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David Stern: NBA Losses Could Reach $400 Million

BRIAN MAHONEY   02/13/10 09:27 PM ET   AP

David Stern Nba Losses

DALLAS — David Stern said Saturday the NBA is projecting league-wide losses of about $400 million this season and has lost hundreds of millions in each previous year of the current collective bargaining agreement.

The commissioner said it has shown the players' association those numbers in hopes of demonstrating why the league feels it needs "significant changes" in the next deal.

The NBA's first proposal for a deal to replace the one that expires on July 1, 2011, was thrown out Friday after what players association director Billy Hunter called a "contentious" 90-minute meeting. Hunter said the proposal called for harsh changes that would affect every NBA player.

"The right adjectives were thrown around, and our proposal appropriately denounced. Our response is, 'You can denounce it, tear it up, you can burn it, you can jump up and down on it, as long as you understand that it reflects the financial realities of where we are,'" Stern said during his annual All-Star press conference.

"And if you would like to have your own proposal, as long as it comes back and deals with our financial realities, that's OK with us. That's fine with us. In fact, that's what we would like to do."

Stern criticized the union's behavior at the session, saying it earned "high marks on the list of theatrical negotiations." He revealed that the players' side brought in a lawyer who threatened that the union would be decertified, making negotiating more difficult.

He also had sharp words for his own side, denouncing anonymous comments made by team executives that served to inflame the bargaining process.

"If you know me, and you know our owners, that's not what we do. That's not us. And the players were upset with those quotes, which I find cowardly, if they were actually said," Stern said. "And if I ever found out who said them, they would be dealt with; they would be former, former NBA people, not current. And we assured the stars of that."

Stern refused to details specifics of the league's proposal. A person who had seen it told The Associated Press on Thursday that it called for first-round picks to have their salaries cut by about one-third, would reduce the minimum salary by as much as 20 percent, and would guarantee contracts for only half their value.

Also, the total value of a maximum salary would drop sharply, as would the total years players could sign for, and the players would see a reduction in their share of the basketball-related income, of which they currently receive 57 percent.

Stern defended sending the proposal shortly before the All-Star break, saying the plan all along was to start the process early. Hunter said the league would like to get a deal done before this July, but the union won't be in any rush to send its own.

"I never have told Billy how he should negotiate or how he wants to negotiate, any more than I tell his lawyer what words he uses to threaten us," Stern said. "That's their choice. We have been, you know, myself, I have only been at this since 1966. I started when I was in a crib."

The sides met twice last summer and exchanged financial documents. Stern made it clear that the league has shown the players all the facts they need to understand the difficulties owners are facing, losses he estimated at "at least" $200 million a year for the first four years of the current deal.

"Our response to the players was: We don't want to play any guessing games about that, all of the data which supports that will be made available to you," Stern said. "Certified financial returns, whatever you need, so that we can have a robust and open dialogue about how we are going to develop together a sustainable business model."

Hunter has argued that the league can fix its problems with expanded revenue sharing among teams. Stern said there will be a revenue sharing plan, but that needs to be implemented in conjunction with a new deal.

The recent economic downturn has been seen as a reason for the league's financial woes, but Stern denied that things will improve just because the economy does.

"Based upon the last several years, we have seen that the – we have shown the players the facts, and at our current level of revenue devoted to players salaries, it's too high," Stern said. "I can run from that, but I can't hide from that, and I don't think the players can, either. Those are the facts, and that's what we are dealing with."

But he said the differences won't prevent a new agreement, saying, "we will manage to get to a place where we always get to. There is always a deal and we plan to make a deal this time, too."

Stern also predicted the Charlotte Bobcats would be sold in about two months.

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DALLAS — David Stern said Saturday the NBA is projecting league-wide losses of about $400 million this season and has lost hundreds of millions in each previous year of the current collective ba...
DALLAS — David Stern said Saturday the NBA is projecting league-wide losses of about $400 million this season and has lost hundreds of millions in each previous year of the current collective ba...
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09:47 AM on 02/16/2010
Maybe if you did not do things like MSNBC just did showing Wescott winning the gold metal but failing to remove the crawl SO WE COULD F@#$ING SEE IT. Maybe than you would make money instead of losing money.
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johnnygoodwud
05:07 PM on 02/15/2010
NBA, no longer a sport, strickly entertainment,,,,,,,,,,,,and there's a big difference.
marka
A Purple State Progressive
08:13 AM on 02/15/2010
The owners are their own worst enemy. The owners bid up the salaries, over pay for contracts, and then ask for relief from the mess that they made for themselves. For supposedly astute businessmen these owners make error after error, this is a crisis of their own making. They want rules that will stop them before they spend again. The fact is, to achieve the same result in 2011, all they have to do is to stop spending money that they don;t have .
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mheister
Raconteur. Blog michaelheister.com
03:16 AM on 02/15/2010
A good part of the professional sports racket in the US involves these uber-rich owners playing cities off against each other for the privilege of having a team, and getting themselves tens of millions in tax breaks and free stuff (like stadiums and arenas) in the process.

The only pro team I know of actually at least partially owned by the fans (and other citizens) is the Green Bay Packers.

Los Angeles at least has been smart enough to tell the NFL to kiss off if they're not interested in the stadiums the area already has, like the Coliseum and the Rose Bowl. And the NFL has been stubborn enough to leave the second-largest market in the country without a team for what, more than a decade?

LA hasn't crumbled to dust for lack of an NFL team. The Lakers/Clippers/Kings/Ducks/Dodgers/Angels can leave tomorrow, and LA & the OC will still be just fine.

I usually take labor's side, but in this case, let 'em strike. Let 'em be locked out. We can live without the NBA for a season. Even two.

If the pro sports teams want me to care, then I should have a stake in it. If LA had a team owned by the people - like Green Bay's - I'd be interested. As it is, why should I care about wealthy owners or their rich players?*

*For the difference between "rich" and "wealthy", I refer you to Chris Rock.
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kidjudas
My Governor is not smarter than a 5th grader
07:44 AM on 02/15/2010
Green Bay Packers is 100% owned by the public. There is no "partially". They are the only NFL team that has to publicly release their numbers every year. Everyone associated with the team draws a paycheck. There is no "Jerry Jones" type owner or group of select owners.
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Dan Bimrose
a liberal
02:08 AM on 02/15/2010
I have never been able to enjoy watching the NBA. I would not miss it one bit if they sat out a season.
01:24 AM on 02/15/2010
Looks like the 2011 NFL and the NBA seasons will not happen. I don't care for NBA basketball and never watched it anyway. More time is spent at the foul line than anything else. Boring. I actually like college basketball.

I will miss the NFL, especially since I have season tickets. My football "fix" will have to be solely provided by college football in 2011.
01:10 AM on 02/15/2010
reminds people of con ball w all the tattoos..
12:40 AM on 02/15/2010
basketball players and baseball players add absolutely nothing to society other than some entertainment which some argue has a monetary value...the question becomes do they deserve millions for hitting a ball with a bat and throwing a ball through a hoop while teachers and policeman add a more valuable service to society and make peanuts...I stopped going to sports events after paying way too much for tickets, parking and meals for myself and kids...prefer watching a good movie or college sports...
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ultrabop
the beat goes on...
11:40 PM on 02/14/2010
After watching two days of the Winter Olympics, where people are actually risking their lives for nothing other than to be the best they can be....the NBA is a disgrace, pampered millionaires sauntering down the court, occasionally throwing a ball into a hoop?

Who gives a S... anymore.
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TOPCAT711
What a Long Strange Trip It's Been
11:14 PM on 02/14/2010
Too much money made by a bunch of tall people throwing a ball through a hoop.

Just my opinion........BTW - I'm not a fan.
09:33 PM on 02/14/2010
Mr Stern is using one of the oldest & least effective negotioting ploys in all of pro sports. The NBA is aiming to emulate the NHL by having a 1 year lock out & not scheduling or playing any games.
The fans of pro-basketball could try watching the college game. The NBA players would be out of a job. That leaves the NBA franchise holders. They, like Mr Stern, are out of touch with reality.
I'm not a big basketball fan. But I check the scores in Italian Pro Basketball & the stories in English about the Italian Pro Game are exciting. Shut the store, Dave. I'll go to the Italian leagues for excitment. You sure don't get excitment with the NBA.
09:06 PM on 02/14/2010
I'm not defending the thugs David Stern calls athletes, but I read somewhere Stern made $20 Million last year for running this circus. The game is crap, they need to extend the shot clock to at least 30 seconds(so they can actually run plays), the owners are clueless as are the players about the real world. There need to be about 6 less teams. Did they need another team in Charlotte after the first one failed? Memphis? Oklahoma? The Clips? Milwaukee? Nets? The 82 game schedule? WNBA?There are going to be some hard choices to be made over the next several years in the NBA, and Stern won't have to make them(he's already as wealthy as some of the games "superstars").
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SuiginTou7
Let the Alice Game begin!
09:16 PM on 02/14/2010
I have to question their intelligence to schedule the All star game at the same time of the Oylmpics. I'm betting they'll wonder why the viewship was so low....
07:30 PM on 02/14/2010
So, Stern is facing the reality that those nearly $1billion teams were over inflated and that despite the tv contracts, costs are going to have to come down. NBA players might actually start to have more talent that the street ballers unless they are going to completely rely on the shoe sales for income.
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MrT3
06:27 PM on 02/14/2010
baseball, hockey, and ufc are trash
04:05 PM on 02/14/2010
Good.

It's time to reduce the outrageous salaries that are paid to entertainers.
09:14 PM on 02/14/2010
It's good to lower the value of franchises also. They are currently worth more than the Mona lisa and most of them aren't really worth a flip.