Thunder tickets hot in OKC

Even the NBA lockout can’t kill excitement and anticipation in Oklahoma City, where the Thunder already are having a banner year at the box office without playing a game.

Oklahoma City fans have responded to the Thunder by , according to the Oklahoman.

Only the Los Angeles Lakers, Boston, Chicago and New York have sold all of their season tickets heading into the 2011-12 season.

The Thunder’s trip to the Western Conference Finals last season obviously has stoked hoop excitement in the Sooner State.

It says something about the strength of small-market franchises, although it never hurts to have entertaining star players like Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook to help market your product.

And it’s proving that Oklahoma fans have a deeper interest in sports than another Oklahoma football blowout or Mike Gundy’s latest rantings at Oklahoma State.

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.

NBA labor dispute wipes out start of preseason

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

On Friday morning, Spurs forward Matt Bonner was in Montreal, preparing to play in a charity basketball game and feeling even more out of sorts than usual, when he got the news.

As expected, the NBA formally announced the postponement of training camp and the cancellation of a week’s worth of preseason games for lack of a new collective bargaining agreement.

“At this point, we should all be back in San Antonio, getting ready for camp,” said Bonner, a vice president of the players’ union who has been closely involved in negotiations with the league owners. “To not be there, it’s just really weird, you know?”

Training camp, originally slated to open Oct. 4, has been pushed back indefinitely. In addition, the league scuttled all preseason games through Oct. 15 — 43 in all.

The cancellations, forecast for days if not weeks, became necessary when the latest bargaining session broke down Thursday without significant progress made.

Among the carnage were the Spurs’ first three preseason games — exhibitions slated for Oct. 9 against New Orleans, Oct. 11 at Sacramento and Oct. 15 at home against the Kings were all scrapped. For now, the earliest the Spurs might open the preseason is Oct. 17 against Cleveland, and even that seems in peril.

“We have regretfully reached the point on the calendar where we are not able to open training camps on time and need to cancel the first week of preseason games,” deputy commissioner Adam Silver said in a statement. “We will make further decisions as warranted.”

In 1998-99, when the NBA’s most recent lockout shortened the regular season to 50 games, the league cancelled the remainder of its preseason schedule on Oct. 6. It is assumed a similar timetable would be in effect this time around.

If a deal is not reached by mid-October, it is unlikely the regular season will be able to open as scheduled Nov. 1. Bonner was hopeful Friday’s cancellations might up the ante for both sides to broker a deal before it comes to that.

“Up until now, nothing had been canceled,” Bonner said. “Now it seems more real. Hopefully, the realness of the situation will create some added motivation to get it solved.”

Bound by a gag order issued by the league office, Spurs officials are barred from commenting on labor issues while the lockout remains in effect.

The sticking points between owners and the union are twofold: How to split the league’s revenue pie, and by what mechanism the players’ share should be delivered.

The players have offered to reduce their portion of basketball-related income from 57 percent under the last CBA to 54.3 percent or lower, with the condition that the soft salary-cap system remains in place.

Owners, most of whom the league says are losing money, want the players to take a smaller cut of the pie — in the “mid-40s,” according to Bonner — while instituting a much more restrictive hard salary cap.

“Their offer is way out in left field, and they’re sticking to it,” Bonner said.

With the clock still ticking and the calendar still creeping forward toward doomsday, players can only hope for a return to normalcy soon.

“The unknown is stressful,” Bonner said. “It’s especially frustrating for players, because we want to play. It’s what we do.”

SPURS’ PRESEASON SCHEDULE

At least three of the team’s seven games will not be played because of the lack of an NBA labor deal:

Canceled
Oct. 9: vs. Hornets
Oct. 11: @Kings
Oct. 15: vs. Kings

On for now
Oct. 17: vs. Cavs, 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 20: vs. Magic, 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 24: @Rockets, 7 p.m.
Oct. 27: @Thunder, 7 p.m.