The Rebel wrote:Hunter103 wrote:Wizenheimer wrote:
and exactly where does it say that the NBA is legally obligated to produce everything the union has asked for?
I believe the NBA is claiming the union has asked for records they aren't required by law to produce
Well if the records
are relevant, and the owners didn't provide them, then the union has a case. What we as a bunch of posters on the internet believe is ultimately irrelevant, but what is relevant will come out at the NLRB hearing, whichever way it goes. Until then it's useless to speculate.
That is a nice couple of ifs there. If the records are relevant, and if the owners did not provide them, but yet the owners are automatically guilty? Having thought about it for a little bit I seem to remember that the players also wanted the owners personal financials, here is a link I found from Berger.
Ken Berger wrote:The key to the NBPA's current strategy will be how the NLRB rules on the union's request for further financial information from the NBA to prove its stated $300 million in annual losses, said Jon Axelrod of Beins, Axelrod, P.C., in Washington, D.C., who has represented unions in labor disputes for 37 years. Larry Katz, the union's outside counsel, has requested additional financial documents from the owners, including those detailing third-party transactions -- where the money goes when a single entity owns the NBA team, the arena and an NHL team -- and franchise valuations.
"In my experience as a union lawyer, that stuff would be very valuable to the union in preparing its negotiating position," Axelrod said.
The NBA has furnished voluminous financial data to the union, including audited financial statements and tax returns. But Katz said the owners have not turned over accounting of third-party transactions or franchise valuations, for which the NLRB could cite the league for bad-faith bargaining.
http://www.cbssports.com/nba/story/1537 ... -legal-warSo the union wants to check the owners personal books, what they do outside of the league, the revenues and where they go from the NHL teams and arenas, and a valuation on what the team may be worth if it were sold. In other words they want a cut of what someone guesses the teams are worth, t
hey want a cut of the money the arenas make outside of the NBA, they want a cut of the owners personal businesses, and they want a cut off of an appraised value of a team. That must be where Hunter is getting his 600-700 million from.
I know the players are acting as entitled brats, but really they think they get the right to get a cut off of everything the owner does, even outside of the league and business of basketball? I would tell them to pound sand as well.
I don't know if you are intentionally misunderstanding or if it is just unintentional and based on your clear bias in the issue, but you are really missing the boat drastically with your leaps against the players. Nothing you said that I bolded is at all what is in that request.
The third party deals are between
the team and the related also owner owned entity. This isn't about getting the books on some unrelated business as you try to portray it. This is
only about basketball related business.
As an example, this is looking into if the Wizards paid 10 million to the Capitals for "marketing", to figure out if the Capitals really did 10 million in marketing for the wizards or if Leonsis is just spreading the Wizards profits over to the Capitals to lower taxes, or improve bargaining against the union. (And similarly to the stadium also owned by him). It is pretty easy when you own the Arena, the hockey team, and the basketball team, to pick contracts that enable you to move profits between the 3 to which ever you want. Same with owners that own TV stations, and essentially negotiate with themselves over TV fees.
For the owner of both there is zero (assuming away taxes) difference between paying 20 million in rights or 50 million. Which means there is zero reason to assume that the 20 or 50 that is picked was a true fair market price and not picked to minimize taxes (obviously very egregious examples might get you in trouble if audited). In contrast, when a team is negotiating with a TV station they don't own it is always in their interest to get the most money.
This isn't asking for Leonsis sets of personal financials, unless the team is giving him a loan. This isn't asking for revenue from the latest boy band concert at the arena. This isn't about attendance at the hockey team. This would only be asking for the details that the team paid to the owner (via his other holdings) as a cost, and trying to see if those numbers are fair market values. {And for what it is worth, I have no reason to believe that they aren't.}