NEW YORK – Once David Stern had
discovered his owners wanted to march one of their biggest spenders into
a mediation session and deliver the Players Association a
take-it-or-leave-it ultimatum, it came to no surprise that he
disappeared to the peace of his Westchester County home. Whatever you
want to say about the NBA commissioner, Stern has long craved
confrontation. And yet, suddenly, he had a doctor’s note to bail with
the oldest and most suspicious of NBA DNP’s: flu-like symptoms.
All hell promised to unleash in the
conference room of the Sheraton Hotel on the 52nd Street and Seventh
Avenue. So bad that the man who wrote the book on collective bargaining
guerilla warfare had retreated to the suburbs and left these unruly
proceedings to someone who truly despises confrontation. Nevertheless, Portland Trail Blazers
billionaire Paul Allen stepped out of the shadows, declared himself as
the hardest line of the hardliners and played the part of the improbable
boogeyman in these dysfunctional labor talks.
Union executive director Billy Hunter said Paul Allen just stared at him when he asked the owners to continue negotiations.
“Here came the Grim Reaper,” one exasperated union official sighed in a quiet corridor Thursday night.
For all the talk about the Robert Sarvers, the most strident of the
hardliners thrust himself to the forefront of fear that this could be a
lost basketball season. For the past 15 years, Allen’s been the wildest
of wild spenders, the salary cap-buster hell-bent on buying an NBA
title. Outrageous contracts, $3 million a pop to purchase late draft
picks. And now, the NBA’s board of governors found him the perfect
candidate to be the bearer of gloom and doom in Thursday’s meeting, even
when a union attorney Jeffrey Kessler said: “I thought we were making
progress toward a deal.”
These are the mind games the owners
will play with the players, all the way to a January deadline to cancel
the season. They’ll be Lucy to the players’ Charlie Brown, pulling that
ball away again and again. This is a high-stakes game full of backward
agendas and hidden motives. Here’s the scariest part of it all for those
who want labor talks to have a puncher’s chance at saving the season:
Allen appears to be checking out on the Blazers, and there’s suspicion
that his motives center on saving as much money as possible in this CBA
to eventually ready his franchise for a sale.
“He’s gone the other way, the complete other way,” a high-ranking
league official told Yahoo! Sports. “He’s been the most vociferous
lately that [the owners] have given up too much to the players, that
they should be holding out for a hard cap, for 40 percent to the players
[on the revenue split]. No one has gone after the labor committee
harder about this than him.”
Nearly three weeks ago, the players themselves had brought their own fiercely private, peculiar force into the room: the Boston Celtics’ Kevin Garnett(notes).
Garnett came out of nowhere in these talks, and owners believed his
strident railing derailed momentum toward a deal in early October.
Now, it was management’s turn. It was Allen, who has spent the GNP of
third-world countries in pursuit of an NBA title, and now, as one NBA
front-office executive calls him: “He’s sort of turned into this era’s
Howard Hughes.”
The season’s in genuine jeopardy now because powerbrokers like Allen
are uniting with nickel-and-dimers like Sarver in a common cause: How do
I get out of NBA ownership with maximum profit, minimal pain? These are
simply men gutting costs to eventually get the best price and sell
those franchises. In his life, Allen has a history of disengaging people
and things once he loses interest, and that appears to be happening
now.
“The worst thing for the Blazers are not the injuries, but Paul
losing interest,” said a league official connected to the organization.
“And once he loses interest in anything, he doesn’t want to deal with it
anymore. He can’t win anymore, so he’s going to literally take his ball
and go home.”
This is the NBA left to Stern, the players and the fans: Owners like
Allen, who are done with it. Over the league, over the love of owning
teams. Those aren’t the overwhelming agendas in the room, but it’s a
part now. Paul Allen’s made it a huge part.
After 24 hours of mediation over Tuesday and Wednesday, the two sides
were making progress. Kessler insisted “something happened in the board
of governors meeting.” This was Wednesday night, between the second and
third consecutive bargaining sessions, and, yes, something did happen.
Allen walked into the St. Regis
Hotel, and the hardliners loved that they suddenly had the biggest
spender of all firmly on the side of shutdown, of NBA Armageddon.
What’s more, Celtics owner Wyc Grousbeck presented a revenue-sharing
plan that, sources said, left some in the room confused and uncertain.
There was hardly a united front walking out of the room on how that
would work, on how it would benefit the league.
The union had its suspicions over that meeting, over the
hardliners ruling the day again. This conspired to set a terrible tone
for Thursday’s talks, where the owners marched Allen into the room like
he was the biggest swinging bat in the room. Allen’s awkward sometimes,
hates public discourses and hadn’t come to articulate a case. He was a
presence to stand there, the richest American owner in sports warning
the players that he was now an ally of the dark side. The owners knew
Allen carried a symbolism with him, an unspoken sense that even the
biggest, wildest, most reckless of spenders wanted a system to save
themselves from themselves. And now, they wanted it completely out of
the players’ take. More than a billion dollars in givebacks by the
players isn’t enough to even keep talking for some of these owners, and
that’s a problem here.
Afterward, Players Association executive director Billy Hunter would
say: “They said Paul was there because the owners were of the position
that they had given up too much in the negotiations and he was there to
reaffirm their position.”
So, the owners told the union they wouldn’t negotiate further issues
until they agreed to drop down to a 50-50 split of revenue. Hunter tried
to save the discussions, and made a case directly to Allen in the
Sheraton conference room. Listen, Hunter said, let’s set aside the
revenue split discussion and go back to the system issues: the luxury
tax, the Bird rights, exceptions and so on.
Only, Hunter’s words were met with a blank stare from Allen.
“Paul didn’t respond,” Hunter said. “He was just … in the room.”
That’s Allen. No confrontations, no arguments. His old general
managers learned this: When he’s done with you, he just stops talking to
you. Just ignores you. Just wishes you’d go away. All of this speaks to
his growing disconnect to the Blazers. Thirteen years ago, Allen
couldn’t wait for the lockout to end. He believed the Blazers were on
the cusp of a championship run, and desperately wanted a season.
Whatever it cost, he was willing to pay. Damon Stoudamire was a free
agent, had a marketplace that wouldn’t have paid him north of $50
million. Allen didn’t care. He wanted everyone in training camp for Day
One, wanted them winning out of the gate, and he peeled off an $80
million contract for Stoudamire because, well, he was Paul Allen and he
could.
And now, he fired his latest GM, Rich Cho, after just one season.
Why? Those within the Blazers believe that it was simple: Cho told Allen
the truth. The Blazers aren’t contenders, that they’ll have to take a
step back, maybe two, before they can start going forward again.
“He didn’t want to hear that,” one league official with knowledge of
the dynamic said. “This disconnect with Rich? It was this: He told Paul
the truth. And Allen has no interest in going sideways now. But now
[Allen’s] realizing that if he can’t win big in the NBA, well, he
doesn’t want to lose money.
“So now, after a health scare, after his team has fallen off,
they send him into the meeting to be the messenger of gloom and doom to
the players. He’s all right with doing that now, because I don’t think
he cares anymore.”
How else do you explain that Allen still hasn’t hired a GM to replace
Cho? This lockout could’ve ended, and the Blazers would’ve had no one
in place to make such important decisions as getting rid of Brandon Roy(notes) with the impending amnesty clause or re-signing Greg Oden(notes).
In the beginning, Blazers president Larry Miller made a run at
popular former Suns GM, Steve Kerr, sources said. Kerr, who played in
Portland for a season, doesn’t want to be a GM again, and wouldn’t get
into talks with the Blazers. Portland then brought several solid,
competent candidates into town for interviews and rejected every one of
them. Lately, the Blazers have tried to engage several prominent league
GMs about discussing the job, and that hasn’t worked. The most recent
discussed within the organization, sources said, has been the Utah Jazz’s Kevin O’Connor, but there’s no indication they even reached out to him.
Now, it appears Allen will just let Miller and his recent interim GM,
Chad Buchanan, take over the duties for the season. Make no mistake,
Allen has slowly, surely stopped looking at the Blazers like his crown
jewel, perhaps now considering them as just another industry he needs to
get lean before he moves it.
For Allen, that’s great. For the NBA, it’s trouble. Because his
agenda – and that of several owners – is making these teams more
palatable for prospective buyers. And that’ll come at whatever the
consequences to the league’s public standing, relationships with its
players, its fans, its future. This has to be disconcerting to Stern,
who doesn’t want to lose the season. It’s strange, though: You have one
commissioner, Stern, who’s fighting to end this and preserve his legacy.
And another, Silver, the deputy, who’s fighting to show these owners
that he’s the tough guy they should want as the next in line.
That’s why Silver was willing to come out on Thursday night, throw
out a crazy, convoluted tale of events he knew – just knew – the union
would have to loudly, bluntly set the record straight on. The NBA knows
when the Players Association gets worked up, gets publicly frustrated,
the public turns on them. It’s a vicious cycle, and Derek Fisher(notes)
understands it. “I do,” he told Yahoo! Sports, “and we measure what
we’re going to say, but in the end, we have to let our constituents, our
players, know our version of things, what really happened.”
So Silver sat there with San Antonio Spurs
owner Peter Holt, the chairman of the labor committee, and didn’t seem
to notice when his top-ranking labor owner violated one of the NBA’s own
lockout mandates, dropping Tim Duncan’s(notes)
name in the news conference. Holt was talking about the past
profitability of his small-market Spurs, and how much Duncan and all
those playoff runs had kept the franchise in the black. Holt has never
seemed to relish the public stage, but Silver loves it. He’s the pitbull
deputy for the ultimate pitbull commissioner, and that meeting on
Thursday was like red meat for the hard-line owners.
This was like the Democrats marching a converted Karl Rove into the
national convention, or the Republicans turning out a Kennedy. Here was
the biggest, swinging bat in the room at the Sheraton in midtown
Manhattan, Paul Allen, the highest-priced messenger in the history of
collective bargaining talks. And the message was delivered to the
players: We’re taking everyone in basketball to hell and back now.
Yes sir, the grim reaper walked into the room, and progress on ending
the lockout was obliterated. So planned, so predictable, the man who
wrote the playbook on labor guerilla warfare, David Stern, got a
doctor’s note and hustled home to the suburbs. All these years Paul
Allen listened to those owners complain about how much money he spent
trying to win, all these years he was the reason they wanted a lockout,
needed a new system. And now, the richest American owner in sports is
fighting the fight, shoulder to shoulder, to change a system that he
himself had made such a mockery.
Everyone else wants the NBA back in
their lives, and slowly, surely its seems that the man responsible for
blowing everything up in Times Square wants nothing more than to be done
with it all.
Source: Yahoo! Sports
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