ranger001 wrote:Decertification will cause problems for the players also. No draft and no salary cap means small markets team cannot compete. Without any promising rookies and with no chance to win fans will stop going to teams in small markets and a few teams will fold. That means less jobs for players.
The big name players will get more money but everyone else will get less.
I agree. This type of Wild West system will ultimately end up in many teams going under or being forced to move to bigger markets where local TV could support a bigger payroll. Toronto is a 'big' market city but I don't think broadcast rights for the Raps bring in much money.
DaCrush is right when he says there is no way the richer teams will be able to control their own egos and not spend whatever it takes to get the big stars. That is why the league needs a restrictive CBA to prosper.
The big national TV contracts will shrink considerably if the nba is not represented in as many cities across America and becomes a 15-20 team league. There would be a lot of negativity toward the NBA if it abandoned 7-10 cities.
And ultimately it would be players taking the biggest hit of all with possibly 100 or more jobs being lost from a pool of only 450.
The superstars and their agents are the only ones holding up this deal now imo. Plus Hunter wanting to save his job and reputation.
The fact that a vote on 50/50 BRI split would likely get approval by the 450 members today tells me the union is fighting a losing battle here and I don't see the courts bailing them out.


















