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Billy Hunter

CBA Talk: Where the Threat Lies

by Tim Donahue on October 28, 2011 at 11:28 am · 0 comments

What a difference a week makes.

Last Friday saw an explosion of anger as the talks fell apart. This time it was the owners, rightly or wrongly personified by Paul Allen’s awkward silence and Peter Holt’s easy Texas manner, who derailed the negotiations. With David Stern out of the room – for reasons either innocent or engineered – the owners put the cart before the horse by reportedly insisting the players accept a 50/50 split of BRI before negotiations on the system could proceed.

It was a profoundly foolish ultimatum, and it brought predictable results.

So, a week ago, we began the countdown to the cancellation of Christmas (at least for the NBA). It was already less than 30 days to the first day of remaining schedule games, and it was practically impossible to get those games in even with almost immediate agreement. Announcement of cancellations, perhaps even an indefinite postponement to the start of the season, was imminent.

But it never came.

Instead, the two sides teleconferenced on Monday, and the owners held another meeting on Tuesday to discuss revenue sharing. These led to the meetings of the last two days. And now, as NBA.com’s Steve Aschburner writes, optimism abounds:

Wait, no snarky “Or not” qualifier? Nope. If only for a night, the content and tone of the key negotiators’ comments to reporters after another seven-plus hours of collective bargaining talks deserved to stand on their own. As did the fact that, as Hunter and union president Derek Fisher spoke publicly first at the end of this session, Stern was seated in the back of the room. He was smiling, he was acknowledged a couple of times by Hunter and he even answered a question for the union chief, who had been asked when the difficult moves in this labor dance would get made.

“Tomorrow,” the commissioner said.

Stern and Hunter both dropped big doses of optimism on NBA fans and followers, suggesting that the lockout, as long and damaging as it has been, might not see its fifth month.

“There are no guarantees that we’ll get it done, but we’re going to give it one heck of a shot,” Stern said.

Said Hunter: “I think we’re within striking distance of getting a deal.”

However, as Stern said in the wee hours Thursday morning, “Until we have an overall deal, we don’t have a deal about anything.”

Though we lack details, we can guess that both sides are close to agreement on a system, and the range where the BRI split will fall has been discussed ad nauseum. If this was just a deal between two guys – between David Stern and Billy Hunter – agreement today would be a certainty.

But it’s not. This is an agreement between 29 owners on one side and 400-some-odd players on the other.  And, since this is an agreement that has been/will be shaped by these disparate parties, it will not make everyone happy. In his interview with Steve Aschburner, NBPA Economist Kevin Murphy said this:

 ”If there’s a deal here, it’s going to be a deal that nobody likes. That’s what deals are. Nobody walks out feeling like they got a complete victory. That’s initially. But then you get back to playing and you realize, geez, I can live with this.”

So, today (and the days that follow), the hope lies in finalizing a deal that the two sides can “live with.” However, even such a deal is certain to leave some feeling left out. And that is where the threat lies – within the people who see no value in agreeing.

The threat is greater from the owner’s side, but that’s largely a function of numbers. It’s just easier in a smaller group. And if you want to see how much it still exists, simply look past what Stern is saying, and watch Adam Silver in last night’s press conference.

However, there is still a tough sell on the player’s side. While the agents have been portrayed as the wolves here, the people who are “left out” are really the super stars – LeBron James, Dwight Howard, Dwyane Wade. With the advent of max contracts, these players have seen their earning potential cut significantly – and they know it.

For all of the attention paid to the BRI split by the media, it’s the stars (and their attached agents) who are really the only BRI warriors in the fight. They can see the direct impact of each point of split on their paychecks, and the system issues don’t mean all that much to them. They are the wild cards from the union, but fortunately, as illustrated by the ESPN’s recent #NBARank project, they are wildly outnumbered.

If talks break down today, it will be framed around BRI. The most likely scenario will be the owners refusing to go past 50, and the players standing firm at 52. Though this will prompt howls of “$80 million ?!?!?!”, it won’t really be about those two points. It will be about the fringes on the two sides not liking the deal as a whole, and using that difference as as excuse.

To keep this from happening, David Stern and Billy Hunter will have to earn all of their money. It seems apparent that these two men are ready to make a deal. Now is the first time in this process that the two sides may be in position for one man on each side to push them together. The task, however, remains herculean.

Five years ago…hell, five months ago…I would have had absolute confidence that the deal would be done once Stern and Hunter started rowing in the same direction. However, neither has ever looked less in control than they have over the course of this lockout. For both, this is almost certainly their last go-round.

Let’s hope they both have one more good day in them.

 

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CBA Talk: A Little Math

by Tim Donahue on October 6, 2011 at 11:54 am · 5 comments

Make the following assumptions regarding the current collective bargaining negotiations:

  • The informal offers reportedly proposed by each side fairly represent the basketball-related income (BRI) split that each faction would accept to approve a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) right now.
  • The players are reportedly offering a deal that gives 53% to them and 47% the owners.
  • The owners have reportedly offered a 50/50 deal.
  • No costs have been excluded from BRI that weren’t excluded under the previous CBA.
  • Both sides are assuming the same types of system changes in the new CBA.
  • The 2011-12 BRI can be expected to be $4 billion.
  • The CBA would be for six years.
  • The expected BRI growth rate over the course of the next CBA is about 4% per year.

In such a situation, the players and the owners stand $120 million apart for this upcoming season, but about $790 million over the course of the six-year deal. Discounting those cash flows at 5% would yield a net present value of $664 million — which is the $790 million in “today’s dollars.”

The Math for the Players

If the players took the owners’ 50/50 offer now, they would get $2 billion this year, which equals roughly $24.4 million per game for the players collectively. In other words, if the players reject this offer, for each game lost, the players give up $24.4 million. Following this logic, it will take missing 27 games games (something that would happen by mid-December) for the players to have lost the $664 million that they are standing firm in order to receive via the BRI split.

Of course, that logic is flawed. The situation is infinitely more complex than that.

One of the big traps that we consistently fall into is viewing the sides as two monoliths. It makes the math easier. But it also muddies the waters. The “players” are 400-plus individuals at different points in their careers with different financial positions, personal concerns and general outlooks on life.

The truth is that the majority of these players will not be in the league for all six years of the next CBA. Only 48% of the players who played during the 2005-06 season played in 2010-11. In fact, 16% of the players from the 2009-2010 season were absent in 2010-11.

While fighting for future generations is great in concept, this really is asking a huge price from the majority of the league for 3 percentage points.

The Math for the Owners

The owners will experience the same “lost income” reality that the players are facing. For the sake of argument (and simplicity), let’s assume they lost $200 million for canceling the preseason, and stand to lose another $250 million or so per month for missed regular season games if they don’t accept the players’ offer now. Just like the players, if they stick to their guns (at a 50% split) they will be have forfeited $664 million by some time around Christmas to get back the $664 million they seek.

Also, like the players’ dillemma, it is infinitely more complex.

These are 30 owners who are in different financial positions. Jerry Buss and James Dolan stand to lose huge sums, while others like Herb Kohl, Michael Jordan and perhaps Herb Simon won’t be as badly hurt. Depending on the math, it’s not impossible that they would be actually losing less money by not having games.

Beyond that, the owners should recognize the 4 percentage points that are already theoretically “in their pocket.” Accepting the players position of 53% will still give them $160 million in savings this season (when compared to the 57% split of the previous CBA), and $884 million (in today’s dollars) over the course of a new, six-year CBA. Unlike the players, virtually all of these owners will be here at the end of the CBA. So the entirely of the deal is more relevant to all 30 of the current owners than it is to all of the more than 400 current players.

This consideration means that for every 1/82 of the season they cancel, they forgo another $2 million in savings on top of their other costs.

The Math for Both Sides

Everyone realizes that, once games are canceled, there will be lasting effects well beyond the simple lost profit/wages associated with these games. Should a lockout alienate fans and sponsors, then future revenues will be lost as well.

For every 1% reduction in the revenue forecast for the next six-year period, the NBA will lose about $263 million (in today’s dollars). This loss will be distributed more or less equally between the two sides and would be in addition to the lost income discussed above.

Continuing to Fight Doesn’t Add Up

Even if the owners are adamant about a 50% split, and the players have dug in at 53%, there is no math that says it is worth it to either side to lose games. I have tried to find a financial reason for either side to stand firm until the other breaks — no matter how long it takes — but I can’t. Not even if I take off my shoes.

Come Monday, if games are canceled, neither side can win. It will only be a question of which side has lost less.

But, as I’ve said before, even rational people will kill for money, but die for faith.

Right now, they say they disagree on “the economics,” but they don’t. They can’t — not if they vaguely understand “the economics.” No, what’s happening here is an Uncle Milty contest masquerading as a disagreement over BRI splits.

Well, boys, it’s come-to-Jesus time.

It’s time to put away the egos and take out the calculators. It’s time to take David Stern’s pointer finger, Dwyane Wade’s audacity, Dan Gilbert’s comic sans, Kevin Garnett’s scowl, the hard cap, the second mid-level exception, the roll backs, and stick them all in Mrs. Sarver’s purse. And then bury it all deep in an abandoned mine shaft.

It’s time for Stern to wrangle up the cats, and it’s time for player union heads Derek Fisher and Billy Hunter to bring in the rank and file. It’s time for each to end the rhetoric and the spin, and tell their constituencies straight up that not taking one more step towards each other is simply a lose/lose proposition.

It’s time for everyone to learn and understand what “Pyrrhic victory” means.

Acknowledgment: Once again, thanks to Larry Coon and his group of super geniuses over at LakersGround.net for helping to shape my thoughts here.

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CBA Talk: Splitting the Baby

by Tim Donahue on September 19, 2011 at 8:30 am · 10 comments

There was lots of activity last week, and as we sit here today, we’re either close to or very far away from having a season. In any case, Harvey Araton of the New York Times put on his thinking cap and came up with an interim solution:

Having already agreed to a reduction in total revenue, from 57 percent to a reported 53, the players should not be expected to give everything up at once, and not if it is unclear that it’s necessary.

But if the owners can prove in three years that at least one-third of the teams are still losing money, then the agreement should allow for the implementation of a hard cap to be phased in over the following two years, allowing teams over the threshold to prepare for it.

Conversely, if the league continues its upswing, its revenue streams are growing as the union has claimed they will and fewer teams are in the red, then the deal could proceed for its duration with the soft cap.

This is a creative solution that is certainly worth considering, but there could be some obstacles. The most significant of which is the thought of getting three years down the road and revisiting the whole financial argument over what are “true” losses again. It could take months just getting the two sides to agree on how that would even be defined.

Second, regardless of how much people want it to go away, most, if not all of the owners would like a system with a hard cap. While it would be simple to lay the blame at the feet of Robert Sarver and Dan Gilbert, the truth is it’s unlikely the two of them have enough juice within the community of owners to derail a deal. Though they may be the most vocal – perhaps obnoxious – of the “hawks”, they must be getting support from some of the other owners, possibly including the influential pair of Boston’s Wyc Grousbeck and Dallas’ Mark Cuban.  The internal machinations of the owners is only a subject for speculation for us.

However, Chris Broussard’s discussion of the subject gives a solid summary of the motivations:

There are three reasons why the owners favor a hard cap, with each owner falling into one of the three camps. Some, such as some big-market owners, want a hard cap because of the increased revenue-sharing plan that’s coming. Some want a hard cap so that they cannot be outspent by their opponents, and others want a hard cap to protect themselves from giving out bad contracts, according to sources.

So, pretending that we on the outside get to put ideas into the conversation, I’d like to offer up another attempt at a structure that both sides might find workable.

The Proposal

BRI Split

Players would receive a guarantee of 53% of BRI.

This is the most widely rumored figure from last week’s abortive meetings. It does not represent significant movement from the 54.x% offered at the end of June, but for the sake of staying consistent with Harvey’s solution, let’s use it.

The Cap System

The system will include both a soft cap – more accurately described as a “threshold” – and a hard cap. Structurally, it is similar to the “flex” cap system previously proposed by the owners, but it is not the same. The mechanics would be:

  • The “soft cap” or “threshold” would be set by reducing BRI by $100 million to cover benefits, then taking 47% of the remainder and dividing by 30 (or total number of teams). Teams may spend above the threshold using an exception system that will be largely the same as the previous system – with changes to be outlined below.
  • A hard cap – which no team will be allowed to exceed at any point during the season – will be established by reducing the BRI by $100 million, then taking 65% of the remainder and dividing by 30 (or total number of teams).
  • A salary “floor” will be established at 75% of the soft cap. Any team who fails to meet or exceed this baseline in payroll will be ineligible for participation in the supplemental revenue sharing program.*  (* This is assumed to be the new program, which is expected deal with currently unshared revenue streams. The team will still receive their share of the national revenues – including television – as they do now.)
  • The luxury tax will be abolished. It will be unnecessary with the hard cap, and its revenue sharing function will be replaced in any new revenue sharing program the league implements.

Exceptions/Cap Holds/Matching Salaries for Trades

As noted above, all previous exceptions will remain – Bird, Early Bird, Mid-Level, and Minimum – with the following change:

  • The Bi-Annual exception will be abolished, but replaced with a Tri-Annual Mid-Level Exception (TAMLE). This would be a second Mid-Level Exception (MLE), but with limited use.  Like the standard MLE, it can either be used in full, or broken up. However, once any part of it is used, it is frozen for three years. If the full amount is used, then it is unavailable to the team for the next two years. If part is used, then the remainder will be available for use in the current year, or the next two.

Cap Holds (or the “free agent amount”) are assumed to function in the same way as under the current system.

There will no longer be a requirement for matching salaries in trades.  The only requirement is that once the trade is complete, neither team may exceed the established hard cap.

Of course, the single biggest change for all of these will be that there will be a hard cap over which none of these will be available for use.

Escrow/Meeting the Guarantee

Just as under the previous system, a soft cap and exceptions can be expected to result in the total negotiated salaries and benefits exceeding the percentage of BRI guaranteed. In this program, 10% of players’ salaries will be held in escrow.

If the total salaries and benefits are below 53%, then the players will receive all of their escrow back, plus any additional monies needed to meet the 53% guarantee, just as happened this year. If they exceed 53% by the escrow amount or less, then the owners will keep the overage from escrow and return the balance to the players, just as happened pretty much every year before last year.

If the overage exceeds the escrow, the players will keep anything over that amount. For example, if the amount held in escrow is $175 million, and the overage is $200 million, the owners will keep the $175 million, and the players will keep the $25 million.

If this happens two years in a row, then that will result in a 1% increase in the BRI guarantee to the players for the remainder of the agreement. This will continue throughout the agreement, so if the owners were to exceed the guarantee plus escrow in every year of a six-year CBA, the annual BRI guarantees would be 53%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%.

CBA Length

This proposal is for six years – with a caveat. If a one- or two-year transition period is used to allow teams to adapt to the hard cap (most notably, the Lakers), then I would change the proposal to seven years. The goal is to have five full years with the system fully implemented.

The Dollars

The Forecasted Revenue (BRI)

Trying to project the future revenue streams for the NBA is problematic at best. For someone on the outside like me, it’s little more than a sophisticated wild ass guess. For that reason, I’ve elected to keep it simple by projecting a flat 4% growth off of the 2011 BRI number of $3.817 billion. The 4% figure seems to be widely accepted within this conversation.

It’s true that such a steady curve is unlikely – particularly given potential impact of the new Lakers local TV deal, as well as the new national TV contract that would come up before this expired. Yet, while it’s true that such fluctuations will have practical impacts, they are not material in this forum.

 (in Billions USD)

The “Soft Cap” Threshold


These projection show that even at the lowered BRI split, the threshold will continue to climb. This is driven both by the steady growth and a slight change in methodology. Whether or not this slight change is adopted would make very little difference in the practical use of the system.

The reduction of the BRI from 57% to 53%, and the soft cap percentage from 51 to 47 will naturally result in a slightly lower soft cap than would have been seen under the previous CBA. This is illustrated in the chart above by the green and red bars.

The Hard Cap


And this, more likely than not, is where it either all comes together,  or people leave the room in a huff. This may be a “blood issue” for the union, but it’s also something that Stern has said the vast majority of the owners want. We need to get this from “non-negotiable” for the NBPA to something they can live with, and the avenue comes from something Alan Hahn reported Billy Hunter himself said:

Even some of the debate over the hard cap system is a matter of semantics. Hunter said the union isn’t fundamentally opposed to a hard cap because, he said, they would accept a hard cap with an astronomical 65 percent share of the BRI. In other words, set the hard cap at a ridiculously high number that only a few teams could afford to hit.

It is sometimes a gift (and sometimes not) to be able to willfully ignore part of  what someone is saying. That is to say, to understand the speaker’s intent, but to also hear it “wrong” in such a way as to open a new door. Clearly, Billy Hunter is telling the owners that he cost of getting a hard cap is too rich for their blood.

As you know by now, I elected only to hear the “65 percent” and Alan Hahn’s added “set the hard cap at a ridiculously high number that only a few teams could afford to hit it.” And now I can say that I have a hard cap that Billy Hunter will accept, even though it’s not quite with a straight face.

Under this proposal, with the actual BRI of $3.817 billion, the 2011 hard cap would have been about $80.2 million. According to Shamsports, only three teams exceeded that amount – the Lakers, the Mavericks, and the Magic. Using Patricia Bender’s info to go back to 2006, you’ll find eight in 2006, four in 2007, and seven each in 2008 through 2010. It’s a number that will be difficult to reach, even without the luxury tax as an additional curb on spending.

However, it is also a number that virtually any market could live with to field a contender, particularly given an improved revenue sharing system. People often point out that spending doesn’t guarantee success. That’s true, but not spending clearly restricts the number of ways you can be successful. Look through the teams that went deep in the playoffs with small payrolls, and most will be getting a lot of mileage out of one or two rookie deals. If you roll those teams out a couple years, you’ll find their payrolls often skyrocket.

The Obstacles

I brought them up with Harvey Araton’s piece, I need to try to identify them with mine.

The biggies are straightforward. The owners potentially would want something closer – both on BRI split and cap system – to their previous proposals. The players swear they’ll never accept a hard cap.

I’d caution the owners not to reach too far. Most of the reasoning can be found in my “Meet in the Middle” piece. The hardliners need to recognize a real – and important – gain here, so league as a whole can move forward. This is likely as close as the owners will ever get to their “dream” system, because the NBPA is just too powerful and the cost of cancelling games or a season is far too costly and risky.

The players are a more difficult conversation. Their concerns about what they could lose under a hard cap are valid, though the rhetoric is alarmist and overblown, even under the owners’ proposed “flex” cap. That being said, it needs to be addressed.

Rather than listening to all the “blood issue” talk, I’m going to point to some comments made by Jared Dudley as reported by Brian T. Smith of the Salt Lake Tribune:

The hard cap? As a player myself, no guaranteed deals — that’s basically what a hard cap is; no guaranteed contracts. It’s not football. It’s not injuries and everything. I understand that the common thing is they don’t want players that make a lot of money not playing. Look, if you were a business or you were a restaurant, you don’t pay someone that you think’s not [working]. We’re not going to put it all on the owners. We’re going to take some of the blame. But, hey, we’re willing to work on it. We’re just not willing to give up guaranteed contracts and $800 million.

This proposal doesn’t ask for $800 million. Using the revenue projections above, it averages about $175 million per year. In addition, if the owners can’t control their spending, the players could see their share grow.

It’s true that even a high hard cap like this will squeeze some players, and we may see fewer 5- and 6-year deals fully guaranteed in the out years, it will not be anywhere near as pervasive or immediate as feared. These fears may be somewhat allayed by the addition of the TAMLE and the removal of the requirement to match salaries in trades (provided both teams remain under the hard cap). These offer some benefit to both the owners and the players.

The bigger obstacles are practical. First, I have devoted no time to transition. Immediate implementation would not affect most teams, but there are a very small handful that would have difficulties. The Lakers face the biggest issues, having almost $95 million in contracts next season (13 players) and $91 million in 2012-13 (8 players). This program would target avoiding salary rollbacks, but clearly either an amnesty program or a one- or two-year transition would need to be worked out. On the plus side, these numbers did pass the “Heat check.” I could see no year where the Miami’s big three could not be kept together, though they will be unable to stack up quality MLE vets like cord wood.

Second, if the owners’ spending exceeds the BRI guarantee plus escrow – which would amount to them hitting about 58.9% of BRI – there may be no way for them to roll that back. From a practical perspective, it’s important to remember that these are not centrally controlled, and, even if they were, how can you tell any team they can’t sign a player, because it puts the league over the secondary threshold? Worse, from a legal perspective, you may be guilty of collusion if you even try.

That particular aspect may need to be removed, or the owners would just have to hope they could individually exert some modicum of restraint. In any case, the practical problems come from the change, and, really, the large gap between the 53% guarantee and the 65% hard cap.

But then again, it’s not an altogether bad thing for teams to be further penalized for “throwing good money after bad.” There’s a significant and meaningful discussion to be had about the wisdom of putting ex-players in positions of power where they are dealing with professional agents when millions – sometimes tens of millions – of dollars are on the line. It is imperative the NBA to learn how to develop real front office talent, perhaps even more important than learning how to develop basketball talent.

Finally, it’s not out of the realm of possibility that even this hard cap could end up being permanently out of reach for some teams. This is the core problem with using aggregate NBA revenue and aggregate NBA growth. Neither is evenly distributed among the 30 teams. This is as good a time as any to say that I consider it pointless to implement a hard cap without sensible revenue sharing, and I only consider it marginally less so to implement revenue sharing without some kind of ultimate lid on spending.

Practical Solutions To Be Had

Really, there’s little difference between what the small and mid-market hawks want and are trying to get, and what the “middle class” of players has and is trying to keep. They want to believe they can succeed – prosper – on the court and in the ledger. They’d like to matter, and they’d like some security. That’s both the owners and the players. Meanwhile, those currently prospering – on both sides – are understandably concerned about coming out the other side of this in worse shape.

It’s time for the owners to start caring about what the players care about, and for the players to start caring about what the owners care about. There are ways to make this work. There are ways that may not make everybody happy, but will make everybody think they’ve got a shot. And that goes a long way.

Maybe this is one of them. If not, I’m capable of coming up with endless different ways to try to make both sides feel that they have at least a puncher’s chance of having what they want. If you listen to and respect the desires and motivations of each, but ignore the rhetoric, then there are practical (though imperfect) solutions to be had.

I know there are smarter and – more importantly – better informed people than me involved in the conversation on both sides. I know this can be done.

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