lipoli390 wrote:thedoper wrote:Just make it so you can sign players you draft to as much as you want. The ire of the fans can then go back where it belongs if a player doesnt sign, the owners. How the owners got the players to give up more money with the salary cap and the revenue stream and how the greed issues of the NBA seem to be collectively levied at the players seem like incredible shrewdness to me. Not only are the owners making more money than ever, they can still act like victims when their prize ponies want to move.
It's not how much the owners make. The issue is how much more some owners can make because of the markets they're in. The ability to make a lot more in some (larger and/or warm-weather) markets would further skew competitive balance over time and would probably lead to a consolidation in the number of teams and less geographic coverage. Ultimately, that contraction would reduce the overall popularity and viewership, which would reduce overall revenue. The billionaires who own NBA teams wouldn't suffer at all. But the fans would and so would the players since there would be fewer teams and, overall, less revenue to distribute among the players. Furthermore, the salary cap and rookie salary structure spreads then wealth among more players by limiting the amount that would otherwise get tied up with a smaller group of elite stars and highly touted rookies.
The NBA Players Association has agreed to the current structure because they understand that it's in the overall best interest of the majority of players to have some chance of competitive balance with a larger number of teams spread out geographically and to spread the wealth among a larger group of players, including those who weren't highly touted coming out of college but who have proven themselves - players like Middleton.
The intent of the salary cap and other mechanisms to promote competitive balance has been challenged lately by stars flexing their muscle and banding together with each other and the wealthiest franchises to form super teams. As we know, if you create a rule, people will find a way around it. I don't think there's a practical way to fix it. The stars have too much clout in the Players Association and the big-market owners have a lot of power among the NBA ownership group. But all is not lost so long as the League has successful teams like the Bucks, Raptors, Spurs and Hawks.
This really isn't a battle between the players and owners. It's more of a battle between the star players and big-market owners on one side and the non-star players and smaller-market owners on the other side.
Glen Taylor is going to make 20x on his investment. The dispute between owners is negligible. If Glen wanted to make more than that win. They all love the cap, and Glen was and has been one of the biggest proponent of it, when in actuality the only tool the smaller markets could yield (the ability to play your players significantly more) has been stripped away. The solution for competitive balance is simple, allow teams to pay players they draft any amount of $$$. If an owner doesnt want to shell out enough to keep that player so be it. But the owners dont really care, they have a safeguard money making ponzi scheme, the players are then forced to wield any power they can (freedom of movement and external sponsorship), and the fans suffer. Maybe when every owner pays more than they can afford (like Lore and Arod) for a team, the push for competitive balance will matter, but the overwhelming majority of current owners are due for a massive windfall if they ever sell. Why would they care about really addressing competitive balance.