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Showing posts with label Derek Fisher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Derek Fisher. Show all posts

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Open Letter to NBA/NBA Players from a longtime NBA business associate

A longtime NBA friend, Michael Goldberg of the Coaches Association, gave me a call and asked if I would assist him in getting this 'guest column' or open letter out to the key media who cover the NBA and its current labor situation.

No editing or preamble from yours truly, here is the commentary from Michael H. Goldberg:

***

An Urgent Call to the NBA, the NBPA and its Players for a Truce and Return to Talks, from a Veteran of the Business of Professional Basketball

By Michael H. Goldberg, Executive Director NBA Coaches Association

“Don't it always seem to go, that you don't know what you've got ‘til it's gone…” Joni Mitchell (Big Yellow Taxi)

I have been involved in the sport of professional basketball for over 35 years.  In 1973, I was appointed General Counsel to the American Basketball Association, a great league but a financial disaster.  In 1978, shortly after four of the ABA’s teams staggered into the safe harbor of the NBA (then itself a league with financial issues), I began my assignment as Executive Director of the NBA Coaches Association (all Head and Assistant Coaches plus alumni) and have served in this capacity ever since.

I’m urging this call for an immediate return to discussions by the parties solely as a veteran of the business of the sport and not as a representative or spokesman of the NBA Coaches or any other constituency.  As someone who has “seen it all” in the NBA (and other professional sports), I urge the principals involved in the current labor dispute to immediately back away from the precipice, get back to the bargaining table, and redouble their efforts to resolve the current conflict and get a deal done without delay. 

The upcoming NBA season must be saved.  To do otherwise will cause a self-inflicted economic blow to an enterprise that over the years through the hard work of players, team owners and the League Office has become a great global brand, but, like every business operating in today’s fragile economic landscape, one that is more susceptible to “decline and fall.” 

We are currently in a global economic crisis such as has not been seen in any of our lifetimes.  Only individuals wearing three-inch thick rose-colored glasses can believe that sports, and NBA basketball in particular, are and will in the future be immune from these forces.  Great companies with names that our parents looked upon as having the safety and sustainability of Fort Knox have only survived thanks to bankruptcy or government bailout, while many others have disappeared altogether.  Tens of thousands of employees working for these “untouchable” companies for years thought they were set for life, only to find themselves out of work and scrambling to figure out Plan B.

In this new and dangerous economic environment there are no guarantees that what worked in the past can work now.  We all need to concede that the NBA does not operate in a financial bulletproof bubble.  After months of discussion, it has become apparent that a solution to the current situation means sacrifice and change.  The parties have moved in that direction.  Now is not the time to step back and harden positions.  Litigation and the “courts” are not the answer – “been there and done that.”  Let the parties have the courage to make a deal, even if it requires taking some risks and accepting the unpalatable for the short term, so as to ensure that going forward there will be a viable and robust NBA business, one that is able to withstand the current financial environment and further prosper.

Partial or lost seasons are a huge mistake and a blow to any sport that requires years of painful business rebuilding to get back on track.  We all know this and know that damage has already taken place.  The recent lost NHL season is an example whereby the end result was a damaged sport and fallout that fractured its union and cost hundreds of millions of dollars lost by the league, its players and its teams, to say nothing of the financial pain suffered by non-player (league and team) employees, suppliers and allied businesses.   Similar results have affected every sport that has shut down due to labor/management issues.

There is no time to waste.  History has proven that all sports labor conflicts are ultimately solved.  No doubt all sides are concerned about their financial well-being and rightly so.  But everyone involved must now think beyond their own interests, check out the daily financial headlines, and work towards a negotiated solution now. Short of this all parties will risk killing the goose that lays so many golden eggs for so many connected with it.  Let’s not commit a “Flagrant 2” to a business that can ill afford it.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

NBA Season in jeopardy, but the Circus is in town

It's mid-November and the NBA is supposed to be in town, complete with its superstar players traveling on chartered jets while they stay at luxury hotel suites and cruise on fancy tour buses to the state-of-the-art-arenas, complete with ritzy locker rooms, weight rooms and practice facilities. The home team rolls into private players-only parking lots in their Escalades, Bentleys or Maybachs, secured like the Marine Corps bunks at Quantico. They report to work, just like the rest of us, they claim. They are members of a union, portrayed as the rank and file who "just want to play basketball."

Derek Fisher announces disqualification of NBA union
As of today, the union, formerly known as the National Basketball Players Association, has been disbanded, disqualified, blown-up, kaboom.  They have not decertified, mind you, as that legal tactic would require each member of the union to trudge into a National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) regional office for a full and formal vote. The union, formerly known as The NBPA, took a short cut to save the time and money of decertification, mainly because its members prefer listening to N.W.A. over schlepping to the NLRB any day of the week.

The charade of decertification, err, disqualification is a thinly veiled attempt to re-gain lost leverage which weighed heavily in the favor of the NBA team owners and their representatives in the league office. The threat of disbanding the union to file lawsuits and challenge the NBA under anti-trust laws was taught in sports law class years and years ago. Labor lawyers like to hear themselves talk in courtrooms as their firms cash seven figure checks all along the way as the laborers fork over as much as $25 million a year (as Kobe Bryant of the LA Lakers might do). The litigators like to litigate and they do it in the name of the rank and file and for future players of generations to come.

Lost in the shuffle are the many arena workers, the vendors, parking lot attendants and restaurant owners and servers in the close proximity of the arenas occupied by the NBA team some 41 nights a year.  The lost wages of those workers is simply the high cost of low living, but the owners and players apologize, just the same to the workers and fans.  The are sorry that they've left the fans with extra leisure time and some serious discretionary income to re-allocate between December 15, 2011 and June 15, 2012.  

The arenas will do their best to fill the dates.  In fact, they've been chomping at the bit to gather up uncertain dates of the future and turn them into cash flow with a concert, Disney event or an extended run of the "greatest show on earth," the circus.

To this observer, the circus has long been in town.  It didn't have a big top tent nor did the elephants walk to town through the Lincoln or Sumner tunnels.  I've been watching the NBA version of a circus and it started this past summer and continued to make appearances on a monthly, then weekly, and lately, a daily basis.  The usual acts were replaced by new high wire acrobatics that might make the original creators of the Cirque du Soleil blush from embarrassment. The NBA circus scores high on un-intentional comedy but registers pretty low on public opinion polls.  It rolls into all corners of the earth, mainly from media reports which now carry the news globally.

The Ring Master of Ceremonies for this year's NBA Lockout Circus is none other than Metta World Peace, the artist formerly known as Ron Artest.  Peace made his legal name change in order to "inspire the youth of the world," many who might've been led astray when Peace's predecessor, Mr. Artest, started one of the worst brawls in sports history when he was a member of the Indiana Pacers and decided to charge the stands at the Palace of Auburn Hills, near Detroit, to discuss foreign policy with a Pistons fan who had tossed a beer cup in his direction as he lay prone on the scorer's table, patiently awaiting the referees' decisions from a scuffle that he began with Detroit center Ben Wallace after a meaningless, hard foul.  After nearly taking the NBA down with the aftermath of his ill-timed Auburn Hills meltdown, Artest sought refuge and began to remake his image to the point where the pro basketball writers later awarded him with a citizenship award.

In my circus, Metta World Peace is ably assisted by the NBA's David Stern and his deputy commissioner, Adam Silver while the players serve up executive director Billy Hunter in a way the Republican party served up Sarah Palin as a vice presidential candidate in 2008.  Hunter has deputized his longtime legal counsel, Jeffrey Kessler, and they have run the equivalent of a legal three-ring circus, dating back to February 2010.  Derek Fisher, a respected member of the former union and well-liked and well-spoken representative for the union, has tried to tame the legal lions that run his union and that of other major sports. 

The non-union, formerly known as the NBA Players Association, is the comedy act of this circus. This summer, they carefully managed to avoid scoring high on the Richter Scale of stupid labor comments, marks previously set by the likes of former union members Patrick Ewing ("We make a lot, but we spend a lot.") or Latrell Sprewell (I've got a family to feed.").  Instead, they scattered like stock brokers heading to the phones when the lockout was announced on July 1, 2011. The members sought millions from the NBA's global popularity, globetrotting to the very lands that the NBA farmed for decades with hopes of growing the pie called "basketball related income."

Deron Williams, an all-star guard, headed to play in Istanbul, Turkey while Kenyon Martin, a one-time #1 pick of the NBA Draft, flew off to China.  Amar'e Stoudemire of the New York Knicks wondered out loud if the players might form their own league one-day, as he spoke of having a long-term plan and strategy that was -- obviously -- not very strategic and hadn't been baked very long.  Other MVP players, like Kobe Bryant, Dwyane Wade and Lebron James talked-up a world tour with an Atlanta-based organizer who set jets on a course for San Juan (Puerto Rico), London (England), Macau (China) and Melbourne/Sydney (Australia).  When it came time, the circus-like tour never made it to San Juan as the organizers realized just what it takes to stage games on a global basis and on four continents in a matter of weeks. Hysterically, there were media reports, albeit on Fox, that had the dozen-plus player participants making between $500,000 and $1 million for their efforts with 'profits' going to charity.  The un-intentional comedy meter hit "laughable" when you added up the potential dollars from ticket sales and subtracted expenses like first class flights and hotels, never mind paying out somewhere between $6 and $12 million in salary from gate receipts of five meaningless and poorly promoted exhibition games.  It was amateur hour at the circus and we all laughed a few laughs at the players expense as their act of the circus was funnier than any clown prince could imagine. It was so pitiful, it might've made Emmett Kelly smile, God Bless his soul.

If that weren't enough, we had another (former) union member, the one and only Allen Iverson, entering the big-top as an event organizer in Las Vegas. Iverson planned a two-night event in Vegas to coincide with a championship Pacquiao-Marquez fight at the MGM Grand.  It sounded great until the only players to show up for the pre-event publicity announcement were Iverson and Al Harrington, not exactly a roomful of support for Iverson on the high wire, and more like a "Roomful of Blues" at the posh HoB, near Mandalay.

Sprinkled in and out of the keen public eye, the NBA circus of the summer of 2011 brought added attention the Drew and Goodman summer leagues where name players like Kevin Durant registered mega-point performances to grab headlines and streaming video time, previously held for great performances in the Las Vegas summer league or the various player charity games.  Other news bits saw the retirement of Yao Ming, the arrest of Jarvis Crittenton, a handful of drug, weapons violations and a DUI or two -- one by a prominent team GM, RC Buford of San Antonio.  Yes, the players and lawyers were not the only acts in the circus.  Hell, Kevin Love played volleyball at the this circus while Kobe Bryant unsuccessfully tried to negotiate a payday in his former stomping grounds of Italy.   Maybe, the financial advisers conventions in Greece and Italy scared off a few of the circus actors from taking the plunge from "death defying" heights.

In the second ring of the summertime circus, the featured actors were team owners.  Usually a button-downed group, the owners of NBA teams let their hard-line stance be known in ways unimaginable to those who follow the NBA closely.  Inexperienced owners in Cleveland and Phoenix piped up as they undermined the league's hierarchy.  Even respected team owners, like San Antonio's Peter Holt, were quoted as saying to players "that they haven't felt enough pain."  One owner, the esteemed Micky Arison of the Miami Heat and Carnival Cruise fame, was fined for 'tweeting" his viewpoint of the failed labor negotiations with his tweet ill-timed, according to the NBA leaders who've used their twitter accounts, NBA TV, NBA.com and several media blitzes to try to reach the rank and file directly while swaying public opinion.

The third ring of the NBA circus is reserved for nasty creatures, also known as the scum of the earth, the wicked, the dangerous men and women who are worse than snakes in the grass or the piranhas of the Amazon.  They are the "agents" and they are to be positioned as the scapegoats of this summer of BRI impasse.  The agents lurk in the shadows of the circus and attempt to manipulate the union lawyers with their own selfish desires.  They band together in groups of six or seven but when the likes of the tamers such as the late Clyde Beatty or Gunther Gebel-Williams come along, they refuse to sit idly as the circus acts swirl around them.  Instead, they plunge at the jugulars of the player reps, or lesser-known, fellow agents and union leaders who might someday be allies. The third ring of this circus is not where you want to be.

And that leaves the concession stand.  The circus might come to a close after a run of more than 137 consecutive days and the NBA might strike a new deal if some of the circus animals slither over to the concession stand.  But, they will have to hit "dictionary (dot) com" on their way over, because the concession that I write of is not the type that sells cotton candy or beer and hot dogs.  It is another definition of the word, a variation from the Latin verb "concedere." It calls for things to be granted in response to a demand from another and it hasn't been uttered or practiced in the two and a half years of NBA labor talks.  The news of today makes me think this circus act is growing old on the once faithful fan base.

Can you pass the popcorn, please.  I'm going to the movies instead of watching the game.

Be sure to check out: DigitalSportsDesk.com

Friday, June 12, 2009

Player of the Decade? Derek Fisher.


ORLANDO – Mike Monroe of the San Antonio Express News had the foresight to write a great story yesterday morning, June 11th, 2009., from his humble abode in Texas, a place he calls the “Tater-Dome.”

Monroe thought about the title and honor of "most dominant NBA player of the decade" and he posed the question to a few NBA experts who were lucky enough to witness all the big games of the past 10+ years and people who really knew the players he put forth in his three-person 'playoff'' for the NBA star who made the most impact during the past 10+ years.

Kobe, Shaq or Duncan asked Monroe?

I can say that I was honored to be among the NBA gurus that he polled as he was doing his research. He also asked Steve Kerr, the overmatched GM of the Phoenix Suns, who carried Michael Jordan's bags for four years, as he spotted up on the three-point line while Tim Duncan dominated the paint in San Antonio for a couple of years. Of course, giving credit where credit is warranted, Kerr did hit a couple big shots throughout the decade, earning himself a championship ring in the 1997 NBA Finals when he drained a shot off a Jordan pass with six seconds remaining to defeat the Utah Jazz..

When Monroe wrote the story, little did he know that Fisher would again be the key player, hitting the two key shots -- both long three-pointers from the top of the key to win a key game in the NBA Finals. (Note: Fisher's prior three-pointer in a big game situation propelled the Lakers past the San Antonio Spurs, but the Detroit Pistons would later outlast the Lakers in the NBA Finals of 2004).

Now, when I was asked to choose between the three players, I defaulted to an answer that Celtics great Bill Russell explained quite eloquently when he was asked who the best NBA players of all-time were during the NBA at 50 celebration.

"There are a lot of ties," said Russ. "How can you possibly say that Oscar Roberston was better than Jerry West or that West was better than Sam Jones or Jones was better than Walt Frazier and so on, describing just a handful of the NBA’s greatest guards, never mind centers like Chamberlain, O’Neal or himself."

So, who is the player of the decade? Is it Kobe, Shaq, Timmy Duncan or do you prefer to nominate another?

Yes, another! As the actual answer might be: Derek Fisher!

“He’s very persistent,” said LA Coach Phil Jackson. “He’s just a dogged player. He’s not blessed with great speed. He’s a good athlete but he’s not spectacularly fast. But, he has a certain sense about him. He knows what’s going on on the floor and can organize a team.

“It’s character. We’ve always said the character has got to be in players if they’re going to be great players. You just can’t draft it. It’s not about talent, it’s about character and he’s a person of high character. He brings that to play, not only in his gamesmanship but also in his intestinal fortitude,” said Jackson.

Where did the clutch performance in Game 4 of the 2009 NBA Finals rank in Derek Fisher’s personal experience?

“Well, it’s number 100, 101, maybe,” joked Fisher during the league run press conference staged before hundreds or media and the worldwide televisioon cameras of ESPN and NBA TV, staged a few minutes after he won Game 4 and put the Lakers in control 3-games-to-1.

“I don’t compare myself to Robert Horry,” said Fisher when he was asked to compare his career to that of another role player who had a reputation of hitting very big shots in many an NBA Playoff game.

Fisher was selected by the LA Lakers in the first round of the 1996 NBA Draft, the 24th overall pick of that draft. He is currently in his 13th season of NBA basketball after playing his first eight years with the Lakers, then taking a free agent route to Golden State for two years and Utah for a season (2006-07). Fisher re-signed with the Lakers as a free agent on July 20, 2007 after a much publicized personal decision to move to Los Angeles from Salt Lake City to better serve his young daughter who had been diagnosed with retinoblastoma, a cancerous tumor in her left eye.

“I gained so much respect for him,” said Kobe Bryant when he was asked about his relationship with Fisher over the decade with the Lakers. “He’s been there before. He’s been there and done that. We teased him a little bit in the locker room, because he was 0-for-5 before he hit the two big shots. He has supreme confidence and those shots at the end of the game were easy for him.”

Fisher finished the game with an impressive statistical line of 12 points and four rebounds on 5-of-11 shooting, playing 42 minutes of time. He was one of four Lakers to log 40+ minutes in the pivotal game in the series.

Here is the story Mike Monroe filed with the Express News yesterday morning:

In the final minute of Tuesday's NBA Finals Game 3, televised close-ups of Kobe Bryant revealed a player mouthing curses, anger directed inward.

The Lakers superstar had missed a critical, late free throw, which made him 5 for 10 on free-throw attempts, incredulous at temporary frailty under duress.

Could it be Bryant now understands how dominant Tim Duncan and Shaquille O'Neal have been over the past 10 seasons, during which each managed to anchor a team that won four NBA titles while simultaneously fearing the foul line?

Depending on your geography or personal bias, the Lakers are either a few Bryant free-throw conversions from an unbeatable 3-0 advantage or one Courtney Lee lob-layup miss shy of a 1-2 deficit in a best-of-7 series that will remain in central Florida for two more games.

Fact is, L.A. holds home-court advantage even if the Magic win Games 4 and 5. That makes Bryant the favorite to earn his fourth championship, his first without O'Neal as a teammate.

When, and if, this happens, expect plenty of experts to declare Bryant the most dominant player of the past 10 years.

Will a fourth title really affirm his ascendancy as the defining player of this era?

Your opinion may depend on the span of your memory.

Wasn't it just two years ago that the Spurs won their fourth championship behind Duncan's play?

Can we be just three years removed from O'Neal's fourth title run, after he became the piece Dwyane Wade and the Heat needed to secure a championship?

Some NBA eras have been simple to define:

The early years belonged to George Mikan, who led the Minneapolis Lakers to five titles, from 1949-54.

Bill Russell dominated from his rookie season, 1956-57, until he retired, with 11 rings, after serving as Celtics player-coach on the 1969 title team.

Michael Jordan dominated from 1990-98, when he led the Bulls to two three-peats that were sandwiched around his stepping away from the game to dabble at baseball.

Duncan's championship run began in 1999, which puts a neat, 10-year punctuation mark on the latest era. But it is an era akin to the 1980s, when Larry Bird and Magic Johnson shared dominance.

Steve Kerr won three titles as a teammate of Jordan's, in 1996, '97 and '98; then two more alongside Duncan, in 1999 and 2003. As general manager of the Suns, he traded for O'Neal. This gives him a unique perspective to judge this latest, arbitrarily assigned stretch of NBA history.

Kerr, though, swatted the opportunity like an overhead smash on the tennis court.

The Suns' GM said he passed some time during a recent trans-Atlantic flight by reading a newspaper article that compared tennis star Roger Federer, whose French Open men's singles championship was his 14th Grand Slam title, to all-time greats Pete Sampras and Rod Laver.

“I finished the article,” Kerr said, “and thought: This is impossible. Whether it's comparing eras or players, the obvious answer is: They're all great players.

“So: Tim, Shaq, Kobe? They're all dominant. Who's more dominant? It's impossible to say.”

Perhaps there is an alternate answer in the debate. A Lakers championship will give Derek Fisher his fourth title, too. Had Fisher not hit the infamous zero-point-four shot that beat the Spurs in Game 5 of the 2004 Western semifinals, Duncan and the Spurs may have gone on to a second straight title, then a three-peat, in 2005.

Then, there would be no debate at all. The years from 1999-2009 would be the Duncan era, plain and simple.

Maybe Fisher, with one clutch basket, changed the decade as much as the players involved in this debate have.

mikemonroe@express-news.net