From Larry Coon's article:
Union president Derek Fisher placed the blame squarely on the teams' front offices. "We've run into situations where teams have either mismanaged spending, overpaid staff, or made decisions on rosters and personnel that weren't in their best interest -- things that we're now being asked to take the hit for,"
You mean like some schmuck giving Derek Fisher $37 million over six years? Eff you Rotten Fish.
The NBA is losing money as a whole, and the salary system/length of guarenteed contracts is totally out of whack, but not nearly to the extent that the owners are whining about. IMO it has become detrimental to the league, but not worth losing a season over.
Just institute a reasonable hard cap ($65 to $70 million range), institute a reasonable minimum team salary ($45 to $50 million), get rid of trade restrictions and signing restrictions (not necessary with a hard cap), limit the length of guarenteed contracts to 3/4 or 4/5 years instead of 5/6 years, and institute some level of revenue sharing. All of that evens the playing field some, still rewards well managed teams, and addresses the current revenue/income issues.
The counter argument is that poorly run teams should greatly suffer for their mistakes and face the consequences. I'm not toally against that, but the NBA is not a real-world business controlled by the market economy. In the real world, the Timberwolves would have folded years ago and the NBA as a whole woud have become stronger. The truth is that the league is weighed down by its weakest link. For a lot of the poorly managed teams, bad long-term contracts weigh down the team. That aspect of free agency always fundamentally hurts the league for "non-superstar players". If you imagine that each player has a "correct" intrinsic value in free agency, the "winner" is never the bidder who gets closest to that value, it's always the one who bids the most. Limiting the legth of contracts does protect teams from making bad mistakes (necessary because the NBA is not really a free market), but it also greatly rewards those players that produce.
With the structure of the league as is, the above issues won't ever go away unless there is a drastic change. Something that would fix the above is relegation, which I'm all for. Imagine if after another crappy year the Kings and T-Wolves got relegated and had to join the NBDL. Adding a basic aspect of Darwinism to the league would definitely fix the problems of the bottom dwellers and make the league stronger as a whole. But that ain't happening any time soon.