Hill says he’s hurt leaving the Spurs

After being traded from his first professional team after three seasons, George Hill admitted Friday he had some bruised feelings.

“It hurts when you feel like you have a lot of family (with the Spurs), but at the same time, I know the Spurs love me as a person,” Hill said Friday at a brief press conference at Incarnate Word University. “They are a great organization and it’s just a better business decision for them and myself.”

Hill was traded Thursday night to his hometown team, the Indiana Pacers. Spurs general manager R.C. Buford termed it one of the most difficult moves he’s had to make during his tenure with the team.

That move was abrupt and one that Hill didn’t realize would be coming until he got a call early Thursday evening from Spurs coach Gregg Popovich.

“When you make something your home for three years and you have a relationship with other players, it’s kind of like breaking a marital relationship,” Hill said. “But at the same time you know it’s a part of the business. I think it’s a great opportunity for me and for the Spurs organization. You have to look at it from that standpoint and just move on and keep trying to do what you’re doing now.”

Are all of those NBA teams really losing all that money?

One of the key tenets in David Stern’s woeful economic plight for NBA owners is the oft-repeated nugget that 22 of the 30 teams in the NBA are losing money with total losses totaling about $370 million per year.

Obviously, if 73.3 percent of  the league’s franchises are losing money the league’s economic model really is broken.

But several revisionist blog posts have disputeds how widespread those losses really are.

ESPN.com’s Larry Coon provides an interesting primer on those operating losses that should be required reading for any NBA fan as the lockout begins.

NBA Players Association president Billy Hunter told ESPN.com

The players association contends that a significant portion of the NBA’s team losses are merely an accounting artifact, and doesn’t reflect an actual operating loss. ”There might not be any losses at all. It depends on what accounting procedure is used,” Hunter said. “If you decide you don’t count interest and depreciation, you already lop off 250 [million] of the 370 million dollars.”

Proving that point, Tommy Craggs of Deadspin analyzed the New Jersey Nets’ financial figures from 2003-06. Obviously, these aren’t the most up-to-date financial figures available, but they are representative of an NBA franchise.

Here’s what Craggs had to say about , which include a $27.6 million loss in 2004.

“That’s not a real loss. That’s house money. The Nets didn’t have to write any checks for $25 million. What that $25 million represents is the amount by which Nets owners reduced their tax obligation under something called a roster depreciation allowance, or RDA.

“Bear with me now. The RDA dates back to 1959, and was maybe Bill Veeck’s biggest hustle in a long lifetime of hustles. Veeck argued to the IRS that professional athletes, once they’ve been paid for, “waste away” like livestock. Therefore a sports team’s roster, like a farmer’s cattle or an office copy machine or a new Volvo, is a depreciable asset….

“If we’re trying to arrive at some idea of how much money the Nets really made in 2004, we’ll need to do a little crude math. Knock out the $25.1 million RDA — a paper loss, remember — and add the $9.1 million in tax savings. Suddenly, that $27.6 million loss becomes a $6.6 million profit.”

There are obviously some franchises that are struggling to meet payrolls. But these stories are indicative that the NBA’s financial plight not me as dire as the league wants us to believe heading into the lockout.

Perhaps the most telling comment comes from Rodney Fort, a sports economist employed at the University of Michigan.

“The bottom line about the bottom line,” Fort tells Deadspin, “is that even if it looks like they’re losing money, it doesn’t mean they’re losing money.”

We’re already missing Phil Jackson from the NBA

The most successful coach in NBA history retired earlier this summer, taking a creative and needling personality with him.

Phil Jackson could raise the hackles of Spurs Nation better than any opposing coach. Like the time he said the Spurs’ 1998-99 championship deserved an asterisk because it was played with only 50 regular-season games. Or when he called Gregg Popovich and his coaching staff “The Simulator Crew” because of their lack of NBA playing experience.

But it’s true that the NBA will be a little less interesting without Jackson around next season.

His old friend and one-time assistant on his Albany Patroons staff, Charley Rosen, had an about Jackson and his unique coaching style.

Jackson had a way of directing his team that was decidedly his own. Like using smoldering leaves of white sage to cleanse his locker room of negative energy. Or beating a tom-tom to attract positive energy. Or his meditation exercises that were meant to identify his team’s personal “safe” spots on a bench.

We won’t see any of this from Popovich, Doc Rivers, Rick Carlisle or Erik Spoelstra.

And the NBA will be less interesting because of it.

But in case any of Spurs Nation is wondering if Jackson has become a reclusive hermit at his Montana compound, fear not.

His girlfriend, Jeanie Buss, had a tweet over the Fourth of July that informed us all that Jackson is enjoying his retirement — at least so far. (Hat tip to Sports by Brooks.com)

“Wishing all a happy reflective 4th of July,” . “Phil sent this (picture) from MT. You can take the man out of Woodstock but…”

Actually, Jackson looked like he might be getting ready for the motorcycle rallies at Sturgis, S.D., next month .

And he was only missing the giant red, white and blue hat and the extended index finger to be mistaken for Uncle Sam.