DG88 wrote:Schadenfreude wrote:DG88 wrote:I completely agree the owners gave up the most and actually looked like they were willing to get a deal done. The players are looking like they can't compromise.
That's because the owners began at an entirely absurd position, and have been slowly chipping away at it to appear more conciliatory. The players, on the other hand, began by offering significant concessions.
Yes but the owners backed off on a lot of the the stuff they were proposing like the hard cap, guaranteed contracts and opt out at year 7 in the deal etc. They also entertained a 50/50 split of BRI to the players, yet they out right rejected it. Now this could just possibly be a way for the owners to gain ground on the PR battle or they're really were trying to get a deal done.
You're kind of restating Schad's point. The owners aren't "giving up" the hard cap since it never existed in the first place. And it doesn't need to be said again that formally offering 47% (informally 50%) of BRI is a slap in the face when the players got 57% last year, a figure that, obviously, the owners agreed to during the last CBA negotiations. Not to mention that the owner's definition of BRI is slightly skewed.
If the owners are pumping this stuff out for PR purposes, they're doing a really poor job IMO. I can't generate any pity for a businessman who wants to create a system where they're guaranteed not to lose any money. The owners love to refer to the NBA as a business, and no industry has such an airtight no-risk system. If you make bad choices (be it overpaying a stiff, locating your franchise in a bum market, etc.), you're going to suffer.
I know you're not backing the owners outright, and I wouldn't want to assume what your stance is, but I have a hard time understanding anyone who sides with the owners in this.






































