NEW YORK — Here is an update from the lobby of the hotel where the players are meeting: Kobe Bryant and Carmelo Anthony and Tyson Chandler are among the players meeting in a conference room, sitting nearby in the media workroom is Brian Mahoney of the AP, who is reporting some more of what commissioner David Stern told him Saturday night. Incredibly, because of its timing — right smack dab in the middle of the players’ meeting, we are getting word of Stern’s
Lockout update: Decision day for players, or not
NEW YORK — Billy Hunter is getting a break today from the cabal of agents who want to kick him out of his job. They are sitting on a decertification petition with more than 200 signatures, and a source in that cabal told SheridanHoops.com that it is highly unlikely the petition will be filed with the NLRB until Hunter meets with 30 team player representatives at a Times Square hotel. So Hunter has bought some time. What remains to be seen is whether
Owners’ proposal is viewable online
USA Today has obtained it and published it. Click here to read it.
Explaining the NBA lockout to the rest of the world, via the BBC
The lockout is illogical. Everyone here in America pretty much understands that, although folks who follow the NBA labor situation closely can comprehend how we’ve gotten to this particular juncture. Outside of the United States, the NBA lockout is incomprehensible to the vast majority of the world. Hopefully, through the global reach of the BBC, folks are now a little better informed. Thanks to colleague Chris Mitchell for arranging this interview I did with the BBC World Service. Click to listen.
Lockout update: Misinformation rules
NEW YORK — Players reps from all 30 NBA teams are arriving in town today, and tomorrow they’ll get debriefed on what is and what isn’t in the owners’ latest proposal. Up until now, they’ve been getting fed plenty of bad information in the two days since the owners and players went their separate ways at the conclusion of Thursday night’s bargaining session. Case in point: ESPN.com drew 5,000-plus comments on a story about how players could be sent down to the D-League
Lockout update: Player reps to meet Monday
NEW YORK — Player representatives from each of the 30 NBA teams will meet Monday in New York, and it is a guessing game as to what happens from there. Reject that deal that is on the table and demand further talks? Approve a vote of the entire player population but refuse to endorse the owners’ latest offer? Endorse the growing decertification movement? We will find out soon enough. In the meantime, some details have emerged of what is contained in the latest proposal. The
NBA Lockout: What’s next
csprtContainer(); NEW YORK — The season will start Dec. 15, there will be 72 games, and the start of the NBA finals will be pushed back into mid-June instead of early June. That is assuming the players ratify the proposal David Stern made to the union late last night. Here are the next several steps: 1. The union’s player reps, with one player representing each team, will have the proposal detailed for them at a meeting in New York on Monday or Tuesday (depending
Lockout talks end; Clock to remain stopped
csprtContainer(); NEW YORK — The clock remains stopped, and it will stay that way until the early part of next week — and perhaps even longer. Eventually, we will learn whether there will be a 72-game season beginning Dec. 15, or a nuclear winter for the NBA. “”We have made our revised proposal, and we’re not planning to make another one. There’s nothing left to negotiate about,” commissioner David Stern said after the sides met for another 10 1/2 hours Thursday. Stern would not characterize
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