Lockout cutting it close

NEW YORK — David Stern insisted Saturday the media takes him more seriously than he takes himself, but this was just one of the semantic tricks he uses to avoid easy answers to hard questions.

The NBA commissioner wanted to avoid specifics when asked if progress in lengthy collective bargaining talks had been significant enough to know if the regular season might begin on time.

“If we didn’t think there was any hope,” he said, “we wouldn’t be scheduling the meetings, but that is the best I would say right now.”

You have to be close enough to see the pained look on Stern’s face to know the real answer isn’t between the lines, but right there in his eyes.

Here’s the truth from a weekend of talks Stern said would carry enormous consequences: There is a better chance the entire 2011-12 season will be canceled than there is that anyone will see a regular season game on Nov. 1.

The league seems to be edging closer to the most inept moment in its history, which is what canceling the entire season would represent.

If the owners who are OK with losing the season — Phoenix’s Robert Sarver, Cleveland’s Dan Gilbert and Boston’s Wyc Grousbeck among them — believe fans deprived of games they love will forgive a lost year, you have to wonder how they ever managed to make enough money to buy their teams.

In a rocky economy, alienating customers by withholding a product they love would be lunacy.

Eventually, fans would return in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago and probably in San Antonio. In other markets, generally smaller and middle ones — places such as Sacramento, Indiana, Charlotte, New Orleans, Utah, Detroit, Milwaukee and Memphis — it would be years before there would be forgiveness in the form of robust attendance.

The real issue for small- and middle-market owners is competitiveness. They don’t believe they can compete for a championship with the Jerry Busses unless the salary cap system allows them a chance to keep their stars. There are ways to accomplish this while retaining a soft enough cap to satisfy the union.

The players’ No. 1 concern is guaranteed contracts. A true hard cap would put 75 to 80 percent of players on yearly deals, which is why union executive director Billy Hunter calls a hard cap a “blood issue.”

Meanwhile, Sarver, who once spent the bulk of a Spurs-Suns game imitating a chicken from his courtside seat to mock Gregg Popovich’s decision to sit a sore-legged Manu Ginobili, has emerged as the hardest of the hard-liners on the labor relations committee. The players over the weekend reportedly were dumbfounded when he described how his wife had begged him to bring home the mid-level salary cap exception in a designer bag.

It’s going to take an owner with a boatload of courage to stand up to shut-it-down hawks such as Sarver and remind what is at stake, which is the very popularity of the league.

Spurs owner Peter Holt, who chairs the owners’ labor relations committee, is no chicken. Awarded a Silver Star for valor in the Vietnam War, it may be time for Holt to take control of the committee and demand its members recognize the tens of millions in givebacks the players already have put on the table.

After all, Holt’s team has remained competitive in a small market because it has been one of the league’s smartest in managing the soft cap.

Also, the fact the Spurs paid no luxury tax but still lost several million dollars in a 2010-11 season in which they won 61 games gives Holt a platform to demonstrate to the players that the plea for some form of systemic change is no semantic trick from Stern.

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Jay-Z says his team will be called Brooklyn Nets

Rapper Jay-Z hasn’t forgotten where he grew up.

It’s why the hip-hop mogul has convinced the other New Jersey Nets owners to rechristen the team as the “Brooklyn Nets” when they move to the new Barclays Center in 2012.

It will bring back memories of “Dem Bums” of the Brooklyn Dodgers, the last big-league franchise to represent the city. That team fled for Los Angeles after the 1957 season.

“We’ve decided that the final name would be the Brooklyn Nets,” . ”I’m giddy right now.”

Spurs’ Parker expects an NBA season

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

Fresh off a star turn for France at last month’s EuroBasket tournament, Spurs point guard Tony Parker spent Saturday afternoon in a rented gym in Alamo Heights, conducting what he hopes will be the first of many eponymous basketball clinics to come.

Some 1,800 miles away at roughly the same time, inside a luxury hotel in midtown Manhattan, NBA owners and players were locked in a collective bargaining meeting that will in large part determine Parker’s next move.

Training camp in South Texas? Or the south of France?

Should the news coming out of New York be bad, and the lockout prolonged, Parker says he’s prepared to open the season playing for ASVEL, the French professional team he co-owns.

“If the sense is we’re going to start in two weeks, I’m not going to go over there,” Parker said. “If they tell me we’re not going to start until January then, yeah, I might go play.”

Parker plans to make a decision next week after the NBA labor situation becomes clearer. Spurs teammate Manu Ginobili, who is weighing an offer in Italy, is believed to be on a similar timetable.

Had the NBA labor dispute not postponed the start of camps indefinitely, the Spurs would have held media day this afternoon, with practices set to begin Monday.

Like other players, the 29-year-old Parker has his eyes on the Big Apple for what has been cast as a make-or-break weekend of bargaining sessions. Ignoring the gloom and doom that has hallmarked negotiations so far, Parker said he expects to be on an NBA court at some point in 2011-12.

“Everybody’s hopeful,” Parker said. “I think we’ll have a season.”

Asked if he thought the impasse would be solved in time to stage a full 82-game season, which would likely mean having the framework of a deal in place by the middle of next week, Parker sounded less sure.

“I hope so,” Parker said. “I don’t think we’ll cancel the season.”

It was a long and strange summer for the Spurs’ three-time All-Star in a lot of ways, and not all of them bad.

Last month, he led the French national team to a runner-up finish at Eurobasket in Lithuania, securing a berth in the 2012 London Olympics for Les Bleus — the country’s first since 2000.

It was a heady moment not lost on Parker, whose basketball résumé includes three NBA championships, one Finals MVP, three All-Star appearances and an All-NBA Third Team selection but, until now, no Olympic berth.

“I’ve been chasing that for like 10 years,” Parker said. “It was my last thing.”

His success in Lithuania has Parker itching to get back on the court with the Spurs, especially with the sour taste of the team’s first-round playoff ouster to Memphis still lingering.

How soon that can happen remains up to David Stern and Billy Hunter.

If doomsday occurs, and the entire season is scuttled, it would be quite a blow to a Spurs team that still relies heavily on aging stars Tim Duncan (35) and Ginobili (34).

Duncan is entering the final season of his contract, and there has been speculation a fully erased 2011-12 campaign might also mean the end of the 13-time All-Star’s career.

Parker, who says he’s talked to Duncan recently and plans to work out with him Monday, isn’t buying that.

“I see myself playing at least two or three more seasons with Timmy,” Parker said.

Whether Parker opens his next season here or abroad remains to be seen.

Should Parker opt to play in France, it might actually cost him money. As ASVEL’s co-owner, he would have to pay to insure his own NBA contract.

“I would do it,” Parker said. “I think it will be good for French basketball, especially after what we did this summer. Everybody’s so excited about basketball right now.”