No denying the points you made. And legally, the players have the right to do what they think is in their best interest. However, I and all the fans have the right to be critical of either side in this dispute. And while I admit that its hard to take a side without knowing all the tiny details.This I do know. We, the fans of the Sacramento Kings, are living a up close and personal life of a fan of a small town team. And unlike Portland, we don't have a billionaire owner.
If the goal of the league is to formulate a CBA that allows each and every team the financial ability to stand on its own two feet, then I'm down with that! In a capitalistic society, you succeed, or you disapear. I doubt anyone here wants the Kings to disapear. We can argue the merits of either side in this debate. But there's no denying that owners like the Maloofs, are dammed to be bottom dwellers if the system isn't changed. Small town teams have little to offer, but the mystic of being winners. Example, The Spurs or the the Thunder, etc.
The basic rule is always, don't kill the goose that lays the golden egg. The league is the Goose. As long as the league is healthy, the players will continue to make big bucks. So if I might suggest something to the players. Set your pride aside! Agree to all the proposals that make sense for the long term success of the entire league, and demand some sort of compensation, either long term or short term in return.
My advice to the owners. Get your house in order, and don't expect to be bailed out in the future by the players union. Prove to the players that your approaching these talks honestly, by putting revenue sharing on the table for the players to see. While I agree that revenue sharing is something to be agreed upon by the owners, I see no benefit in keeping those agreements secret from the players union. Unless of course, there is no agreement.
No doubt that adjustments need to be made. I'd favor a hard cap, similar to the NFL, which is totally opposed by the players and big market teams, for obvious reasons. I don't mean to come across like I'm "pro player." I'm really not. I don't care whether the players get 57% or 37% of BRI. Doesn't matter to me.
That said, I don't think that the amount of money a person or group of people make can be looked at in a vacuum. The average NBA player makes north of $5 million a year because the NBA is a $4 billion business. They get a share of the revenues. So for fans to say "what, they can't survive if they only make $3 million a year? Why don't they just take the cut and go play?" isn't fair. It's partly due to their talents that the league is a multi-billion dollar business, so it's understandable that they want to maximize their earning potential.
The money isn't the problem, if you ask me. It's the system. The players might make more than they should, based on the numbers and the profitability of the league, but you have a system that's being further and further skewed in favor of the big money and big market teams, despite the so-called restraints in place. It's obvious that things need to change, but what things are those?
For small market fans, like Kings fans, the problem isn't that the average player makes $5 million a year. The problem is that the contending teams have or will soon have $90 million payrolls, despite the $56 million salary cap. The problem is that big money teams can afford to pay a dollar-for-dollar luxury tax, so there are no real restraints preventing them from stacking their teams with talent. It does no good to draft well when big money teams can draft poorly and then pay your best draft picks max money once their contracts are up, effectively turning you into a farm system. People complain about the MLB, but there's really little difference between what the Yankees have been doing for a decade and what the Lakers are starting to do. Yeah, it's a little harder for an NBA team to add talent once they're above the cap, but it's not impossible, and as such, not only can the Lakers continue to pay their best players $20 million a year, they can actually bring in other star players and pay them $20 million a year as well. And so on.
It isn't even really about revenue sharing. I don't think the Lakers should have to subsidize the rest of the NBA with their $3 billion TV deal. But I don't think they should be able to outspend everyone using that $3 billion either. Fact is, revenue sharing is already a reality, in several ways. Staying with the Lakers, when they go to Sacramento and the PBP sells out, the Kings don't split those gate receipts and concessions with the Lakers. When high profile teams go to Milwaukee or Charlotte or New Orleans or Memphis, and the home team sells out, the road team gets none of that windfall. The big market/high profile teams are already subsidizing the small market teams, in more ways than one.
And it's like you said, if you can't cut it, you get cut. If the league wants to have a truly competitive league, serious changes need to be made, but it's not necessary for the best teams to subsidize the struggling teams. Sad to say, but if an NBA franchise can't hack it in a small city, then that franchise needs to make changes, maybe even move. The NBA's job isn't to make sure small towns get to keep their teams. But they should provide each team an equal opportunity to be competitive, or at least take steps in that direction. The highest paid player in the NFL is in one of the smallest cities in the country. That city also just built a new stadium to keep their team. Small cities
can support pro teams, but that becomes a significantly difficult proposition when the league provides them with zero protection against big market teams with fat pocket owners.
In this situation, the players' first proposal included a loss on their part. They've already come to terms with the fact that they're going to take a hit. But just having the players make less doesn't guarantee the financial well-being of the league, and it doesn't protect the small market teams. There needs to be systemic change in the NBA in order for the Kings and other small market teams to be competitive. That change can actually take place without the players taking a sizable hit in their percentage. The two issues are related, but separate.