The last CBA was already damn near idiot proof. The only team that lost actual money on a total return basis under the expired CBA was Charlotte. In a watered down, overexpanded league with a serious parity problem and half a dozen half full arenas, only ONE team lost real money when all was said and done.
A number of people seem to have very strong feelings about guaranteed player contracts and the impact of guaranteed money on player performance. A revenue sharing system under a lopsided CBA is a GUARANTEED CONTRACT for owners. What do you imagine that does to an OWNER'S performance? How can the significance of guaranteeing profits to ownership be lost on Cohan-era Warrior fans of all people? If owners are supposedly of significance to fans because of a connection between ownership, risk and the quality of the product, then leaving Chris Cohan and Tawn's grandkids out of the equation, how do fans benefit from guaranteeing owners profits and insulating them from risk of loss?
Capitalism works (when it works) because of risk. The pressures of risk and competition and the strengthening and purifying power of loss are what create efficiency in markets. You get better businesses when bad businesses are allowed to fail. When is the last time an NBA team was actually allowed to fail? The numbers being floated as new CBA proposals will all but eliminate financial risk altogether from the owners side of this equation. An owner that isn't taking risk is not a capitalist. Owners who are insulated from risk and competition by collusion are called cartels.












