1
killbuckner wrote:Dboys- the courts have already rejected your reasoning.
Actually, it doesn't appear they've done any such rejecting once we have looked directly at what the courts have said over the years ...as long as things flow from certain specific circumstances.
The key is that the league has far greater latitude for things flowing from the collective bargaining
process ...even when a stalemate happens, or even when a union decertifies as a tactic.
Note that it was this context (unilateral choices flowing from the collective bargaining
process) that we were talking about - there was no assertion that a league could simply plop these items into their league in another context.
2 You keep focusing on "single entity" as if it decides things - and the courts have made it clear that defining the single entity issue for a league isn't the bottom line in these situations. Your assertion that "the courts have routinely rejected the single entity status for the NFL and NBA" is not true - they actually did NOT answer the question. But from what they went on to say, it wouldn't matter if they did.
3 I think your arguments about the draft, cap, and so on are logical in some ways and very flawed in others. For example, a better analogy for the draft is like getting an extremely lucrative offer from McDonald's to be a manager, at (and only at) a specific location in Kansas City. If you don't like KC, you can find a different employer besides McD, but perhaps will have to work for much less. McDonald's says that the location in KC has selected you, and if you ever want to work in a McDonald's, you start there until you get some seniority. Now, it's your choice.
Same for a player. If you want to play in the NBA league, you enter by going to the team that has selected you. After 4 years of seniority, you can pick your spot. Or, you can pick another league if you wish.
An added item about a draft - you can dream up all the analogies you want, but given the landscape of USA sports history and the court's recognition of a league having tools for competitive balance, I think you're far off base in thinking courts would tell a sports league they couldn't have a draft to help spread the talent in a talent-balancing way. It's incredibly reasonable. Heck, tens of millions of fantasy football players have drafts this month as their chosen way to balance competition.
4 As to the general issues ....
You and I and others can try to cobble together a different system based on our sense of "fairness" but it's not our business, so in the courts anything reasonable will fly. Not YOUR definition of reasonable, or mine, but a very fuzzy and permissive one.
"No way would the courts accept a 20 million dollar salary cap as "reasonable." ....I agree on $20M being unreasonable. But a different number????
For example, absent a CBA and using today's NBA environment, would the courts accept a hard cap of something in the $50-$60M range with somewhere around a 50-50 split if the league can document that they have been enduring operating losses of $300M a year (using GAAP numbers for their businesses) and this revision gives their owners a reasonable level of profitability? I think that has a good shot of flying.
Also, your renewed attempt at trumpeting treble damages assumes the league doesn't act "reasonably" - but the league would have to act outrageously to cross that line, I think. I think they'd be very careful and cross all their i's and dot all their t's. Ultimately, unilaterally adjusting the numbers to a level that simply lets them have a profit is not unreasonable, if the players won't work with them on that problem and they need to get their businesses back to work.