Which makes this whole discussion pointless. Either there are major changes or no season next year.
Fair enough. But Glenn did want to understand the rules as they stand now.
Which makes this whole discussion pointless. Either there are major changes or no season next year.
Plus if the owners get the hard cap they want, and don't grandfather in all existing contracts, which is what they say they're going to do. Then there will suddenly be a lot of players on the market via trade by teams over the cap. In other words, it will be a buyers market, and the price of players will go down. Guys like Dalembert may well end up signing for 4 to 5 mil a year, because there won't be enough teams out there doing the buyinig.
I have a hard time believing that the league will implement any cap structure that will force teams (notably Lakers, Heat) to discard players they already have under contract. They may make it hard on them (forcing them to fill out the roster with min-level players) but I don't see how they could enforce it otherwise. Imagine the following scenario:
Miami Heat: Sorry, David Stern, but we can't find anybody to trade for Bosh. Nobody has any cap space left because the cap has been reduced so severely. It's not even that we don't want to follow your rules, it's that your rules prohibit any of the other 29 teams from trading for him. His salary is too high.
David Stern: Well, I guess you'll just have to cut him outright.
Chris Bosh: What about my contract? What about my money? I'll sue!
David Stern: OK, the Heat have to cut you, but they also have to pay out your salary.
Miami Heat: And now we're short a player. We'll have to sign someone at the minimum. Hey, there's this really great player out there named Chris Bosh!
David Stern: Sorry, you can't sign him. Otherwise it totally defeats the purpose of our salary cap.
Miami Heat: So we're going to be paying him $20M+ a year not to play basketball for us, and somebody else is going to be paying for him to play for them, too?
Chris Bosh: Double bonus!
Miami Heat: Screw this. We secede.
Anyway, I pretty much guarantee that no teams will be forced to get rid of players they already have under contract. They may not be as able to bring new players in, but they won't be forced to get rid of anybody.
I have a hard time believing that the league will implement any cap structure that will force teams (notably Lakers, Heat) to discard players they already have under contract. They may make it hard on them (forcing them to fill out the roster with min-level players) but I don't see how they could enforce it otherwise. Imagine the following scenario:
Miami Heat: Sorry, David Stern, but we can't find anybody to trade for Bosh. Nobody has any cap space left because the cap has been reduced so severely. It's not even that we don't want to follow your rules, it's that your rules prohibit any of the other 29 teams from trading for him. His salary is too high.
David Stern: Well, I guess you'll just have to cut him outright.
Chris Bosh: What about my contract? What about my money? I'll sue!
David Stern: OK, the Heat have to cut you, but they also have to pay out your salary.
Miami Heat: And now we're short a player. We'll have to sign someone at the minimum. Hey, there's this really great player out there named Chris Bosh!
David Stern: Sorry, you can't sign him. Otherwise it totally defeats the purpose of our salary cap.
Miami Heat: So we're going to be paying him $20M+ a year not to play basketball for us, and somebody else is going to be paying for him to play for them, too?
Chris Bosh: Double bonus!
Miami Heat: Screw this. We secede.
Anyway, I pretty much guarantee that no teams will be forced to get rid of players they already have under contract. They may not be as able to bring new players in, but they won't be forced to get rid of anybody.
I have a hard time believing that the league will implement any cap structure that will force teams (notably Lakers, Heat) to discard players they already have under contract. They may make it hard on them (forcing them to fill out the roster with min-level players) but I don't see how they could enforce it otherwise. Imagine the following scenario:
Miami Heat: Sorry, David Stern, but we can't find anybody to trade for Bosh. Nobody has any cap space left because the cap has been reduced so severely. It's not even that we don't want to follow your rules, it's that your rules prohibit any of the other 29 teams from trading for him. His salary is too high.
David Stern: Well, I guess you'll just have to cut him outright.
Chris Bosh: What about my contract? What about my money? I'll sue!
David Stern: OK, the Heat have to cut you, but they also have to pay out your salary.
Miami Heat: And now we're short a player. We'll have to sign someone at the minimum. Hey, there's this really great player out there named Chris Bosh!
David Stern: Sorry, you can't sign him. Otherwise it totally defeats the purpose of our salary cap.
Miami Heat: So we're going to be paying him $20M+ a year not to play basketball for us, and somebody else is going to be paying for him to play for them, too?
Chris Bosh: Double bonus!
Miami Heat: Screw this. We secede.
Anyway, I pretty much guarantee that no teams will be forced to get rid of players they already have under contract. They may not be as able to bring new players in, but they won't be forced to get rid of anybody.
I think what is like to happen is an agreement on moving gradually towards a hard(er) cap, which means there will be no cutting of current contracts, but restrictions that become tighter every year until all current contracts expire, and all the contracts are post-CBA. This will probably make it hard for teams with lots of long term pre-CBA contracts to add new players, but they will not be forced to release their players. It might motivate them, though, to trade away players with long term contracts in order to get under the cap. On the other hand, teams will be more hesitant to take on pre-CBA contracts, even if they are quality players, since the implications of taking on these contracts will become worse than they are now.
Yep, most likely scenario is it gradually phasing in.
Except the owners want the changes now. Plus this CBA will probably only be for 4-5 years at most with the option to extend. Some contracts go beyond that time frame.
I think we should take note that JT is shooting almost the exact same field goal percentage as Landry. I think JT could hit 40 layups in a row and someone would still be bitching about his missing shots around the basket. Is he perfect? No! But he has improved.
Yeah, he lost the championships for the Celtics last year. By getting injured. If he hadn't gotten injured, the Celtics would be world champs now. Thats how overrated he is. My Buddy Robin is a huge Laker fan and was watching the Championships with me. The minute Perkins went down, I turned to him and said, the Lakers just won the championships. They can't beat the Lakers without him.
The current contracts are legally binding. They have no way of legally voiding these contracts, and players aren't just going to voluntarily give up money they are contractually entitled to. Imposing an immediate hard cap with those contracts in place would paralize the entire league. The only way they can do it is gradually.
Keep in mind that the NHL did in fact manage to negotiate a 24% rollback in all existing contracts as part of the end of the '04-'05 lockout. And while it may not be possible to technically void the contracts, the players don't get paid if the owners lock them out. That's got precedent from back in '98. And there are some serious ramifications of that.
Not counting unguaranteed money, NBA players are collectively owed $1.5B next year, and a total of $3.3B for all future years. That means that if NBA players allow the season to go into lockout next year (and the owners have already threatened that the lockout would last an entire season) they stand to lose $1.5 billion dollars. If they accept a 25% pay cut across the board and play the season, they lose "only" $830 million dollars. So, unless they believe that they will be in a stronger negotiating position (for future contracts) after a one-year lockout (hint: they won't be) there's actually reasonable incentive to take a salary roll-back. Even a 25% roll-back will cut net losses nearly in half. That doesn't mean a roll-back is going to happen (and I don't actually think one will) but it does show that such a thing is not beyond the pale. It could reasonably happen.
It's hard for me to keep that in mind because I know absolutely nothing about hockey. I wouldn't even be able to name one professional hockey player to save my own life..
Having said that, I'm no expert and I'm not a lawyer, but just intuitively I would think that:
1. I don't remember the details of the '98 lockout, but it seems to me that if there is a lockout due to players' refusal to cut back on their own guaranteed money, then they can't deny the players their salary. Just like if my boss wanted to cut a 3rd of my salary and I refused, he wouldn't be able to just not pay me. If the situation were reversed, meaning the players go on strike due to the league's refusal to better their terms, then I would understand that the owners would not be obligated to pay them their salary.
2. Each player signs his contract individually, which means that there cannot be an across-the-board decision to cut salaries unless every single player voluntarily agrees. If one player refuses to cut his salary, I don't see how anyone can force him to do so.
It's hard for me to keep that in mind because I know absolutely nothing about hockey. I wouldn't even be able to name one professional hockey player to save my own life..
Having said that, I'm no expert and I'm not a lawyer, but just intuitively I would think that:
1. I don't remember the details of the '98 lockout, but it seems to me that if there is a lockout due to players' refusal to cut back on their own guaranteed money, then they can't deny the players their salary. Just like if my boss wanted to cut a 3rd of my salary and I refused, he wouldn't be able to just not pay me. If the situation were reversed, meaning the players go on strike due to the league's refusal to better their terms, then I would understand that the owners would not be obligated to pay them their salary.
2. Each player signs his contract individually, which means that there cannot be an across-the-board decision to cut salaries unless every single player voluntarily agrees. If one player refuses to cut his salary, I don't see how anyone can force him to do so.
1. I don't remember the details of the '98 lockout, but it seems to me that if there is a lockout due to players' refusal to cut back on their own guaranteed money, then they can't deny the players their salary. Just like if my boss wanted to cut a 3rd of my salary and I refused, he wouldn't be able to just not pay me.
On this one - if you read the fine print on your contract, in some states "each party can terminate the contract without reason given 30 days notice.". In Delaware, 30 days aren't needed. Just sayin'.
Players get paid on a per game basis. No games = no pay. Doesn't matter the reason.
That seems strange to me. So if the owners initiate a lockout for no apparent reason, that means they don't have to pay the players?
We, and the rest of the league, have 9 years of Daly's body of work to go by. Was why all the silliness abou him earlier was getting on my nerves -- everybody knows what this guy is and can do. He's nto a world beater, but he's one of those Top 10 or 15 interior shotblocker/rebounders, and has been for a long time. He's in the Top 50 al time in shotblocking (or it might have been #54 entering the season?), and si routinely in the Top 20 in the league in per minute rebounding. This should not be news to anyboby. The offense is just a bonus, but he's a xareer 54% shooter, and not a terrbile FT shooter for a big man. And he's been doing it all decade.
The latter is due to American labor law -- the players have a union, the contracts were negotiated under rules agreed to byt he union. If the union agrees to roll them back, back they go.
It should be ntoed however that this successful rollback of NHL contracts (in the face of a union almost as irrational and antagonistic as the MLB's union) took an entire year -- the NHL actually scrapped their entire season. they still haven't gotten back on TV the way they were. It was ridiculous. And nwo the rumblings over there are that the fools inthe union are gearing up for another go at it. Luckily hockey fans are pretty stup...er...I mean fanatical. They'd likely be back even if their favorite player came over to their house and peed in their corn flakes. And since the sport never really seems concerned about a larger footprint, that's enough. I think the NBA is in much more direct competition wiht the other major NOrth American sports, and has been actively trying to establish a global presence for a decade at least. Following in hockey's footsteps would judt be nuts.
I say sign dally for 3 years and let's see what whiteside can bring us. If whiteside is legit then we trade dallys contract, and since it's only 3 years he'll have good trade value.
I have a hard time believing that the league will implement any cap structure that will force teams (notably Lakers, Heat) to discard players they already have under contract. They may make it hard on them (forcing them to fill out the roster with min-level players) but I don't see how they could enforce it otherwise. Imagine the following scenario:
Miami Heat: Sorry, David Stern, but we can't find anybody to trade for Bosh. Nobody has any cap space left because the cap has been reduced so severely. It's not even that we don't want to follow your rules, it's that your rules prohibit any of the other 29 teams from trading for him. His salary is too high.
David Stern: Well, I guess you'll just have to cut him outright.
Chris Bosh: What about my contract? What about my money? I'll sue!
David Stern: OK, the Heat have to cut you, but they also have to pay out your salary.
Miami Heat: And now we're short a player. We'll have to sign someone at the minimum. Hey, there's this really great player out there named Chris Bosh!
David Stern: Sorry, you can't sign him. Otherwise it totally defeats the purpose of our salary cap.
Miami Heat: So we're going to be paying him $20M+ a year not to play basketball for us, and somebody else is going to be paying for him to play for them, too?
Chris Bosh: Double bonus!
Miami Heat: Screw this. We secede.
Anyway, I pretty much guarantee that no teams will be forced to get rid of players they already have under contract. They may not be as able to bring new players in, but they won't be forced to get rid of anybody.
Their FG% may be similar, but I know that you Baja, watch enough games to know that Landry takes a lot more outside shots than JT does. I don't think it's unfair to call out professional NBA big men for missing easy shots around the rim. In JT's case he usually follows it up and tips it in eventually, but you'd still rather have him finish on the initial attempt. If any big man in the NBA consistently blows easy lay ups (I call Tyreke out on this too), they deserve criticism. Fair and simple.
I agree with you though that JT has shown improvement around the basket. He's converted many more shots off the pick and roll with Tyreke and has also shown a decent turnaround jumper. But it isn't good enough, and we need him to be better if we're getting rid of Landry.
The Lakers would have lost without Andrew Bynum, but lots of people on this board still say that Bynum is overrated. Perkins plays a solid role on the Celtics and does his job well. He's good, but IMO if he were on any other team he wouldn't have nearly the same amount of publicity/reputation as a great defender.
Keep in mind that the NHL did in fact manage to negotiate a 24% rollback in all existing contracts as part of the end of the '04-'05 lockout. And while it may not be possible to technically void the contracts, the players don't get paid if the owners lock them out. That's got precedent from back in '98. And there are some serious ramifications of that.
Not counting unguaranteed money, NBA players are collectively owed $1.5B next year, and a total of $3.3B for all future years. That means that if NBA players allow the season to go into lockout next year (and the owners have already threatened that the lockout would last an entire season) they stand to lose $1.5 billion dollars. If they accept a 25% pay cut across the board and play the season, they lose "only" $830 million dollars. So, unless they believe that they will be in a stronger negotiating position (for future contracts) after a one-year lockout (hint: they won't be) there's actually reasonable incentive to take a salary roll-back. Even a 25% roll-back will cut net losses nearly in half. That doesn't mean a roll-back is going to happen (and I don't actually think one will) but it does show that such a thing is not beyond the pale. It could reasonably happen.