Canceled season is looming closer

NEW YORK — Faced with a deal it could not accept and a negotiating process that had reached a dead end, the National Basketball Players Association elected to disband Monday afternoon, thrusting the NBA into chaos.

The prospect of reviving the 2011-12 season now rests with the courts.

Billy Hunter, executive director of the now-defunct NBPA, made the announcement just before 1 p.m. CST, after a four-hour meeting of union officials and player representatives from all 30 teams.

A letter informing the NBA of the union’s decision was sent before Hunter took the podium.

“The players just felt that they had given enough, that the NBA was not willing or prepared to continue to negotiate,” Hunter said, with more than 40 players packed behind him in a small hotel conference room. “Things were not going to get better.”

The union’s decision comes four days after commissioner David Stern issued an ultimatum to the union to accept the league’s current proposal or have it replaced with an inferior deal.

Stern reiterated over the weekend that the NBA was done negotiating.

Few teams in the NBA have more to lose from cancellation of the season than the Spurs.

Coming off a 61-win season that was followed by a shocking first-round playoff loss to the eighth-seeded Memphis Grizzlies, they understand that the glory days of an aging roster are dwindling.

Two-time Most Valuable Player Tim Duncan, now 35, is in the final season of his contract. Though he has stated his intent to play as long as he remains a significant contributor, losing the season could affect his thinking.

All-Star guard Manu Ginobili, 34, is under contract for only two more seasons. He has acknowledged that retirement will be an option after 2012-13.

The club hoped a shortened NBA season might convince 36-year-old forward-center Antonio McDyess to put off his announced retirement plans.

There is little chance he would return for a season in which he would turn 38.

On several occasions during the lockout, Stern has expressed regret about the effect it has had on players like Duncan. He reiterated the sentiment Monday, even as he criticized the union’s decision to disclaim interest.

“Players whose last year was this season will have their careers potentially end on this basis,” he said, “and it’s just a negotiating tactic, and it’s all that it is.”

In disbanding, the NBPA will now become a trade association. It will represent the players’ interests, but for the purposes of bargaining, the players are now considered individuals.

The decision to end the union effectively renders moot a separate effort by agents and players to force decertification of the union. An antitrust lawyer representing that group was set to deliver more than 200 player signatures to the National Labor Relations Board to start the clock on that process. Decertifying — effectively overthrowing union leadership from the outside — would have taken at least six weeks and would have required a majority vote by the full membership.

By disclaiming interest, the union ceases operations, opening the door to an immediate antitrust lawsuit.

The NBA is expected to challenge the disclaimer as a sham that was perpetuated only to create leverage at the bargaining table. The league made that accusation in August, when it filed a pre-emptive lawsuit accusing union leaders of threatening to disclaim as a negotiating tactic.

Stern hammered that point again in a statement issued Monday afternoon.

“At a bargaining session in February 2010, Jeffrey Kessler, counsel for the union, threatened that the players would abandon the collective bargaining process and start an antitrust lawsuit against our teams if they did not get a bargaining resolution that was acceptable to them,” Stern said.

In an interview with ESPN, Stern said the NBA was entering a “nuclear winter.”

He also said the league’s latest offer was not an ultimatum but a revised proposal.

“When you negotiate for 21/2 years and finally get to where the parties are … that’s not an ultimatum. That’s a proposal that’s ready to be voted up or down,” Stern said. “They seem hell-bent on self-destruction, and it’s very sad.

“There will ultimately be a new collective bargaining agreement,” Stern said in his statement, “but the 2011-12 season is now in jeopardy.”

Without a union, the players are now free to sue the NBA under antitrust laws and challenge the legality of the lockout. Hunter said a lawsuit would be filed within two days.

Staff Writer Mike Monroe and the New York Times contributed to this report.

NBA players would be wise to learn historic lessons from vets like Grant Hill

It’s hard to imagine a player in the NBA who is more respected than Phoenix forward Grant Hill.

After battling back from a series of injuries earlier in his career, Hill is now the second-oldest player in the league at 39.

Hill learned much during the 1998 lockout, when the league shaved its schedule from 82 to 50 game in a similar lockout. The stoppage in play cost Hill much of the $6.6 million he was supposed to make that season.

Despite that financial duress, Hill told Yahoo.com about that lockout.

“It’s always worth it. I think you learn a lot,” Hill said. “I think it’s worth it. I think the game recovered. The game is in great shape now.”

Hill is concerned about what another impact an extended layoff  would have on him.

“It’s tough, especially for an older guy,” Hill said. “You got certain benchmarks you try to reach in the offseason to get ready for training camp. You could do too much or do too little just in terms of staying in shape, staying sharp.”

Hill isn’t taking an active role in these labor negotiations. But it would be very smart of the younger players to lean heavily on the wisdom of older players like Hill and Tim Duncan who lived through the earlier lockout.

“It’s not an easy thing. I’m confident with our leadership and our guys who are at the table,” Hill told Yahoo. “From what I hear there has been some really healthy conversations and dialogue. We just have to continue that.

“At least we have the luxury of having it before and learning from it as players and also as a Players Association. I think this time around guys are better prepared. It was kind of crazy last time. It might get crazy here now.”

Here is a list of the players who played in the NBA during the 2010-11 season who were around for the 1998 lockout.

  • Boston G Ray Allen
  • Philadelphia C Tony Battie
  • Miami G Mike Bibby
  • New York G Chauncey Billups
  • Milwauke G Earl Boykins
  • Los Angeles Lakers G Kobe Bryant
  • Phoenix G Vince Carter
  • Portland C Marcus Camby
  • Miami C Erick Dampier
  • Philadelphia G Antonio Daniels
  • San Antonio F-C  Tim Duncan
  • Los Angeles Lakers G Derek Fisher
  • Boston F Kevin Garnett
  • Denver F Al Harrington
  • Phoenix F Grant Hill 
  • Miami F Juwan Howard
  • Miami C Zydrunas  Ilgauskas
  • Cleveland F Antawn Jamison
  • Dallas G Jason Kidd
  • Washington F Rashard Lewis
  • Portland C Sean Marks
  • San Antonio F-C Antonio McDyess 
  • Detroit F-G Tracy McGrady
  • Houston C Brad Miller
  • Oklahoma City C Nazr Mohammed
  • Phoenix G Steve Nash
  • Dallas F Dirk Nowitzki
  • Boston F Jermaine O’Neal
  • Boston C Shaquille O’Neal
  • Cleveland G Anthony Parker
  • Boston F Paul Pierce
  • Los Angeles Lakers C-F Theo Ratliff
  • Milwaukee F Brian Skinner
  • Los Angeles Lakers F Joe Smith 
  • Miami G Jerry Stackhouse
  • Dallas F Peja Stojakovic
  • Chicago F Kurt Thomas
  • Detroit F Ben Wallace
  • Memphis G Jason Williams

These players were around for the nastiness of the last strike. The younger  players would be wise to seek their counsel.