Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

What was the point of the lockout?


jtnc

Recommended Posts

For owners to get some of their money back.

QFT

It was never about parity. That is what owners throw out there to make us feel ok with the lockout. They really just wanted a bigger piece of the basketball related income. Basically, lower the minimum salary level and the cap.

The only way the Bobcats ever win is to get lucky in the lottery and get a superstar and hope he sticks around long enough to win. SA did it with Duncan, Dallas did it with Dirk. Best we can hope for.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah, it was a money grab by the owners... nothing more.

If they really wanted parity they would have held out for a hard cap and given some of the BRI back to get it.

Does the NBA not realize that this consolidation of talent will ultimately kill the whole league?

Why should anyone in New Orleans even bother to watch a Hornets game at this point?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Isn't it basically still the same CBA until the luxury tax significantly increases in two years? Why would anything be different right now?

exactly, when the new tax levels kick in it will make some teams think twice about how much they spend. under the new cba the lakers would have paid out 60 million in luxury tax along with the over 90 million they spent on players. throw in the estimated 50 million they will contribute toward revenue sharing adds up after a while. players will still move to teams they want to play for but will have to take pay cuts which will bring down the market for alot of players.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Even with a hard cap, players are going to go to the large markets where endorsement deals and tv time are plenty.

Isn't Miami small market? I think you just need to get some elite talent in the lottery and then you will be attractive to free agents. Luckily, I guess, we will probably be bad enough to get a good player from what looks like a strong draft.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Miami is a bandwagon town, not a small market. Hence the repeated sell out of Heat games compared to the 10-15 people who go to Dolphins games.

Well here, http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0763098.html, it says Miami is the 44th largest city in the US. I realize there's some other cities nearby, but it's not like any of them are huge either.

I'm just saying, you have to get an elite player and then it's a destination for free agents. Nobody wanted to go to New York until they got Amare. Nobody wanted to be part of the soon to be Brooklyn Nets until they got Deron Williams.

I understand that all things being equal huge city > than Charlotte, but if you get a good player and have the proper things in place (ie cap space, assets, etc) players will come there.

Cleveland was a destination when they had Lebron. Imagine how many people would have taken a pay cut to go there if they had gotten Amare instead of Antawn Jamison.

The system is set up to reward teams that hit on a star in the draft and don't blow up their cap with overpaid players. Of course teams that spend 30 million into the luxury tax are going to be better, if they are also run well.

The NBA is unfair, but I would say it is unequal because the difference between the #1 pick and the #5 pick in a given draft is immeasurable.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Not sure who said it first, but Tepper is the correct answer. Still, I'm gonna go with Kasay keeping it inbounds. If, you subscribe to the butterfly effect version of time travel consequences.... When we win SBXXXVIII everybody's lives change: Moose never breaks his leg, We win it all again in 05. Tommy Jone is unknown and Peppers stays home, Champs once more 2008. No artificial pig heart turning JR into a creepy weirdo, no lockout, no Clausen. Fox and Jake ride off into the sunset on their own terms. No 2-14, no #1 pick. But, no laptop, no Blinn, 3 years behind The Golden Calf of Bristol, we still get Cam. JR let's him grow his locs like he always wanted, Smitty sees Cam in a new light. Dreads swinging, (and Smitty with his 3 Lombardis behind him) Cam is old enough to get those calls. No Manning narrative, Cotchery TD, PI against Talib on Philly Brown, 10,000 RTP calls and Kony Ealy SB50 MVP. No Jeans Fridays, no Tepper. KB doesn't slip on his own meatsweat mid-route in SD, Cam becomes the 1st QB to win 10 straight SBs. Retiring after being elected 47th president of the US of A, Cam ushers in the Permanent Proletarian Revolution across the globe, Xi Jinping bows in awe. "ẄøŘƙƐṛ§ őF ŧĤə ŵØRłð, ŮŊÏŦƐ!!!"
    • Yeah your right the owner was copping hand shandies while all this was going down 
    • I mean not surprised the Patriots took him in and aren't trying to push him out. They've been the most morally bankrupt team in the NFL for a long while. Wouldn't be surprised if Vrabel has his own dirt on Kraft/Brady and other assholes from that organization over the last couple decades. 
×
×
  • Create New...