USA Today's Chris Colston took a look at the pending NBA collective bargaining agreement negotiations through the prism of one of the league's current, fleeting points of concern (or annoyances, depending on the range of your perspective): a lot of players are hurt. The epic Bulls-Celtics series itself is missing Kevin Garnett, Luol Deng and Leon Powe, with Paul Pierce and John Salmons obviously gimpy. Every other first-round series has had injury issues.Colston ties this to the length of the NBA regular season, long a bugaboo for pundits. Few say the regular season means nothing these days, but the complaints remain, especially as keystone players like Dwyane Wade wear down in the playoffs. Colston suggests the players union, as a condition to taking a smaller slice of the revenue pie, may demand a shorter season in those CBA negotiations.
Lakers guard Derek Fisher, the union's president, suggests a shorter season will be one of several things the players will ask for should the owners push for a different revenue split (it's currently 57% for the players). Here's Fisher:
"The way this game has evolved into a global power, each game deserves to be the maximum of what it can be. If you consistently have key players missing games due to injuries and things that can be avoided, I think that's a fair point to discuss."As Mavericks owner Mark Cuban notes in Colston's story, this is a "size of the pie" issue. Maybe every game will mean more as teams can't wait around forever to lock up playoff positioning, but less games means less revenue. One, maybe two franchises lost money by hosting games this year. Gate receipts have to be really bad to lose money on game day. For every other team in the league, shortening the season to (say) 60 games would cause a loss in potential revenues. You can't exactly add more seats to a sold-out Staples Center for a Lakers game that means more, you know?
This seems like a non-starter to me, even if it's a good idea. As we discussed when the "c-word" (contraction) came up, shrinking anything is a sign of weakness. The league doesn't need to do that. I have a solution, though: that Best of 99 series I talked about! Imagine if this Bulls-Celtics series went on until next February. It'd be great!
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
5-01-2009 @ 11:33AM
Pimp Daddy said...
I for one doesn't think a shorter NBA seaon would cut out on injuries.Players hurt themself doing the offseason and don't report it because of contracts.Players get hurt in the pre-season,players get hurt in practice,players get hurt at the beginning of the season.If a player get hurt at the beginning of the season who's to say he want be hurt come playoff time if you shorten the season.If you shorten the season do you shorten the players pay?
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5-01-2009 @ 1:15PM
nscnyyfan said...
I think if they cut the season shorter... owners will have an excuse to cut players salaries... that and it might cut down on imjuries but would also cut down on team costs
5-01-2009 @ 1:27PM
rjw6683 said...
I agree with the short season. I'm sure cutting down there monsterous work week of 3 mabye 4 days of 30-40 minute shifts will do the trick. Who could expect people to take only a couple million a year to play a game for a 2 hour work week? Then you add in practice and shoot around.(well for everyone but AI) Give me a break already. Hey D Fish.....If that gruelling shift you people run seems to hard come take a look at what real people do. I'm a bricklayer and up untill a year or so ago we were working 12-14 hours a day 6 days a week. We get hurt and have to work through it or our families starve. Winter comes...we tarp in and work through it. We have no end of season to get time off. That is the people that are paying for tickets to pay you. Stop insulting all of us by pretending your season is too long and physically demanding. I promise you, 99.99% of the working class would trade you there crap job to be able to play a game for a paycheck. Just thank god you were blessed with that talent so you aren't right with us.
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5-01-2009 @ 3:00PM
MenoRikey said...
Cut some regular season, shorten the 1st (and maybe 2nd) round of the playoffs and dismantle some teams (Toronto, Memphis) would result in better games, better teams, better competition, which would lead to more interest, more fans and more money.
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