Talks turn cold, more games canceled

After all the excitement that came out of Thursday’s bargaining sessions, some pundits were excited that an 82-game NBA schedule potentially could be saved.

Unfortunately, Friday’s breakdown in the talks has killed those ideas along with adding another round of cancellations.

All of the November games have now been cancelled as we’ve passed the 120-day mark of the lockout.

The tripping point in Friday’s talks was how the percentage of basketball-related income would be divvied up. Owners aren’t budging on a 50 percent split. Players, who had a 57 percent split in the last contract, aren’t willing to dip below 52.5 percent.

That leaves a $100 million gap that apparently can’t be bridged – at least at this time.

After making some movement in other issues, David Stern and Billy Hunter attacked the biggest obstacle Friday. Neither side is willing to budge.

There is no day set for a resumption of talks.

Prepare for more games than the ones in November to be missed.

All’s quiet on Spurs’ opener that wasn’t

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

At precisely the moment the Spurs’ season was supposed to take life Wednesday night, the ATT Center stood dark and dead, its empty parking lot and bolted doors providing the most literal symbol yet of the NBA’s ongoing labor standoff.?

Three miles away at Tony’s Bar, the lights were on, and the night was young.

Eight patrons populated the snug, white stucco building a brisk walk from Alamo Plaza, sipping cheap Bud Light and $3 red wine. A Tejano number blared from the jukebox while a mirror ball sparkled and spun over a tumbleweed-vacant dance floor.

Above the bar, a television was showing a situation comedy on mute. Nobody was watching.

“Just a normal, unbusy day,” said Tony Lopez, the bar’s owner.

Wednesday was supposed to be anything but.

Had it not been for the NBA lockout, which has already devoured all of November’s schedule and has December in its callous crosshairs, the Spurs would have opened the season at 7:30 p.m. against Milwaukee at the ATT Center.

And then, Lopez says, you really would have seen his place jumping.

“I would have had people calling all afternoon, trying to reserve the tables close to the TVs,” said Lopez, who opened his bar in November 1999, months after the league’s last work stoppage was resolved. “That’s just not the case.”

Wednesday night — Opening Night that Wasn’t — found fans across town adjusting to a new normal, all the while rooting for the timely return of the old one.

A lifelong San Antonian, Lopez lives and dies with his Spurs. He wears his fandom on the walls of his establishment, which is speckled with Spurs memorabilia, some of it vintage.

A newer sign, handmade out of yellow poster board and Magic Marker and posted on the bar’s front entrance, belies its owner’s underlying bitterness about the NBA’s endless labor tug-o-war.

“Boycott All NBA Products,” it reads, in Lopez’s own scrawl.

“I think we need to ‘Occupy the ATT Center,’” Lopez joked, referencing the economic protests that have become en vogue across the country. “It’s really sad.”

At Fatso’s Sports Garden on Bandera Road, the city’s oldest existing sports bar, owner Steve Wilkinson has an equally dim view of the NBA’s labor struggles.

“I’m just hoping those greedy S.O.B.’s can come to an agreement,” he said.

Wilkinson expects interest in the NFL, college football and college basketball to help his business weather the absence of pro hoops through November.

If the lockout stretches much further than that, however, Wilkinson predicts he will begin to feel the pinch.

“After December and January, the Spurs games pay our bills,” said Wilkinson, who opened Fatso’s in 1986. “That’s where our survival is.”

Similarly, Mike Griffith, a spokesman for Buffalo Wild Wings, said that chain — which boasts seven area locations — is not expecting an NBA-related loss of revenue until football season ends.

“After the Super Bowl, I think that’s when we’ll see the biggest impact,” Griffith said.

One night into the Spurs’ postponed regular season, the difference was already noticeable at Fatso’s.

Wilkinson said no Spurs game Wednesday night meant one or two fewer waitresses, one or two fewer cooks, one fewer bartender.

“That’s four or five employees who are not going to make money because the Spurs aren’t playing,” Wilkinson said. “It’s like a snowball. It affects a lot of people.”

Over at Tony’s, where Lopez can usually be found manning the bar himself, Wednesday night was a little too typical. A little too “unbusy.”

It’s not just Spurs fans who fill Lopez’s registers on game nights. Among his in-season regulars are ushers, concessionaires and parking attendants who wander over from the ATT Center after the final horn.

“There’s no money for them,” Lopez said. “So there’s no money for me.”

For now, all Lopez can do is wait for millionaire players and billionaire owners to come to an accord on how to split their wealth, so he can maybe sell a few more $2 longnecks.

“Let’s see what kind of agreement they come to,” Lopez said. “Maybe then I can make up a lot of lost business.”

Until then, the lights remain on at Tony’s. The mirror ball spins. The jukebox sings.

The TV is on, with nobody watching.

Could 82-game NBA season be salvaged?

Reports from the marathon NBA bargaining session that stretched well into Thursday morning sound as substantive as we’ve heard during the nearly four months of negotiating between the two sides.

The best news that came from both the players and owners after the 15-hour session ended was that an 82-game season still could  be salvagable if a settlement could  be reached by Sunday or Monday.

“We initially wanted to miss none,” NBA commissioner David Stern“It’s sad that we’ve missed two weeks. We’re trying to apply a tourniquet and go forward. That’s always been our goal.”

Both Stern and Billy Hunter sounded upbeat when they emerged to give their spin to the media.

Maybe it’s the late hour. But how come this seems to be a completely different attitude emerging than after cataclysmic gloom and doom that marked the end of last week’s abrupt conclusion? 

Despite the happy spin both sides have, huge work needs to be made when they meet again beginnning at 2 p.m. Thursday.

One source told CBS Sports.com that “small moves” have been made. But the same gap exists with the split of the basketball-related income remains and appears to still be the same impediment to a deal as before.

It will be up to Hunter and Stern to bridge that gap.

They’ve been here before and haven’t been able to settle the deal.

Will they be any more successful on Thursday?

Basketball fans can only hope.