Lockout update: See you in court

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As we watch Adam Silver slowly morph into Gary Bettman, we bring you the latest lockout news from around the Web:

Mitch Lawrence of the New York Daily News: “The NBA and the players union will take their fight to a Manhattan federal courtroom on Wednesday in a hearing that could affect the union’s potential plans to decertify if labor talks break down completely and the lockout goes on indefinitely. The league is asking Judge Paul G. Gardephe to rule that if the players decide to end the union, the lockout would not be an antitrust violation. A ruling is not expected Wednesday. … A ruling by Gardephe in favor of the NBA could ostensibly force the union to abandon any future plans to decertify, if the stalemate at the bargaining table were to continue indefinitely. Although there are some powerful agents who were pushing for the union to do that earlier in the lockout, the union has never embraced going the court route to get a new labor deal. … NFL players took the decertification route in their fight against the league’s owners last spring, but that tactic was not considered a success. Since the NBA players have not taken any action on the decertification front, and have yet to file an antitrust case against the league, the union contends that there is no dispute that has occurred for the court to decide, and therefore the case should be dismissed.

Howard Beck of The New York Times: “For months, Commissioner David Stern has insisted that the league’s 29 owners are unified in the goals, methods and necessity of the lockout, which is in its fifth month. He maintains that stance, (Heat owner Micky) Arison’s glib posting notwithstanding. “He believes his tweets were taken out of context and understands our concern about them,” Stern said Tuesday in a telephone interview. “And he’s very much on board with the other 29 owners about the deal that we want.” If fans and commentators view Arison’s words as a declaration of self-interest, an attempt to distance himself from the more hawkish factions, Stern said he understood it. Arison himself conceded “that it might have had that impression,” Stern said, “but he didn’t intend it to.” …  Stern did acknowledge one divide between his owners: those who are in favor of the deal the union rejected last week — a 50-50 split of revenue and no hard salary cap — and those who are “rethinking” that offer. “But I believe that a majority of teams are in favor of making the deal that we were offering to the players,” Stern said. “And I’m trying very hard to keep that deal on the table.”

Sam Amick of NBA Confidential: “Short and sweet here, since it’s late and the only point of this post is to share the latest lockout-related letter. If you need to get caught up on all the latest mailings, read about today’s letter from Billy Hunter or go to my archive here. Otherwise, the following is a letter from National Basketball Players Association president/Lakers guard Derek Fisher to the media addressing this story from FoxSports.com’s Jason Whitlock. “The statements made in recent articles on the Fox Sports website are inexcusable.  Among the many baseless accusations, to allege that I am working with the league for my personal gain is unequivocally false.  The implication that I am doing anything but working in the best interests of the players is disgusting, defamatory and a flat out lie.  I have issued a letter through my attorneys demanding a retraction for the libelous and defamatory stories the site and reporter have continued to publish. Regardless of the media reports, the Players Association, our staff, Executive Director and Executive Committee are unified and working side by side to serve our players. There should be no more distractions.  We must continue to negotiate a fair deal for our players.”

Whitlock defends himself on FOXSports.com: “I stand by the accuracy, integrity, sourcing and truthfulness of all the stories I’ve written about Derek Fisher during this NBA lockout. If you read the entire transcript of his 515-word letter, it reveals a basketball player who thinks he can moonlight as the leader of a labor movement. Fisher — not Billy Hunter, an experienced lawyer and negotiator with an impressive resume — is the players’ front man on a $3 billion labor deal. It’s lunacy. It’s ripe for corruption and chaos. Fisher’s consigliere is his publicist. She called me Monday afternoon looking to query me about my opinion on Fisher and the NBA lockout. I politely informed her that my opinions are easily accessed here at FOXSports.com and that I’d love to speak with Fisher. “You don’t want to talk to me?” she asked at some point. “You are not the president of the NBA Players Association,” I responded. Let me break this down one last time for Derek Fisher: 1. Fisher needs to fall back behind Hunter and let an experienced lawyer/negotiator battle David Stern; 2. (Fisher’s publicist, Jamie) Wior needs to spend her days building a relationship with the producers of “Dancing With the Stars,” so that her client’s transition from athlete to entertainer is a smooth one.

 

Lockout update: Audio podcast via YouTube

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In this podcast interview on http://www.clnsradio.com/, I was asked straight up who was more to blame for the NBA lockout, David Stern or Billy Hunter. Give a listen to see which one I skewer.

Tweet of the Day: LeBron James

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He is looking for a flag football game against Kevin Durant, who played in one at Oklahoma State.

 
LeBron James

@KingJamesLeBron James 
RT @KDTrey5: Set it up! My team ready RT @KingJames:@KDTrey5 Team KD35 vs Team King James do I hear? Flag football.(Done deal! Date soon)
 

Hubbard column: Live from New York! It’s the NBA and Saturday Night!

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By now, the writers responsible for Saturday Night Live spoofs are papering the halls of NBC with Kim & Kris scripts. After a couple of weeks off, a new show is scheduled this week and you can bet Kardashian-Humphries will get major play.

Ah, the NBA and reality TV: Fantastic!

The announcement Monday of divorce plans between the couple came after only 72 days of marriage. You can google “Kardashian and over-under” and see that projections of how long the relationship would last were being made immediately after they got married, but the shortest I saw was six months.

That proved to be wildly optimistic.

Getting an SNL interpretation is inevitable, but I’d rather the comedy writers focus on the lockout because there is ample material. Certainly Bill Hader (famous impressions: Rick Perry, James Carville) as David Stern and Kenan Thompson (Al Sharpton, Herman Cain) as Billy Hunter would provide many laughs.

And like the bits with Tina Fey portraying Sarah Palin, the truth would provide the comedy.

Stern character: “All we’re trying to do is have the players help us recover from the last two deals that I made, which were called brilliant for the owners at the time but have now resulted in losses in hundreds of millions of dollars every year. I think it would be fair to say they might have been the two worst deals ever negotiated in the history of sports, which our very rich and demanding owners have, admittedly, reminded me of a few times. Our owners can sustain those type of losses only for another 50 years or so – well, except in the case of Paul Allen – so we have to do something to stop the bleeding.”

Hunter character: I know what the owners are thinking. They think that our players haven’t been prudent with their money. They think a guy like Kris Humphries spending $10 million on a wedding that preceded a 72-day relationship is excessive. Well, let me tell you something. He did not pay. Kim found sponsors and actually made money on her wedding. I’m sure David can relate to that. Probably jealous. Our players don’t spend that kind of money on weddings. Well, except Carmelo. But our guys have a lot of money saved. They will not cave. If the owners want to shut down the league for a year or two, we’re prepared. Some of our big guys may be fatter when they get back, but we’re prepared.

Chris Paul and Jim Dolan, buddy-buddy?

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NEW YORK — There is word out there this morning that federal mediator George Cohen might be asked to re-join the NBA collective bargaining talks to guide these blind men to the finish line.

So while we await word on that, let’s all chew on this.

From Marc Berman of the New York Post:

“(Jim) Dolan, part of the owners’ negotiating committee, is content about one of the agreed-upon aspects of a new collective bargaining agreement: the size of the salary cap will not go down. More than any team in the NBA, that will benefit Dolan’s big-market Knicks the most, ironically. According to multiple sources, one of the resolved issues in a new CBA is the 2011 salary cap will remain at the level as it was in 2010 — $58 million. Star guard Chris Paul will be able to be the Knicks’ main target in 2012 because of the team’s salary-cap maneuvers. … Economic projections from sources say the salary cap will then grow to about $60-$61 million in 2012, when the Knicks will have the largest cap space in the league and have room to woo either Chris Paul, Deron Williams or Dwight Howard, who are slated to become free agents. The Knicks could be at least $20 million under the projected 2012 cap. Ironically, Dolan has been seated across from Paul, who is the Knicks’ top priority, during many of the labor bargaining sessions because Paul is on the union’s negotiation committee. According to a players source, Dolan has been the least combative of the owners and often serves as a mediator during contentious moments. “He’s tried to keep the parties on point,’’ the source said. “He’s trying to make a deal, seeing a positive spin. He’s been, in a word, productive.’’