Hunter tells players to prepare to miss half a season

So much for that optimism that the players and owners were getting closer to a settlement that would end the lockout.

After Tuesday’s meetings with owners, NBPA executive director Billy Hunter advised players to prepare to miss at least half the upcoming season.

NBPA president Derek Fisher was just as bleak in his assessment.

“We can’t come out of here thinking that training camps and preseason are going to start on time at this point,” Fisher after the meeting.

NBA commissioner David Stern said it was a day without much progress. The biggest obstacle continues to be the players’ resistance to a hard cap.

The next step for the owners will be their board of governors meeting Thursday in Dallas. Expect some kind of announcement at that time where training camp and preseason games will be postponed.

As expected, there seems to be a division of opinion between owners on the need for a hard cap. The challenge of getting all of them to sign off on a deal might be as hard for Stern to pull off as dealing with the players.

And after reports of Tuesday’s meeting, it doesn’t appear that will be very easy, either.

Owners, players schedule meeting with small groups

At least the NBA players and owners still are talking about trying to start the season on time.

After hopes were buoyed and then rudely dashed last week about a possible settlement last week, an impasse appears to be in place. Hardline owners like Phoenix’s Robert Sarver and Cleveland’s Dan Gilbert appear determined to fight for a hard salary cap at the expense of starting the season on schedule.

The NBPA has shown no interest in even considering that, leading to an abrupt breakdown that led most observers to expect training camps and the preseason would be postponed.

But there appears to be at least a glimmer of new hope. Chris Broussard of ESPN.com reports this morning that his sources tell him that small groups of players and owners will meet later this week.

An agreement will depend on both sides giving. The players want the owners to give up their hope of a hard cap — a way they can be protected from themselves in terms of unwise contracts. And owners will likely be adamant that players give up a couple of more percentage points of “basketball related income.”

The players had 57 percent of the basketball related income in the last contract. They have come down to 53 percent in current negotiations. In order to get the owners off their demand for a hard cap, it make take a couple of more points.

It still appears extremely doubtful that we’ll see the Spurs and New Orleans in the preseason opener Oct. 9 at the ATT Center.

The Nov. 2 season opener against Milwaukee might be a different story. But there has to be movement on both sides to get there, and last week’s deadlock at the negotiations wasn’t a good sign.

Italian job: It is Manu’s choice

This time, no one can question Manu Ginobili.

This time, he isn’t limping with an injury that risks his partnership with the Spurs.

This time, the NBA is the one not honoring the contract.

So if Ginobili decides to return to his old team in Italy to earn some money and enjoy la dolce vita?

Ciao and good luck.

Virtus Bologna called Ginobili earlier this month. And even if he’s only a rental until the lockout is over, the move makes sense.

The club has slumped in recent years. So why not bring back such a popular former player, as well as someone who added NBA credibility and global visibility after he left, and sell a few tickets?

And if Kobe Bryant joined Ginobili, well, Virtus Bologna would become the Miami Heat of the lockout world.

Ginobili said he would decide by October, and he was initially appreciative of the offer. But his family doubts he wants to play in Europe. He exhausted himself in the recent FIBA Americas tournament and, besides, Ginobili’s personality doesn’t lend itself to this.

He’s not in need of constant attention, and he’s never come across as someone who is either obsessed with money or has carelessly spent it. If there is meaningful currency in his life, it’s likely with his twin boys.

He doesn’t need the money, either. Ginobili has already earned over $66 million with the Spurs alone and is under contract for another $27 million over the next two seasons.

Still, an extended lockout will cut into that contract. Those who think a few million Euros are trivial, considering his career earnings, aren’t thinking as his financial advisers do; a few million Euros matter even to the wealthy.

There’s also something that a person in the Spurs’ organization thinks might be a factor: Ginobili “isn’t going to want to sit around for few months and do nothing.”

Ginobili’s peers are already reacting that way. Deron Williams is over there now and, after last week’s official cancelation of some preseason games, others are looking to follow.

“If (the lockout) goes past the middle of October or November,” Kevin Durant told Yahoo! Sports, “I think I will have to make a decision.”

Durant has options in Turkey, Spain and Russia. For a young man who has mostly had to adjust to the differences between Austin and Oklahoma City, that would be an adventure to mysterious ports.

For Ginobili, already fluent in Italian, the trip would be an enjoyable trip back in time. In Bologna, he was the Final Four MVP of Euroleague in 2000-01.

He also might fondly remember the one-game-a-week European schedule. In the perfect world, wouldn’t he have always been able to play this way?

The Spurs don’t like thinking about the repercussions. Playing in Argentina this summer was one thing, this is another. As always with Ginobili, the more drives to the basket, the more risk.

Remember, Ginobili broke a bone in his right elbow in a seemingly harmless play in the final regular-season game last season. That moment was as responsible as any for the first-round loss to Memphis that followed.

Another continent of games would bring another series of possibilities, and Ginobili wouldn’t see these as playful exhibitions. He’s not built that way, either.

If the Spurs would like to talk to him about all of this, they can’t. Under lockout guidelines, communication isn’t allowed.

And even if they could talk, what could they say?

This time, unlike 2008 when they wanted Ginobili and his sore foot to skip Beijing, the Spurs don’t have an argument. Their league is the one not allowing Ginobili to hone his craft, and their league is the one nullifying his contract.

What could they say?

Ciao and good luck.

bharvey@express-news.net