Retirement isn’t end for Yao

By Jonathan Feigen
jonathan.feigen@chron.com

HOUSTON — With the door to the NBA that swung open nine years ago now closed on him, Yao Ming on Wednesday chose “a new life.”

Yao announced his retirement in a ceremony and news conference in Shanghai, citing the repeated injuries to his left foot and ankle.

“At the end of the last year, my left foot had a third fracture,” Yao said. “Today, I need to make a personal decision. I will stop my basketball career, and I will formally retire. Today, thinking back and thinking of the future, I have been very grateful. First of all, I need to be grateful to basketball. It has brought happiness to many people, including myself.

“Life is my guide. Just follow it, and it will open doors. Out of each door, there will be (a) beautiful world outside. Since I am retired, one door is closed. But a new life is waiting for me. I have left the basketball (court), but I will not leave basketball.”

He also will not leave Houston and sent a message to his “second hometown.”

“I’d like to thank you for giving me a great nine years in my career,” Yao said. “Nine years ago, I came to Houston as a young, tall, skinny player. An entire city and team changed me to a grown man, not only as a basketball player. I gained my first daughter over there. I feel I’m a Houstonian, and I will always be with you.”

While Yao moved on, the NBA could not quite let go.

NBA commissioner David Stern said he would soon offer Yao a place in the NBA, likely working with the league’s initiatives in China that have taken off since the Rockets made Yao the first pick of the 2002 NBA Draft.

“It’s sad,” Rockets owner Leslie Alexander said. “He had such great potential. He fulfilled it, really, but we would have been a great team with him. It’s sad for him because I know he wants to play very badly. It’s sad for the Rockets.”

The day after Yao was drafted, Alexander had said that Yao would become the greatest sports star in the world. That seemed to be hyperbole at the time, driven by the excitement of landing a 7-foot-6 tower of potential. But Alexander’s expectation turned out to be prophetic.

“At his peak, he was that,” Alexander said. “If he had been healthy, and we would have won championships, he would have been even bigger. But he had the most name recognition in the world. He was a sports icon.”

Stern also flashed back to Yao’s first giant steps to the NBA and the night it all started. He knew then that Yao’s impact would stretch far beyond the court, even if he could not have predicted then the growth of the game in China that Yao would inspire.

“I remember the exhilaration of calling his name as the first pick … and contemplating that he would be a bridge between Chinese fans and American fans,” Stern said. “That all happened with a wonderful mixture of talent, dedication, humanitarian aspirations and a sense of humor.

“What a wonderful combination.”

Alexander said he would like Yao to continue to work with the Rockets but was not sure that would be Yao’s preference.

“Yao’s got so much going for him worldwide, I don’t think he’s the kind of person who would work with one team,” Alexander said. “He’s bigger than that.”

Mike Monroe: NFL a tough act to follow

There is only one reason to believe the end of the NFL lockout will spur the two sides in the NBA’s labor dispute toward a settlement: Pressure to preserve the momentum gathered during a remarkable 2010-11 regular season capped off by a hugely popular playoff run.

It would have been easier to cancel NBA games in November if fans didn’t have NFL games as refuge for their disappointment.

Patriots owner Robert Kraft, a member of the NFL Management Council Executive Committee, apologized to fans on Monday for making them focus on the business of football rather than what happens on the field.

Kraft’s league won’t miss a single regular-season game, but his apology seemed sincere.

Imagine how Spurs owner Peter Holt, who chairs the NBA Board of Governors player relations committee, will feel if he has to tell fans that the business of basketball means they won’t see a full schedule or perhaps no games at all.

Aside from the added urgency that goes with being the lone league locked out, though, there is not much for the NBA’s owners or players to take from the NFL settlement as a template for progress.

Remember: NFL owners never claimed their business model was broken. Indeed, the league never had to turn over its books to the players because it never said it wasn’t turning a profit. The ink on the league’s bottom line was set in less type, but it wasn’t red.

The NBA turned over its financial records to the National Basketball Players Association, and while the union is suspicious, it hasn’t disputed some losses were incurred.

The players steadfastly have rejected the notion they should accept enormous salary givebacks to ensure annual profitability for the teams, which is what the owners have asked them to do.

The NFL’s players settled for a deal that cut their chare of league revenue by about 3 percent. Conversely, the NBPA has been asked to swallow a double-digit dip.

Revenue sharing, the players believe, must be a bigger part of the answer to the NBA’s problem. In this instance, there is something to be learned from the NFL. All the teams in the pro football league share equally in its enormous network TV deals. In the NBA, teams like the Lakers and Knicks benefit from local media packages that simply aren’t feasible in smaller markets. Some other form of revenue sharing is required.

The NBA says it has robust changes in its revenue sharing program running on a “parallel track” with its negotiations for a new collective bargaining agreement. The owners say that is an internal discussion, so we haven’t heard a peep about that yet.

Commissioner David Stern enjoys pointing out that you can’t revenue share your way out of a net loss.

So now football is back, and basketball has allowed an entire month to go by without a single negotiating session. The two sides won’t meet again until mid-August because of something about awaiting a ruling by the molasses-slow National Labor Relations Board.

Meanwhile, a lot of players are angling for jobs overseas. The Lakers’ Kobe Bryant has had his representatives talk with Besiktas, the Turkish team that already has signed Deron Williams of the Nets.

This is moderately tangible pressure on the NBA to get back to bargaining. Lakers owner Jerry Buss, for one, probably would prefer his star not put his shaky knees at risk playing with Besiktas.

Ultimately, the only real urgency in any labor stalemate is applied by hard economics. Just as the NFL’s talks didn’t get serious until training camps were threatened, the NBA’s talks will drag until truly meaningful dates start getting scratched — not the summer league or rookie transition program.

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Don’t save dates on Spurs’ schedule

Normally, the release of the NBA schedule is one of the most anticipated days of a long and sweltering offseason. This year, however, it feels like one big tease. The league proceeded with the announcement of the full 2011-12 schedule Tuesday, despite an ongoing labor dispute that could eventually erase most or all of it.

Staff writer Jeff McDonald circles some red-letter dates on the Spurs’ potential schedule — in pencil, of course:

The Opener
Nov. 2: Milwaukee Bucks at ATT Center
The last time the Bucks visited the ATT Center, Manu Ginobili stunned them with a buzzer-beater. Former Spurs guard Stephen Jackson is now playing with Milwaukee.

The Champs
Nov. 4: Dallas Mavericks at ATT Center
Mark Cuban’s boys, led by Dirk Nowitzki, visit San Antonio for the first time with “defending NBA champions” attached to their title.

The MVP
Dec. 17: Chicago Bulls at ATT Center
Reigning league MVP Derrick Rose and Co. come to town, repaying the Spurs’ visit to the Windy City on Nov. 30. Caution: If a lockout shortens the season, games against the Eastern Conference will be the first to go.

The Rematch
Dec. 26: Memphis Grizzlies at Memphis
The Spurs get their first crack at Zach Randolph and the Grizzlies, who knocked them out of the first round last season in a stunning No. 8-over-No. 1 upset.

The Superfriends
Jan. 17: Miami Heat at Miami
The Spurs’ lone stop in South Beach to face stars LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh and, uh, Joel Anthony. Miami comes to San Antonio on Feb. 1. Remember, a lockout could scuttle games against the East.

The Rodeo Trip
Feb. 6: Washington Wizards at Washington, D.C.
em year’s buckin’ bronco tour spans nine games covering 18 days, starting with this trip to D.C. The itinerary also includes Philadelphia, Toronto, Detroit, Memphis, Los Angeles (Clippers), Utah and Portland before concluding Feb. 23 in Denver.

The Homecoming
Feb. 29: New Jersey Nets at ATT Center
After returning from the rodeo trip, the Spurs settle in for a seven-game homestand beginning with this visit from the Nets and coach Avery Johnson. The Spurs finish the season with 16 of 22 games at home.

The Homecoming, Part 2
March 30: Indiana Pacers at ATT Center
Popular ex-Spurs guard George Hill, dealt to the Pacers on draft night in June, makes his first return to S.A.

The Mamba
April 11: Los Angeles Lakers at ATT Center
Kobe Bryant comes to town for only one night this season. The Spurs face the Lakers in two of the final four games, returning to Los Angeles on April 17.