Is expected two-week postponement actually a good sign?

The NBA is expected to postpone two more weeks of the season Tuesday, extending a lockout that already has cost the league the first two weeks of the season.

The New York Daily News reports that an announcement through Nov. 28.

As dire as that might sound, it’s not as bad as league officials had hinted. Commissioner David Stern had said that games through Christmas were in jeopardy when talks broke off last week.

The league still hasn’t written off those Christmas games which traditionally kick off the season for many casual fans.

The News reports that Stern has said it will take a month to put the new collective bargaining agreement in writing, conduct free agency for upwards of 150 players, and run a short training camp and an abbreviated preseason schedule.

So even in the most ideal circumstances it will take about four weeks from the settlement until we would see the first games of the season. 

It’s disappointing, but not unexpected, that two more weeks will be lost. But it’s not as a dire as postponing all of the games through the end of the year.

Takes from blog brothers: Spurs get mention in George Will column

I’m back after a week of vacation and it seems that we are no closer to a solution in the NBA lockout as we were when I left.

The cancellation of the first two weeks of games last week will likely be followed by the announcement of more missed games as soon as later this week. There appears to be little chance to see games on Christmas — the traditional start of the NBA season for many casual hoop fans — unless some remarkable work is done behind the scenes by David Stern and Billy Hunter in the next 48 hours.

The NBA’s lockout has become a topic for editiorial pages across the country as both sides appear to be entrenched in their positions.

George Will, the Washington Post’s fine editorial columnist, figures that the NBA lockout is such a strong topic that he even in the middle of his beloved baseball playoffs.

Will mentions that the Spurs are an anomaly in sports after winning four NBA titles during a nine-year period despite playing in a small market.

And he also describes what appears to be the central difference in the two sides.

“Labor-management disputes test the two sides’ animal spirits and pain thresholds,” Will writes. “The former favor the players, who — owners frequently forget this — have climbed to the narrow peak of their profession’s pyramid because they are ferocious competitors who loathe losing at anything.

“Owners, however, have higher pain thresholds because they have longer time horizons: They do not have short careers; they do have deep pockets.”

Here are some other Spurs-related tidbits from around the web from the last several days. Enjoy them.

  • Judy Battista and Pete Thamel of the New York Times mention the Spurs’ losing season when they pondered the Indianapolis Colts’ opportunity to perhaps grab Andrew Luck with Peyton Manning sidelined. 
  • The Houston Chronicle’s Jonathan Feigen notes that small-market franchises like the Spurs have been successful in the modern-day NBA — despite Stern’s claims that a new contract will .
  • The Bismarck Tribune’s Lou Babiarz notes that the Spurs are among six NBA franchises .
  • Kimberly Nordyke of the Hollywood Reporter.com reports that among NBA players during the lockout.
  • The New York Times’ Howard Beck notes that the to claim their 2007 NBA title.
  • The Charlotte Observer’s Rick Bonnell explains whyin a new economic era.
  • Dave Shireley of Deadspin.com , describing them as “well-coached, vaguely exotic, still pretty good, but too old to do any real damage.”  (Warning: The title of the story probably isn’t suitable for work, but it’s still an interesting analogy.)
  • The purist side of Phil Jackson never accepted what he termed as the in the lockout-shortened 1999 season, the Orange County Register’s Kevin Ding reports.  
  • Deadspin.com’s Owen Good enjoyed  playing the Spurs in the .  

NHL labor leader warns NBA players about missing season

Former Dallas Stars standout Bill Guerin lived through the NHL’s labor lockout of 2004-05. It cost him a year of his career.

That’s whyin a recent Fort Worth Star-Telegram interview.

“I learned a big lesson: It’s not a partnership,” Guerin said. “It’s their league, and you are going to play when they want,” he said.

The players have already lost two weeks of earnings and likely will lose more after the abrupt ending of negotiations.

Guerin urges the players to get their best deal as quickly as possible.

“It is not worth it to any of them to burn games or to burn an entire year. Burning a year was ridiculous,” Guerin said. “It wasn’t worth me giving up $9 million a year, or 82 games plus the playoffs, then having a crappy year and being bought out…. Guys in the NBA making $15 million or however much better think long and hard about this.”