TP vows to finish season in France if NBA season canceled

Spurs guard Tony Parker is sounding more like a businessman the longer he stays with ASVEL Villeurbonne.

Parker told Basketactu.com that he will  for the rest of the season if the NBA is canceled because of the lockout.

And he also plans to make a bid for French forward Boris Diaw if the lockout continues. Diaw hasn’t chosen to go overseas, but has hinted he might join Parker if the season is wiped out.

Parker has been successful since beginning with his team. His team is playing in the 2011 Eurocup as he’s won MVP of the month and week since joining the team. 

As the lockout continues, Parker is becoming more engrossed with his French team.

He will return to the Spurs as soon as the lockout ends, but it sounds like he’s busy with his own team.

Stern confident the season will not be missed

NBA commissioner David Stern was making the media tour today as he continued to express confidence that a deal is close that could save the NBA season.

On the day before Stern’s deadline to players on a 50-50 split on basketball-related income, the commissioner made several public comments about his confidence that a deal would be made.

Stern adamantly expressed his confidence to Stephen A. Smith of ESPN New York that a deal eventually will be made. (Hat tip: Sports Radio Interviews.com)

When Smith asked him if the league has prepared for the eventuality of a missed season, Stern expressed forcefully .

“Stern: I refuse to contemplate it or discuss because we are going to make a deal.

“Smith: So you’re confident?

“Stern: Unlike any other deal, if I don’t bid enough for your house you don’t have to sell it to me. Or if you ask too much I don’t have to buy it. Our players, there’s going to be a deal. The only question is how much damage is done to the game and our fans and the people who work in our industry before we make that deal.”

Stern also refuted charges by some players that their group is making all of the concessions in the negotiations with owners.

“I would argue that if I were them also,” Stern said. “But another view on this is by working together with us over the last number of years, 30 years or so, we’ve taken the average player salary from $250,000 to well over $5 million. If we make the changes that are in the owners current proposal we will take a small step back from the $5.5 million average salary to something above five and we will grow it over the life of the proposal to well over $7 million. This at a time when there’s 9 percent unemployment, when all of the risk on this business is on the owners and the five or six thousand other people who help make it.

“We think it’s a very fair accommodation. We’re giving them the benefit really of keeping them pretty close to where they are under a system that is no longer sustainable. If you ask the people at the Ford plants, the GM plants, the other plants that no longer exist and you look at public workers and the cutbacks that are going on, we think that our players deserve to be kept as close as we possibly can to what they’ve earned under the old deal and keep them growing after we take that reset. We think it’s eminently fair and reasonable and we think that when you look around and look at the deals that are being made out there in the public sector, the private sector with give back after give back, being a member of the highest paid union in the world whose wages and compensation continue to rise is not a bad deal.”

How about it Spurs Nation? Do you share the same optimism that Stern has about settling a deal soon?

But more importantly, at this point do you really care?

Buck Harvey: In private, would Spurs take the deal?

NBA players aren’t being greedy. They haven’t been given a chance to be.

Their leadership made the decision for them Monday. Their player representatives said they “unanimously” agreed to begin anti-trust action rather than put the owners’ proposal up for a full vote.

That’s the nature of unions; the reps don’t forward to their members what they don’t like. But this isn’t another union, and this isn’t just another wage scale they are debating.

That’s one reason all of the players should have been able to vote.

There are a few million more.

As it is, the NBA took a step Monday toward what David Stern called “nuclear winter.” Billy Hunter responded with something that hasn’t happened often. He agreed.

Hunter said there is a “high probability” there will be a lost season.

All of it still falls under negotiations, no matter how many lawyers are now collecting fees. That’s why it is too early to say there won’t be a season; at this point in 1998, the agreement was still six weeks away.

Still, everything is at risk, including the players’ reputations. To the majority of fans, they are greedy or worse, undeserving in today’s job market.

The average salary of an NBA player, $5.1 million, equals the combined average salaries of the NFL and Major League Baseball. And they can’t come to a deal?

The details say something else. The players are the ones who have compromised, yet as recently as last Friday, were blindsided by further owners’ demands.

Stern’s arrogance also has done little to reach compromise. He’s already won, yet keeps running up the score.

Little wonder the union stood in defiance Monday. “The players feel that they’re not prepared to accept the ultimatums,” Hunter said.

But only about 30 players felt that. These are the reps, some of whom got the job because no one else wanted it. They try to do the best they can, but a few things are working against them. One is a confusing business world that is out of their comfort zone.

Another is a dynamic that has a locker-room feel to it. They’ve built their careers trying to be tough-minded teammates. So, given the group mentality, who wants to be the one arguing for surrender?

Individually, however, they are like their teammates in their respective cities. They have their own careers to worry about. Their shelf lives as NBA players are short, and, for every insulting clause Stern throws at them, the pay is still good.

So imagine what was going through Matt Bonner’s head as he stood at a press conference Monday as the Spurs’ rep. He’s 31 years old, with a contract that will pay him through 2014 — yet he would prefer to sacrifice something tangible for something that is not?

If Tim Duncan had a vote, he would likely be divided. He would want to be loyal to the cause. But he would also be voting against the largest one-year salary of his career, as well as perhaps his last season.

Tony Parker would have little reason to vote no; he’s under contract until 2015. Manu Ginobili is facing the last two years of his career at a combined $27 million. He wouldn’t want to play?

Richard Jefferson not only is under contract until 2014, he would also be an amnesty candidate. If the Spurs cut him, he would get his money, as well as a chance to sign with another team.

The younger players could have a different agenda. But they also might need the money more, too. DeJuan Blair, back after a brief adventure in Russia, could use some dollars to make up for lost rubles.

Not all NBA rosters are like the Spurs, but there is a similar thread that runs through all of them. They are angry, and they are not sure if that should matter to them personally.

So given a private ballot on Monday, weighing their own lives against a tactic that might backfire, what would they have done?

Here’s a guess.

The Spurs would be preparing for training camp right now.

bharvey@express-news.net