Dallas-Mavs.com Forums

Go Back   Dallas-Mavs.com Forums > Mavs / NBA > Around the NBA

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 06-21-2005, 12:20 AM   #1
Pirate
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 528
Pirate is a name known to allPirate is a name known to allPirate is a name known to allPirate is a name known to allPirate is a name known to allPirate is a name known to allPirate is a name known to allPirate is a name known to allPirate is a name known to all
Default From DLord - "New CBA is very close ..."

From db.com boards, the following update by Lord Monday evening 6/20/05 (posted @ 11:23 pm)...

"New CBA is very close ..."

Per Chad Ford @ ESPN ...

The NBA and its players' association are close to agreeing on a new collective bargaining agreement ... sources close to both negotiating committees said Monday night.

The potential agreement would run for six years and would allow the two sides to avoid a July 1 lockout.



Here is a summary from realGM of the reported deal (Dan Rosenbaum)

sports.espn.go.com/nba/ne...id=2091116

There still could be some details that bring it in line, but here are some of the major points.

- 19 year-old age limit
- rookie scale contracts stay the same, except third season becomes team option
- six year contracts with same team, five year for new team
- maximum raises of 10 percent for same team, 8 percent for new team
- players guaranteed 57 percent of BRI
- salary cap trigger percentage rises to 51 percent from 48.04 percent (this may result in maximum salaries increasing)
- escrow tax maximum falls in stages to 8 percent from 10 percent
- luxury and escrow tax distributions are equal for all 30 teams (this is a huge concession to the players)
- no supertax of high-spending teams

Nothing on any changes in the mid-level exception.

Overall, I would expect the players' share of BRI to rise past 60 percent during the life of this deal, unless there are other important details being left out.



My quick analysis of the deal as appears above ...

1. Decent deal for both sides
2. No major changes to the current system, just some tweaks
3. With no "supertax" (2% luxury tax on the biggest spenders) and a raise in the cap, plus shortened contracts, look for some AGGRESSIVE (and stupid) spending this summer in free agency by teams with newly found cap room.

I didnt see anything about the NDBL being used as a possible minor league for development of young players who are stuck on the back end of the bench - and if this is not included, it would be the one flaw I would wail about. That is sorely needed to make the players better and to develop them faster.

Pirate is offline   Reply With Quote
Sponsored Links
Old 06-21-2005, 03:33 AM   #2
Misfit Mav
Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 680
Misfit Mav will become famous soon enough
Default RE:From DLord - "New CBA is very close ..."

Wow... what looked like a potential disaster for the Mavs has been completely resolved. Looks like we'll get the summer league, and avoid the "super tax." I'm pleased to see a moderate age limit as well, as I think it will be better for the players and the league. Great news if it all comes through.


Here's Ford's full article

Age limit, bigger cap, shorter contracts part of dealBy Chad Ford
ESPN Insider


The NBA and its players' association are close to agreeing on a new collective bargaining agreement that would institute a new 19-year-old age limit, reduce contract lengths and raise the salary cap, sources close to both negotiating committees said Monday night.

The potential agreement would run for six years and would allow the two sides to avoid a July 1 lockout.

The two negotiating committees were scheduled to meet again on Tuesday morning in New York, NBA spokesperson Tim Frank said. Union spokesperson Dan Wasserman declined comment on the story.

A source close to the NBA negotiating committee and a source close to the union's negotiation committee claim that all of the major issues between the sides have been agreed to in principle, and the purpose of Tuesday's meeting is to work out some of the finer points of the agreement that weren't addressed during a lengthy, breakthrough negotiation session Friday. Both sources asserted that none of the issues left on the table are major sticking points.

If those issues can be worked out in a timely fashion, the two sides would be ready to announce a deal.

If a new agreement is reached soon, the players would have the opportunity to ratify it during a summer meeting on June 28. It might take several more weeks for the final agreement to get drafted, possibly delaying the start of the free agent period scheduled to start July 1.

The owners will have won several key concessions from the players, if the current proposal is agreed upon, according to sources on both sides.

• A 19-year-old age limit would be implemented. Players who are not 19 by draft night would be ineligible to declare. Under current rules, American players are eligible for the draft the year their high school class graduates. Foreign players must be 18 by draft night. The new proposed age limit would bar most, but not all (Amare Stoudemire was already 19 when he was drafted), high school players from entering the draft.

• Contract lengths would be reduced by one year. Currently, players can sign a fully guaranteed contract for a maximum of seven years if they re-sign with their current team. Players signing with a new team in free agency can sign a six-year deal. Under the new proposal, maxiumum contract lengths would shorten to five years for players signing with new teams and six years for players re-signing with their current team.

• Raises in contracts would be reduced. Under the current CBA, players are allowed maximum raises of 12.5 percent per year if they re-sign with their current team and 10 percent if they sign with a different team in free agency. Under the new proposal, raises would be reduced to 10 percent if a player re-signs with his current team and 8 percent if they sign with a different team in free agency.

• Teams would pick up an extra option year on rookie contracts. Currently, first-round picks are tied into a league salary scale. When a first-round pick signs a contract, the first three years are guaranteed, with a team option for the fourth year. Players are paid a set amount based on where they were selected in the draft. Under the new proposed rules, first-round picks would get the first two years of their contract guaranteed. The third and fourth years of the contract would be team options.

In return the owners would make the following concessions to the players if the current proposal is ratified:

• Total player salaries would be guaranteed. The proposed agreement guarantees that players receive a minimum of 57 percent of basketball-related income (BRI) in the form of salaries each year.

• The salary cap would increase. The current CBA bases the salary cap on BRI. The cap is set at 48 percent of BRI; last year, that came to $43.87 million. According to sources, the owners would agree to increase that percentage to 51 percent, in effect raising the salary cap. Sources say the cap would, in that case, rise to between $47 million and $50 million next season.

• Escrow would be reduced and distribution of escrow moneys modified. Currently, players must pay 10 percent of their salaries into an escrow account each season. If, at season's end, the total amount of player salaries exceeds 57 percent of the league's total basketball-related income, that money goes to the owners whose teams stay below the luxury-tax threshold (and a few that fall within a certain "cliff threshold"). If it doesn't exceed 57 percent, the players get their money back. Under the proposed agreement, that number would be slowly fazed down to 8 percent by the end of the agreement.

There is potentially another significant development in this area. Under current rules, the NBA has sole discretion over the use of the escrow money. Currently, it redistributes the cash (and luxury tax revenues) to teams that are under the luxury tax threshold. In essence, Clippers owner Donald Sterling gets a bonus for being cheap. Under the new proposed agreement, distribution rules would be changed so that luxury tax revenues would now be distributed equally among all 30 teams.

• No super luxury tax. Owners had been pushing for a "super tax" for teams who exceed the salary cap by more than a certain percentage. They would be penalized $2 for every dollar they were over the tax threshold. However, the owners dropped their demand for a super tax under the newest proposal.

Chad Ford covers the NBA for ESPN Insider.
__________________
When asked after the Dallas Mavericks impressive game 3 win over the Sacramento Kings whether he thought the Mavs won because they played well or because the Kings played poorly, Nelson responded that it was hard to tell, much like a thermos. "How do it know?" queried the ever eccentric Nelson. When you put something hot in it, it stays hot. When you put something cold in it, it stays cold. "How do it know?"
Misfit Mav is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump




All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:25 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.