NBA season still in doubt | Inquirer Sports

NBA season still in doubt

Players want bigger profit share
10:06 PM October 10, 2011

Players Dwyane Wade (L) guards Chris Bosh during a charity basketball game in Miami, Florida October 08, 2011. NBA players are participating in a charity basketball tournament while the NBA lockout continues. REUTERS/Rhona Wise

NEW YORK—NBA players and owners still have no deal headed into the deadline for starting the season on time.

Negotiators for the sides met for more than five hours Sunday (Monday in Manila) before breaking for the night. They are scheduled to return Monday afternoon.

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“We’re not necessarily any closer than we were going in tonight, but we’ll be back at it tomorrow and we’ll keep putting time in,” said union president Derek Fisher of the Lakers.

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If they can’t come to a deal then, NBA commissioner David Stern has said the first two weeks of the regular season will be canceled. It is scheduled to begin November 1.

Neither side offered any specifics, but a person with knowledge of the talks said they did not discuss the split of revenues, perhaps the biggest issue dividing them.

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The person was granted anonymity because the details were supposed to remain private.

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When they last met on Tuesday, league officials asked the union if they would consider a 50-50 split of basketball-related revenues.

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The players, guaranteed 57 percent under the previous collective bargaining agreement, rejected that and said they were not prepared to go below 53 percent.

The salary cap system is the other big issue.

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Fisher also said the union would postpone a regional meeting scheduled for Monday in Los Angeles so he and other officials could remain in New York for more talks.

“We feel like our time, and our guys would want our time, to be used in meeting and try to get closer to getting a deal done,” he said. “So instead of going forward with that meeting, we’re going to put it off and then we’ll reschedule it accordingly.”

No further talks had been expected this weekend.

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On Friday, a person close to the union said players had been seeking a session before the deadline, but were told it came with a precondition of agreeing to the 50-50 split.

TAGS: Basketball, David Stern, Derek Fisher, Lockout, NBA, Sports

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