Tag Archives: david stern

David Stern Rejects Chris Paul Trade

On the eve of the sport’s formal re-opening for business after a five-month lockout, NBA commissioner David Stern sent shockwaves throughout the league Thursday night by nixing the league-owned New Orleans Hornets’ plans to trade guard Chris Paul to the Los Angeles Lakers.

Within an hour of the Hornets striking an agreement in principle with the Lakers and Houston Rockets on a three-team trade that would have landed Paul in the same backcourt as Kobe Bryant, Stern informed the Hornets that they couldn’t make the trade, stunning team officials who had been working around-the-clock for days in hopes of bringing an end to the Paul saga before the season officially started.

ESPN

Union to meet Monday to discuss NBA’s offer

MIAMI (AP) — Decision day for NBA players may have arrived.

The players’ association will meet in New York on Monday morning, a session that could lead to the end of the lockout or send it into a bigger tailspin. Representatives from all 30 teams are expected, as are other players, to examine and discuss a seven-page summary of the NBA’s latest collective bargaining proposal to the union.

The proposal, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press, was dated to be delivered to union executive director Billy Hunter on Friday. At least some of the people who will be in the NBPA meeting said Sunday they had not yet seen the offer, creating more than a little confusion over what exactly is on the table.

“We haven’t asked for anything more than what we had,” Miami Heat player representative James Jones said Sunday. “We understand the times. We understand the economy. We just want a fair deal where both sides are bearing the weight of the present times and with an eye on the future of the game of basketball.”

Sounds so simple. But it’s not.

By Monday, things could finally become clear – because this union meeting may decide if basketball will be played this season.

Some project that team payrolls will exceed $100 million in the next five or so years, even to the chagrin of many owners. And on Saturday, Commissioner David Stern said again if the current offer is rejected, a harsher one – where owners would keep about another $120 million of basketball related income, or BRI, each year, along with other so-called system issues that players didn’t want – will take its place.

“We’re not going to cancel the season this week,” Stern said. “We’re just going to present them what we told them we would.”

The NBA wants a 72-game season to begin Dec. 15. For that to happen, a handshake deal almost certainly would have to be in place this week. Stern says it will take about 30 days to get the season started once an agreement is reached.

There are 17 items in the memo, including how teams paying a luxury tax would not be able to acquire free agents in sign-and-trade deals after the 2012-13 season. One of the key points comes on Page 5, where the NBA says “there will be no limitations on a player’s ability to receive 100% guaranteed salary in all seasons of a contract.”

Players have repeatedly said they will reject a deal where contracts are not guaranteed.

“I’m going to sit down take a look at the deal and analyze it,” Minnesota player rep Anthony Tolliver said Sunday, as the lockout reached Day 136. “Not like it’s the first offer or the last offer, but just as one where I’ll say `Would I or my teammates want to play under these conditions?’”

Among the other points of the current proposal, as outlined in the summary sent to Hunter by NBA Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver:

-The union will choose between accepting either a 50-50 split of BRI or a band where they may receive between 49 percent and 51 percent, depending on economic projections;

-All teams may still use a mid-level exception, though the rules vary considerably depending on whether a franchise is above or below the luxury-tax level;

-Minimum team payrolls would be at least 85 percent of the salary cap in 2011-12 and 2012-13, and 90 percent starting in 2013-14;

-Luxury tax rates would rise after the third year of the deal;

-Maximum contract lengths would not exceed five years, and annual raises would be cut significantly to a maximum of 6.5 percent;

-There would be an “amnesty” provision where a team would be permitted to waive one player before any season, if that player was under contract at the inception of the CBA, and have his salary removed from the team’s totals for luxury-tax and salary-cap purposes.

Still, some players sound skeptical that the offer they will see Monday will be enough for basketball to start up again.

“I was a little bit more hopeful last week than I am this week,” Tolliver said. “I’m trying not to be too negative but it’s kind of hard not to when it’s been this long and this many meetings. It’s hard not to get continuously more pessimistic by the day. Hopefully this deal will blow me away in a good way. But it’s hard to believe that’s going to be the case.”

Meanwhile, talks about decertifying continued to gain some momentum over the weekend.

An agent who spoke with the AP on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the ongoing dispute said “a lot of petitions have been signed already,” but acknowledged some players aren’t sure that move – should it happen – will get owners to relent on some issues, or simply steel them on a hard-line stance.

“I would say the thing I don’t like the most isn’t about the deal specifically, but is the lack of information on what’s actually on the table,” the agent said. “That’s the most frustrating thing. … I think that the guys should actually know what’s being proposed and decide from there.”

Another person directly involved with the negotiations told the AP the NBA side is frustrated – and nervous – over the sense that the league’s current offer is already being poorly received, even though most players have not seen the proposal.

That person also reiterated Stern’s words: If this isn’t the deal, the next offer will be much worse.

“It’s time to think rationally about what we’re talking about here,” the person involved with negotiations said. “This is the deal. We’ve come too far. We’ve talked it out. This is the deal and there are things in this deal that neither side will like. Everyone made concessions. It’s time to decide. We all talk about these arena workers and the effect this has on the local economy, all those things. If we mean what we say about those workers, this deal gets done and the season starts Dec. 15.”

© 2011 The Associated Press

NBA players get a new deal, and a break to ponder it

NEW YORK (AP) — David Stern is ready to start a 72-game season on Dec. 15.

Players, however, aren’t prepared to make that happen just yet.

If they choose to reject the league’s latest ultimatum, they will get a far harsher offer, one that could put the entire NBA season in jeopardy.

The answer should come early next week – and Stern made it clear: Yes or no, no more negotiating.

“I would not presume to project or predict what the union would do,” the NBA commissioner said. “I can hope, and my hope is that the events of next week will lead us to a 72-game schedule starting on Dec. 15.”

The league presented the players’ association with the new offer Thursday after nearly 11 hours of bargaining, hoping it would be enough to end the lockout. Stern had previously said the original proposal needed to be accepted by the close of business Wednesday to avoid the less favorable proposal, but had “stopped the clock” while the sides were bargaining.

The clock starts again once the union has had time to meet and plot its strategy.

Union president Derek Fisher said the revised proposal doesn’t address all the necessary system issues that players are seeking before they would agree to the economic concessions owners are demanding.

“It does not meet us entirely on the system issues that we felt were extremely important to try and close this thing out, and so at this point we’ve decided to end things for now, take a step back,” Fisher said. “We’ll go back as an executive committee, as a board, confer with our player reps and additional players over the next few days. Then we’ll make decisions about what our next steps will be at that point.”

And that could include disbanding the union, too.

Union executive director Billy Hunter said the hope was to get the player reps to New York for a meeting by Monday or Tuesday, then discuss whether the new proposal was good enough to present to the full membership for a vote.

Stern made it clear that whatever they say, they shouldn’t bother to ask to meet again about this proposal.

“There comes a time when you have to be through negotiating, and we are,” Stern said.

He added if there’s another bargaining meeting, it would be off the proposal in waiting: a 53-47 split of revenues in the owners’ favor, a flex cap with a hard ceiling and salary rollbacks.

That leaves the union to decide if it can persuade its members to accept the revised offer. The league has been willing to offer a 50-50 split of basketball-related income, and Stern said the proposal put in play Thursday night attempted to meet the union on its system issues.

Hunter provided only one specific change, allowing the “mini” midlevel exception for teams over the luxury tax to be for three years at $3 million a year, as opposed to two years at $2.5 annually. The league has been trying to curb spending by the big-market teams to create more competitive balance, but players want a system like the current one that leaves them with the most free agent options.

“It’s not the greatest proposal in the world, but I have an obligation to at least present it to our membership and so that’s what we’re going to do,” Hunter said.

Stern said he didn’t expect the players to like every aspect of the revised proposal, saying there were many teams, too, that didn’t like aspects of the revised offer.

But he said he can get it passed, even with some hardline owners preferring to go to the 53-47 deal already.

“This is the best attempt by the labor relations committee and therefore the NBA to address the concerns that the players expressed coming out of their meeting of the player representatives,” Stern said.

The union had nearly its entire executive committee in attendance, with Fisher and Hunter joined by players Chris Paul, Maurice Evans, Roger Mason Jr., Keyon Dooling, Theo Ratliff, Etan Thomas, Matt Bonner; attorneys Jeffrey Kessler and Ron Klempner, and economist Kevin Murphy. Management stuck with the same small group as Wednesday: Stern, Silver, Spurs owner Peter Holt, the chairman of the labor relations committee, and attorneys Rick Buchanan and Dan Rube.

A 72-game season would mean a loss of only 10 games, despite starting 1 1/2 months after the original Nov. 1 opening night. Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver said that would require moving the playoffs and NBA finals back roughly a week. Game 7 of the NBA finals would have been scheduled for June 21.

A Dec. 15 opening night schedule would include Miami at New York, according to a person who is aware of the plans.

Beyond the system issues that divide the sides, Hunter said there were six pages of what he called ancillary items, such as the draft age and the commissioner’s disciplinary rights, that still must be addressed before a deal.

“There’s not enough progress to get a deal done,” Fisher said. “That’s the disappointing part. We want to get back on the court.”

But if they decline the offer, it could be a while before that happens. Some agents have long pushed for decertification and a fight against the league in court, and Hunter said this week he was aware players were already collecting signatures to go that lengthy and risky route.

Even so, there still would be time for bargaining, though there would be no need if players decide this deal is good enough.

That didn’t seem to be the case Thursday night.

“As Derek has alluded, there has been some movement by the NBA, obviously not enough,” Hunter said. “The question now is, how will those reps respond when we sit down with them early next week and disclose to them the revised proposal that the NBA has presented to us this evening.”

© 2011 The Associated Press

Magic Johnson backs Stern after racial suggestion

NEW YORK (AP) — Magic Johnson said it’s “ridiculous” to suggest that David Stern is racist, saying it’s OK to disagree with the NBA commissioner but that you “can’t attack the man and what he stands for.”

Johnson was responding to comments made by attorney Jeffrey Kessler, representing the NBA players’ association, who told the Washington Post that owners are treating players like “plantation workers” during the ongoing lockout.

That was similar to the comments Bryant Gumbel made last month on his HBO show, when he said Stern “always seemed eager to be viewed as some kind of modern plantation overseer treating NBA men as if they were his boys.”

But Johnson said Stern has always done right by players, noting the number of blacks such himself, Michael Jordan and Isiah Thomas who have followed their Hall of Fame playing careers by going into management or ownership positions.

“This league is more diverse than any other league and has more minorities in powerful positions than any other league,” Johnson said during a phone interview. “That’s all about David Stern and his vision and what he wanted to do. He make sure minorities had high-ranking positions from the league office all the way down to coaches and front office people.”

Stern did not comment, though told the Washington Post that Kessler’s conduct “is routinely despicable.”

However, players such as Johnson and Bill Russell called the league office to support Stern, who is leading owners in a bitter dispute with the players but who has not lost their support, according to Johnson.

“It was David Stern who took this league worldwide. And so those guys know it was because of David Stern and what he was able to do,” Johnson said.

Johnson recalled it was Stern who offered him a place in the 1992 NBA All-Star game, even over some players’ wishes after he had retired the previous November because of HIV. And it was Stern who included Johnson that summer on the Dream Team that won the Olympic gold medal.

And it was Stern, he said, who called him after Johnson’s comments about Thomas in his book ignited a public feud between the longtime friends, urging Johnson to work it out.

“He has always done what’s right for both the players and owners. I’m going to have to say this personally, David, he didn’t have to do that. That’s the type of commissioner he is.

“He always is looking out for the players and what’s best for the league and I disagree with anybody who says he’s trying to be a plantation owner. It’s ridiculous we’re even talking about it.”

Stern, 69, is likely nearing his final years on the job after becoming commissioner on Feb. 1, 1984, just as Johnson and Larry Bird were renewing the longtime rivalry between the Lakers and Boston Celtics. Johnson said he’s “tired of people taking shots” at Stern, especially because so many of them have jobs connected to the NBA that Stern created.

So Johnson urged those criticizing Stern during the lockout to “not go to the gutter.”

“We should be saluting him, he shouldn’t be torn down, especially something that he’s not,” Johnson said.

“He’s a tough business man and a smart business man. That’s what he’s supposed to be.”

© 2011 The Associated Press

NBA owners say take deal now, or it gets worse

NBA Commissioner David Stern gave the players an offer and a deadline: Accept a chance to earn up to 51% of basketball-related income by Wednesday or get ready for a deal that’s a whole lot worse.

He wouldn’t call it an ultimatum, but it sure didn’t sit well with the union.

“The players will not be intimidated,” attorney Jeffrey Kessler said early Sunday after eight hours of negotiations stretched late into the night. “They want to play, they want a season, but they are not going to sacrifice the future of all NBA players under these types of threats of intimidation.

“It’s not happening on (president) Derek Fisher’s watch. It’s not happening on (executive director) Billy Hunter’s watch. It’s not happening on the watch of this executive committee.”

Full story at USA Today

Fisher denies union rift in letter to NBA players

Derek Fisher denied a rift in union leadership in a letter to NBA players Monday, telling them there have been “no side agreements, no side negotiations or anything close” with league officials.

A story Saturday on Foxsports.com titled “Is Fisher in Stern’s pocket?” said there was a disagreement between Fisher and players’ association executive director Billy Hunter and that the Lakers guard had promised NBA Commissioner David Stern that he could deliver a deal with a 50-50 split in basketball-related income.

The story said Hunter confronted Fisher last Friday, the day talks with the league broke down and led to the cancellation of the entire November schedule.

“Usually I wouldn’t even dignify absurd media reports with a comment. But before these reports go any further, let me say on the record to each of you, my loyalty has and always will be with the players,” Fisher wrote in the letter, obtained by The Associated Press and other media outlets. “Anyone that questions that or doubts that does not know me, my history, and what I stand for.

“And quite frankly, how dare anyone call that into question. The Players Association is united and any reports to the contrary are false. There have been no side agreements, no side negotiations or anything close. We are united in serving you and presenting the best options and getting everyone back to work.”

Players and owners made progress on a number of issues related to the salary cap system over two days last week. But the negotiations fell apart again on the third day, when the sides decided to revisit the BRI split again.

Owners are insistent on a 50-50 split, while players have proposed reducing their guarantee from 57 percent down to 52.5, which they say would transfer more than $1.5 billion to owners over six years.

“My goal, the executive committee’s ONLY goal is to present you with the most fair deal possible,” Fisher wrote. “A deal that is both fair on system and BRI. One isn’t more important than the other. They are both extremely impactful to our business, our sport and our day to day life in the league.”

Fisher put the blame squarely on owners in the letter, telling players that “if nothing more, the league and owners should understand people’s livelihoods are at stake.”

“They should be able to take the over 1 billion dollars we’ve offered them and open the doors of their arenas and let us, along with the ushers, parking attendants, everyone impacted to get back to work,” Fisher added.

There have been no bargaining sessions since Friday, though Fisher told the players he would be in touch later in the week with an update.

Players will lose about $350 million with no games in November and more games could be lost without further concessions by the players, since the league has repeatedly said it won’t go beyond the 50-50 split.

The Foxsports.com story identifies union leadership as a problem, saying: “This is fact: Fisher and Hunter haven’t been on the same page throughout this lockout.” It cites a veteran NBA player familiar with the negotiations who expressed concerns about Fisher’s allegiance.

“The attempt by `sources’ to divide us will be unsuccessful,” Fisher wrote. “We will continue to work every day to do right by you, the businesses that depend on our league and our fans.”

© 2011 The Associated Press

NBA cancels all games through November

After the breakdown, again, of NBA talks Friday to reach a new collective bargaining agreement, Commissioner David Stern announced the cancellation of games through November.

And, he said, in effect, the league and players have lost the shot at getting in a full season.

“It’s not practical, possible or prudent to have a full season now,” said Stern, who projected several hundred millions of dollars in losses without games in November, on top of the $200 million lost without the preseason.

He said the NBA’s “next offer will reflect extraordinary losses that are starting to pile up.”

Talks disintegrated when NBA executives and locked-out players failed to make progress on the split of basketball-related income (BRI). They also stalled on negotiating the salary cap/luxury tax system.

But Friday, whatever progress that was made earlier in the week got lost when the sides tried to get down to business on BRI.

Full story at USA Today

Emotional Rodman caps Hall of Fame ceremony

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) — Thanking his coaches and apologizing to his family for his shortcomings, Dennis Rodman was enshrined in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame on Friday night.

Choking up often during an emotional speech, Rodman said his regret was not being a better father, and praised his coaches for being a father to him, after his own father left when he was a child and he never had a relationship with afterward.

The enshrinement of the flamboyant five-time champion capped the enshrinement of the 10-member class of 2011. Chris Mullin, the two-time Olympic gold medalist, opened the night as the other headliner.

Rodman wore two outfits to the event, but said his many looks were an “illusion” and that he loved “to just be an individual that’s very colorful.”

He thanked Commissioner David Stern and the NBA community “to even just have me in the building” and saved his deepest appreciation for coaches Phil Jackson and Chuck Daly, Lakers owner Jerry Buss, and James Rich, whose family took Rodman in after his mother threw him out of the house.

Rodman described them as men “you can call any time of day” who ignored his antics and “looked at an individual that had a good heart.”

He apologized to his mother, who was in the crowd that didn’t know quite what to expect from the always-entertaining Rodman but probably wasn’t expecting to see such a look inside of him. He said he was like so many players who fought to get out the projects and make something of himself.

“I did that, but it took a lot of hard work and it took a lot of bumps along the road,” Rodman said.

Mullin’s journey began in New York.

A five-time All-Star with one of the game’s best jump shots, he was enshrined last year with the 1992 U.S. Olympic Dream Team and also won a gold medal at the 1984 Olympics.

The left-hander followed a decorated amateur career by scoring more than 17,000 points in the NBA. The New York city product recalled his hometown in his speech, saying “Looking out, I realize I’m a long way from Flatbush Ave., but Brooklyn’s definitely in the house tonight.”

He stayed in New York to play in college at St. John’s and was presented for enshrinement by his coach, Lou Carnesecca.

“I chose the best coach in the best city, and I played in the world’s most famous arena,” Mullin said.

The class also included coaches Tara VanDerveer, who has led Stanford to two national championships and won more than 800 games, Tex Winter and Division II Philadelphia University coach Herb Magee, the career leader at the collegiate level with more than 900 wins.

Eight-time NBA champion Tom “Satch” Sanders, big men Artis Gilmore and Arvydas Sabonis; the late Reece “Goose” Tatum of the Harlem Globetrotters, and women’s star Teresa Edwards, who won five Olympic medals – four golds – and is entering her fifth Hall of Fame, also were to be honored at Symphony Hall.

VanDerveer called her enshrinement an “exciting homecoming for my mother, Rita,” because her parents met at Springfield College. She ignored her father’s pleas to focus on her algebra homework instead of basketball, learning from whatever coaches she could and going on to win a gold medal coaching the 1996 U.S. women’s Olympic team.

“Thank you, Hall of Fame, for honoring my life’s work,” she said. “I’m forever grateful.”

The induction of Rodman and Winter, the architect of the triangle offense, brought back Scottie Pippen and other players and coaches from the Bulls’ dynasty of the 1990s. Winter, an assistant to Jackson on nine NBA championship teams, has been slowed after a stroke and struggles with his speaking, but felt well enough to make the trip for the weekend and what many considered overdue enshrinement.

“We’re really excited for him. I know he is to. He’s very happy about it,” Jackson said. “He’s been jumping the gun all night and all day yesterday, so I think it’s a good time for him to do it, even though I wish he could express himself and say what he really has on his mind.”

Sabonis, a dominant player in Europe long before he finally came from his native Lithuania to the NBA at 31, was presented by Bill Walton, who had described the versatile center as a “7-foot-3 Larry Bird.” Later came the enshrinement of Gilmore, an ABA champion who went on to make six All-Star teams in the NBA, where he is still the league’s career leader with a .599 field-goal percentage.

“Millions of people have laced up their sneakers since Dr. Naismith invented the game several miles from here in 1891 and every one of them would love to be in my shoes today,” Gilmore said.

© 2011 The Associated Press

The end is near: NBA owners, players spiral toward lockout

NBA commissioner David Stern sees a deep, dark abyss. An unfathomable gulf that will erase every gain the league has made as it has approached heights not reached since Michael Jordan left the game for good.

Billy Hunter, NBA Players Association (NBPA) executive director, envisions total destruction and loss. Lost money, power, presence and prestige.

Read more at Salt Lake Tribune