BorisDK1 wrote:You cannot predict profits strictly by revenues: you have to look at costs. I don't know what other costs the NHL has or does not have over against the NBA, so I won't comment on it.
You won't comment on the costs of the NHL because you don't know them but you will and do comment on the costs of the NBA saying that the owners couldn't control their other expenses and that player salaries were the only things they could control, and that the other expenses (over 50% of BRI + other non-BRI expenses according to the owners) were just the normal costs of running the league.
So based on that one comment you made about the NBA at least one, if not a combination of the following, must be true:
(1) the NBA costs several hundred million more to run than the NHL (I'd like to know why)
(2) the NHL includes a downright magical ownership group that has managed to keep costs below what you'd normally expect at which point it's clear that ownership
can control their other costs despite your claim to the contrary
(3) the NBA actually can control their other costs and is either not doing so wisely, or is manipulating them to show more costs in the one season where they need to negotiate for revenues, or is investing heavily somewhere outside of normal costs of running a league with the intention of some future revenue (unknown if it would be BRI-related or not, or if the expenses would be ongoing or more temporary) which is what business people do (i.e. take a risk)
(4) the NHL is exaggerating how low their expenses are (they don't have much to gain by doing so)
(5) the NBA is exaggerating how high their expenses are (they have a lot to gain by doing so)
I know you just won't comment anymore, but none of those answers really fit with your position.