rules limiting contracts. The owners are not required to offer anyone any specific amount of money for any specific number of years except in the case of rookie scale. Restraint and good decisionmaking can accomplish all of that, but we wont get restraint ir good decisionmaking as long as the owners continue to structure idiotproof financial systems to protect the weakest and stupidest among them.

billinder33 wrote:Sleepy51 wrote:Oh boy...
Rob Kurz and minimum salary really arent essential to my argument that was kind of tongue in cheeck. The point was that I do not mind if player salaries come down, includimg Damp's salary. I just do not support any measures to reduce those salaries that restict player's opportunity. The salaries should be reduced by responsible spending decisions by owners. Makin good decisions and living with the results does not require rules limiting contracts. The owners are not required to offer anyone any specific amount of money for any specific number of years except in the case of rookie scale. Restraint and good decisionmaking can accomplish all of that, but we wont get restraint ir good decisionmaking as long as the owners continue to structure idiotproof financial systems to protect the weakest and stupidest among them.
So you are against a maximum contract value? Or just the reduction of the existing maximum?
Jester_ wrote:Can we trade Draymond Green for Grayson Allen?

billinder33 wrote:Reportedly, the Thunder are hemorrhaging money while Cohan made money every year. Clearly there is a huge disconnect between making decisions and making money. You seem to think that there is a correlation between profit and decision, where the evidence would say otherwise.
billinder33 wrote:And you know who's to blame for that? YOU ARE.... because you are someone who paid a lot of money to support Cohan's crap decision making over the years by going to home games. If you really wanted to punish owners for bad decision making, then you should have stayed home all these years and watched the games on Fox Sports Bay Area Network instead.

floppymoose wrote:billinder33 wrote:Reportedly, the Thunder are hemorrhaging money while Cohan made money every year. Clearly there is a huge disconnect between making decisions and making money. You seem to think that there is a correlation between profit and decision, where the evidence would say otherwise.
What evidence? The only evidence I can find suggests they made good money. Their attendance is strong, their payroll is under control, and they make playoff dollars and will continue to do so. I'm not convinced they are in a bad way at all.
http://www.forbes.com/lists/2010/32/bas ... 29710.html
floppymoose wrote:billinder33 wrote:And you know who's to blame for that? YOU ARE.... because you are someone who paid a lot of money to support Cohan's crap decision making over the years by going to home games. If you really wanted to punish owners for bad decision making, then you should have stayed home all these years and watched the games on Fox Sports Bay Area Network instead.
I don't see a lot of games in person, but that doesn't matter. The strength of the season ticket holder money is just one more thing the owners have to evaluate. It's one of the things that makes GS a valuable team. Where GS has suffered for their poor decisions has been in maximizing their profit. They would be able to charge (even) more for seats, get playoff revenues, get more tv money, and get players for less money if they had made better decisions over the years.
Jester_ wrote:Can we trade Draymond Green for Grayson Allen?
Sleepy51 wrote:The owners are not required to offer anyone any specific amount of money for any specific number of years except in the case of rookie scale. Restraint and good decisionmaking can accomplish all of that, but we wont get restraint ir good decisionmaking as long as the owners continue to structure idiotproof financial systems to protect the weakest and stupidest among them.
floppymoose wrote:
What evidence? The only evidence I can find suggests they made good money. Their attendance is strong, their payroll is under control, and they make playoff dollars and will continue to do so. I'm not convinced they are in a bad way at all.
http://www.forbes.com/lists/2010/32/bas ... 29710.html
floppymoose wrote:I don't see a lot of games in person, but that doesn't matter. The strength of the season ticket holder money is just one more thing the owners have to evaluate. It's one of the things that makes GS a valuable team. Where GS has suffered for their poor decisions has been in maximizing their profit. They would be able to charge (even) more for seats, get playoff revenues, get more tv money, and get players for less money if they had made better decisions over the years.
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