[QUOTE]NBA owners now offering players 'flex cap'
NEW YORK — What NBA commissioner David Stern
described as a “critical’’ day for labor negotiations in hopes of
avoiding a lockout turned into a four-hour session that resulted in
progress but also more questions.
After offering a $45 million hard cap the
past few months — an offer steadfastly rejected by the Players
Association — Stern called the league’s new proposal a “flex cap’’ that
would set a median salary cap at $62 million and eliminate the large
disparity in spending among teams.
This past season, the Los Angeles Lakers had the league’s highest payroll at $91 million, while the Sacramento Kings
spent a league-low $44 million. The owners want to implement an
“NHL-type’’ system, according to deputy commissioner Adam Silver, one
that would allow teams to exceed the $62 million cap but would also
place the financial onus on the players if the average payroll of all 30
teams exceeded $62 million.
The
league is seeking to lower overall player salaries, limit guaranteed
contracts, and reduce player basketball-related income. Stern promised
during a press conference at the Omni Berkshire Hotel yesterday that
player revenues would not dip below $2 billion per season.
However,
the new proposal is dramatically different from the current plan, which
has a $58.044 million salary cap and levies a dollar-for-dollar penalty
for teams that exceed the luxury tax of $70.3 million, which the Celtics have done the past several seasons.
The
Players Association said it will spend the next three days determining
whether it interprets this proposal as a hard cap with different
language. The players asked to meet again Friday in New York.
“The
owners believe that the system modifications that we have requested
make a lot of sense to make sure that our teams are both competitive and
profitable,’’ Stern said. “We have modified our proposal to a ‘flex
cap,’ where there is a targeted salary but teams can go above it and
teams will have a minimum below it, which is more flexible than our last
offer.
“We think this is
virtually the best shot we have to demonstrate to the players our good
faith, our desire to go as far as we can to avoid a lockout.’’
Stern would not say whether this was the owners’ final offer, but he did appear close to the end.
“This
makes 10 proposals that have gone back and forth, at least,’’ he said.
“We think we’ve demonstrated that we’re here to try to make a deal.’’
According to Players Association president Derek Fisher of the Lakers,
the sides have not agreed on any of the smaller issues because they are
interconnected with the hard cap and guaranteed salaries.
“So
far, there hasn’t been much movement at all,’’ Fisher said. “It’s been
characterized in different ways; essentially they want to create a hard
salary cap.
“We just don’t
see it, for the reasons why we’ve been given, as necessary. We feel that
teams have shown the ability to be creative and pay the guys they want
to pay and not pay the guys they don’t want to pay. We feel that teams
should have that opportunity independently and be able to run their
businesses the way they see fit.
“We
continue to toss ideas out and express our willingness to move on
certain parts of the deal, but there are certain parts we have no
interest on moving on.’’
Players
Association executive director Billy Hunter did not sound optimistic,
but like Stern, he refused to close the door on striking a deal before
the current collective bargaining agreement expires June 30.
He
repeated that the players will not strike if the owners continue to
negotiate in good faith, and he asked the owners to refrain from a
lockout.
“I would think
someone has to make a big move, that’s a good way to characterize it,’’
Hunter said. “I guess there are some concerns on their side to stem
their expenses and obviously they have been calling for a guaranteed
return on investment, which we have difficulty with.
“We’re
hopeful that something can transpire, that we can structure a deal. It
has to be a win-win. We have said all along we’re not going to accept a
bad deal, not at least without a fight. The question is whether or not
we can avoid the fight.’’
http://www.boston.com/sports/basketball/articles/2011/06/22/nba_owners_now_offering_players_flex_cap/
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