Ponchos wrote:
Wow.. Just wow.
All money made counts in BRI calculations. It is completely irrelevant what team gets the money.
Again, do you know what BRI% is, how it is calculated and how it affects how much money players get?
Fine wrong wording, individual players and teams are rewarded additional bonuses and salaries with stipulations in their contracts if they make the playoffs. A team and player in the playoffs will make more revenue than a team that is not. Players out of the playoffs will not make the same amount as players are.
Best Record in NBA| $288,421
Best Record in Conference| $252,369 per team
Second Best Record in Conference| $202,842 per team
Third Best Record in Conference| $151,421 per team
Fourth Best Record in Conference| $119,000 per team
Fifth Best record in Conference| $99,158 per team
Sixth Best Record in Conference| $67,632 per team
Playing in the First Round| $149,243 per team
Playing in Conference Semifinals| $177,579 per team
Playing in Conference Finals| $293,447 per team
Losing in the NBA Finals| $1,173,474 per team
Winning the NBA Finals| $1,770,947 per team
You assigned a 1 billion dollar weight to the playoffs, which is arbitrary, do you have any number to say that the NBA generates 1 billion in revenue from the playoffs?
Whats the BRI for the year?
17% of 3 billion (the 4 weeks of games that are played) = 510,000,000.
100% of the 1 billion from the playoffs = 1,000,000,000.
So the BRI for the year is 1,510,000,000. With a 50/50 split that means the players would get 755,000,000.
Ok great, so how much did the players actually lose? 755mil divided by 2 billion (50% of the BRI if the whole season was played) = 37.75%, so they lost out on 62.25% of total wages.
Wait a minute?!?! 20 weeks of the season were lost, and the players lose 4% a week... They should've lost 83% but they actually only lost 62.25%!!! HOW CAN THIS BE!
How did you measure NBA playoff revenue? Ok I wont contest that the NBA playoffs are a major revenue source, can you verify that its actually 25 % of their total revenue or is this just a number you are pulling out of your ass? Ok lets say its close to that. So 4 % becomes adjusted and players lose per week becomes adjusted and now they are losing 2-3% percent of their total wages instead of 4. They will still lose more money demanding 52 % and losing this sum over a month than having accepted 50 % at the start and making this money from the start. BRI is still SMALLER.
The problem that both sides are now facing, though, is that the longer this lockout drags on, the bigger the hit to BRI. At four percent growth (which is modest), next year’s BRI number would have been $3.96 billion, but because of lost games, that figure will be much lower. Throw in the fact that fans who are disgusted with this fight in general won’t be rushing to add to the league’s intake—they won’t buy jerseys, they won’t go to games and patronize the arenas, they won’t re-up for NBA cable packages—and BRI will take a bigger hit. The concern has to be that not only will BRI suffer this year, but it might take multiple years to get back on track.
Read more:
http://aol.sportingnews.com/nba/story/2 ... z1d0Rxxs8DThe lost money in direct revenue from games, and indirect revenue that this will have in the future, will not justify a 52 % split when a real calculation of total lost earnings is made. Many see this. You do not.