Twinkie defense wrote:floppymoose wrote:If they had $300 million in losses last year (all of a sudden, after a nice run of profitability until - surprise! - it's CBA negotiating time) and then the next CBA gives them $300 million more (7% of the BRI) why should the values go up? The league will be breaking even.
It's amazing that so few ever see the contradictions. It's Emperor's New Clothes all over again!
I would expect a more healthy League, greater revenue, and greater profits would increase team values - although there is a question if values aren't already inflated right now, due to anticipation that a new CBA will be more favorable to team profitability than the last CBA.
That is their problem of over paying a team. Just like when you buy the stock at the highest, then the expectation went down, and you lose money. So you are asking that company to pay you back your lose? Oh please, that's their problem on buying something inflated; that's poor management, and should not be bailed out by anyone.
Twinkie defense wrote:Reignman wrote:And with respect to the NFL, and clarify for me if I'm wrong, are there any teams that wouldn't be able to stand on their own 2 feet without revenue sharing?
Last year I believe every NFL team made a profit - SF 49ers profited the least (for some reason), with a $1 mil profit. But of course that was under the interim year between their CBAs.
Regarding hockey, I'm not a fan but their salary structure does not at all approach that of the NBA does it? Are there hockey players making $17 or $18 mil per year?
And compared to (the very profitable) NFL: their biggest salaries, for superstar QBs, are south of $20 mil. NY Knicks have the equivalent of about 4 superstar QBs on their roster.
Your believe is very wrong.
Please put a link where it shows all the NFL team made a profit.
As for hockey, their salaries are disclosed, and great players like Igina makes 6m - 7m, Crosby makes 9m and etc.
Then for NFL, their salary cap is around $105m. Michael Vick is making $14m, El Manning at $12m. A few QB might makes $18m. But if you just want to say NBA can afford 4 superstar QBs on the roster, yes, that is true.
Twinkie defense wrote:floppymoose wrote:ranger001 wrote:And again, the players are employees not shareholders.
This is basically at the heart of the disconnect. These players are very much unlike most employees. They are not replaceable.
And yet they are replaced all the time. I'm sorry but Michael Jordan is not the Grateful Dead, playing to sold out arenas for thirty years.
Like most unions, the NBAPA exists for the average and below average player. And the history of collective bargaining has shown that employees get more pay, more benefits, more protections under unions than without unions. LeBron doesn't need the Union, it's costing him money - he's subsidizing the Jamal Crawfords of the world. Without the union, LeBron would make much more, but total salaries - along with salaries of 90% of the players - would be much less. There is no shortage of the kind of stinky bench players you see clogging up the rosters of every team in the League, and tons of guys in every major city that would love to have those roster spots at $50k/year. Just last week there were a bunch of dudes balling up in Oakland for a chance at a tiny salary and having to live in Iowa. Iowa! So I would be interested to hear your rational about total compensation going up without the NBAPA - and if that is the case, I think the Union would be doing its clients a fiduciary benefit by disbanding - not one of those fake decertifications though, but each man for himself.
Yes, the unions are there to protect below average players, but not average players.
Also, the league is protecting the owners as well. Can LeBron bolt after his first year to New York? No, but he would without CBA on rookie contract. Would Hedo Turkolu makes less on his preview contract year? Nope, but if there is no cap, he would make more (Blazzers would pay him more, or some other team).
Think of it this way.
There are 2 cases that owner will not lose money:
1) 47% or even 50% on RBI
2) Revenue sharing between owners, 57% on RBI
If you are concerned about owner losing money, then why not go with case 2? Why choosing case 1 to have some owners take more, and all players lose money?