Cuban says Miami return isn’t sentimental

Category : Miami Heat


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Cuban says Miami return isn’t sentimental

MIAMI – For Dallas owner Mark Cuban, being back in Miami brought out little sentimental value.

Cuban made his first trip back to the arena where his team won last season’s NBA championship, as the Mavericks were facing the Miami Heat on Thursday night.

The Mavericks beat the Heat in six games in the NBA finals and clinched on Miami’s floor, turning the tables after a six-game loss to Miami in the 2006 title series that was capped with the Heat spraying champagne in Dallas.

His ring was at home, too, where it typically stays. Cuban said he wore it once at home with his kids, and that’s about it.

“Do I look like a jewelry guy to you?” Cuban asked before the game. “Trust me, I don’t have to tell anybody we won.”

It’s been a somewhat up-and-down season for the Mavericks, who entered Thursday fifth in the Western Conference standings. The Mavs have already had four losing streaks of at least three games, one more than they had last season.

Nonetheless, it’s no surprise that Cuban is enjoying this season – and defending the crown.

“Yeah, no question. Because you got one. There’s a lot of guys who came close and never got one,” Cuban said.

“It’s certainly more fun. Again, it’s a funky season, so we haven’t had a lot of time to enjoy it. The games come so quickly that it’s an aberrational season. You just deal with it.”

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BY TIM REYNOLDS

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Heat owner Arison cast ‘protest vote’ against CBA

Category : Miami Heat


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Heat owner Arison cast ‘protest vote’ against CBA

MIAMI (AP) – Miami Heat owner Micky Arison revealed Thursday that he voted against ratifying the NBA’s new collective bargaining agreement, saying that ballot was cast as a protest of how revenue sharing is expected to work in the deal.

Arison is the second owner to publicly disclose that he voted against the CBA, joining Dallas’ Mark Cuban.

The NBA’s Board of Governors approved passage 25-5, and Arison’s “no” vote came after it was already assured that the deal would go through and the league would be back in business. In an interview with six Heat beat writers, Arison would say that he would vote the same way if the outcome was hanging in the balance.

“While I did everything I could behind the scenes, and some not so behind the scenes, to get playing by Christmas, when you come down to it, financially … it’s a tough financial deal for us,” Arison said. “Particularly the revenue-sharing piece of it, the way it’s structured. For us to have to pay revenue sharing to larger-market teams was disturbing. And we will. So that was a kind of protest vote.”

Arison’s announcement came tinged with one major caveat: He wanted a deal, and fought for a long time to get one. Miami, which lost last season’s NBA finals to Dallas, enters this season as the prohibitive favorite to win the 2012 championship. NBA rules prohibited Arison from having virtually any contact with players during the lockout, but he said he felt they understood he wanted a deal.

Turns out, just not this particular deal. Or, more specifically, not the revenue-sharing aspect of this particular deal, even while acknowledging that it was help level the playing field in the NBA.

“I did everything I could, from both the owners’ side and the players’ side to get a deal done as quick as possible and to miss as few games as possible,” Arison said. “So you’ve got to connect that with the `no’ vote.”

The Heat made money last season for the first time in at least a decade, riding the boost that came from the first year of having LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh on the same team. But the new deal will eventually have a punitive salary cap and revenue sharing designed to help the so-called “small market” teams.

In short, revenue sharing figures to hit Miami hard, even though Arison said he believes his “big market” club actually has a smaller market than Minnesota.

“While the original intent of the owners was to have a hard cap, which would have basically leveled the playing field, instead because of players’ refusal to accept that they just made it extremely expensive,” Arison said. “So now you have to financially deal with how expensive that is.”

For nearly two years of negotiating, owners wanted things like a hard salary cap, the elimination of guaranteed contracts, rollbacks of current salaries and a massive reduction in the players’ share of basketball-related income. After locking out players on July 1, it took nearly five more months to reach an agreement.

And there was a sense that some clubs wanted a deal that would essentially break up the Heat, or at least the pairing of James, Wade and Bosh. Arison said the Heat never thought that would be necessary.

“Obviously, I wanted to see a negotiation that led to something that we could have kept the team together,” Arison said. “And it did. The fact is they made it expensive, but we can keep them together.

In a revealing 33-minute session with reporters, Arison said his relationship with owners around the league has included “some resentment” since Bosh and James decided in July 2010 to play with Miami. His cell phone rang once during the interview – “That was LeBron,” Arison said, laughing, after ending the call – and he also insisted that voting against the deal will not inhibit Miami’s ability to do business around the league.

He also said that it was easier for him to get over the Heat losing the finals than it was to deal with losing a series of playoff heartbreakers to the New York Knicks.

However, what’s most important to him when it comes to the NBA right now, he said, is that the league is playing again. Miami opens in Dallas on Sunday, plays its home opener against Boston on Tuesday, and then Arison, who also is the chairman and CEO of Carnival Corp. will leave for – what else? – a cruise vacation.

“As a league, financially we’re better off,” Arison added. “Not as a team, but as a league. And players, financially, will be well off as well and will be the highest-paid athletes going forward like they have been in the recent past. So I think while it was a loss-loss for everybody to lose the beginning of the season and have the problems we had, it was a win-win to get going by Christmas Day.”

By TIM REYNOLDS, AP Sports Writer

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NBA Commissioner Stern hears boos at Dallas opener

Category : NBA Lockout 2011


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NBA Commissioner Stern hears boos at Dallas opener

DALLAS (AP) – NBA Commissioner David Stern opened his lockout-delayed season by hearing boos from Mavericks fans.

Stern was in Dallas for the NBA finals rematch between the Mavericks and Heat, and he was on the court for the start of the Mavs’ banner-raising ceremony honoring their first championship. The jeers came as soon as he started speaking, but he quickly turned them into cheers by offering his congratulations to team owner Mark Cuban.

Cuban’s often contentious relationship with Stern could’ve been as much of a reason for the boos as the lockout, which pushed the opener from Nov. 1 to Christmas and cut the season by 16 games.

Cuban and Miami’s Micky Arison were among five owners who voted against the labor deal. Stern said “it doesn’t send any signal whatsoever” that the two owners in the most recent finals were against the agreement.

Stern said Arison only objected to the revenue sharing. He also pointed out that Cuban was part of the labor relations committee and the planning committee.

“(Cuban) might not have been enamored with the final outcome because it takes away the advantage that overspending can give you,” Stern said.

Stern also said he could have done a better job of explaining his reasons for blocking a proposed trade of Chris Paul from the league-owned Hornets to the Lakers, only to later agree to a deal that sent Paul to the Clippers. He said that “lost in the frenzy” over his action was the fact he quashed the deal in his role as the owners’ representative looking out for the best interests of the Hornets – not as the commissioner looking out for the best interests of the league as a whole.

“Our view was that the best thing was for New Orleans to be a young team,” he said.

Stern blamed himself for not clarifying that sooner.

“I don’t think it affected the integrity of the league,” he said. “I do think I could have done a better communications job. … It’s a job that, as the owners’ representative, I was stuck with. But I think that it was better to have me do it than a group of owners do it because I have the singular focus of doing what’s best.”

The booing Mavs fans may not have realized they had Stern to thank for getting Lamar Odom to Dallas. Odom was supposed to have been in the Lakers-Hornets deal; when he wasn’t, he was so upset that the club didn’t want him that he asked to be traded.

After the Dallas-Miami game, Stern went to Oklahoma City for the opener between the Thunder and Orlando. Magic star Dwight Howard is trying to force his way to the team of his preference, just like Paul did. Asked if that was bad for the league, Stern said it’s always happened, using Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Wilt Chamberlain as examples.

“That’s the beauty of the soap opera,” Stern said. “It will play out like it plays out.”

Stern had compliments for another superstar he was about to watch, LeBron James.

“I see a level of acceptance and maturity,” Stern said. “He’s clearly saying he might’ve said a few things differently, etcetera, and he’s going to let his talent do the talking. I think that’s pretty exciting because he’s got some pretty exciting talent. So we’re happy for him and we’re looking forward to how the season winds up.”

So, how does he expect the season to wind up?

“I said to Mark, `It’s ironic, the most underrated team in the league is the NBA champion,”’ Stern said. “I think Dallas has a pretty good roster. … I said before last season, `I think we’re going to have to play the season. We’re not mailing the trophy to Miami.’ It turns out, we mailed it to Dallas. We’ll see what happens this year – but Miami really seems formidable with those three superstars.”

By JAIME ARON, AP Sports Writer

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Nowitzki, new-look Mavs seeking 2nd straight title

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Nowitzki, new-look Mavs seeking 2nd straight title

DALLAS (AP) – Dirk Nowitzki has an idea of what it’s like to be an NBA champion. He learned one of the lessons over the years he spent being teammates with Devean George.

Nowitzki noticed that before practically every game, George found someone warming up on the other side of the court and greeted them with a smile and a hug that seemed warmer than most pregame how-do-you-do’s. Nowitzki eventually asked George why. The answer: they were his teammates, guys he had one an NBA title with during one of those three magical seasons with the Los Angeles Lakers.

“Once you win a championship,” George told Nowitzki, “it’s like a bond. It’s like family forever.”

Nowitzki told that story the first day he met with reporters after the lockout. Although the last time he’d been at team headquarters was for the championship parade, a day when everyone vowed to stick together and try winning it all again, Nowitzki returned knowing the Mavericks would lose several valuable contributors.

So while Nowitzki was going to miss Tyson Chandler bailing him out on defense, J.J. Barea zipping through the lane or nailing a long 3 and Caron Butler taking some the scoring load he also knew those guys would always have a special place in his life.

And, he trusted Mark Cuban and Donnie Nelson to find competent replacements.

Sure enough, the front office plugged holes with some big names, practically swiping Lamar Odom from the Lakers and signing Vince Carter. Adding that pair of 30-somethings, plus 28-year-old backup guard Delonte West, doesn’t completely fill the void, but it’s a good start and an indication that Cuban remains serious about trying to defend the first title in franchise history.

“We weren’t the favorites to win it last year, so nobody really knows what’s going to happen,” Nowitzki said. “Last year, it just worked out. The chemistry was great, guys wanted to win and play with each other. To me, the team is set up kind of the same again with a bunch of older guys that want to win, who’ve seen basically everything in this league and have individual (accolades) but they just want to win together and off each other.”

In a 66-game season, Dallas will be hard pressed to keep up its streak of 50-win seasons. There’s no telling how their aging legs will handle a schedule packed with more games and fewer off-days.

The thing is, the postseason remains the same. So this veteran group understands the ups and downs of the next four months are all about getting ready for the chase of those 16 wins that matter most.

Odom certainly understands. He spent each of the last two seasons trying to defend a championship. His Lakers did it two years ago, then were swept by the Mavs in the second round last season.

“If they thought winning a championship was hard, defending it is going to be … it’s tough,” Odom said. “It changes the mindset of teams, and of your team. It’s tough. But if a team can do it, this one can.”

Coach Rick Carlisle considers the reinvention of this team part of the challenge of repeating.

“We’ve got to reformulate this thing, but the guys coming in are veteran guys and they’ve played in a lot of big games. … They know what it’s about,” Carlisle said. “If you’re a new guy coming to this team, you’ve got to be excited. And you’ve got to be trying to figure out how you’re going to fit in and how you’re going to help this team get in position to repeat. Hey, I like the fact our team has a different look. That’s a great challenge for our coaching staff. And I think our players are energized as well.”

Jason Kidd is going into the final year of his contract but is already talking about playing a few more years. Jason Terry is going into the final year of his deal, but hopes to remain with the Mavericks for the rest of his career. There’s no telling what will happen in the new, post-lockout landscape, especially with Cuban letting Chandler, Barea and Butler go for the sake of gaining salary-cap flexibility.

“The way things fell was unique and you know we certainly did our homework,” said Nelson, the Mavs’ general manager. “We got a little lucky, which is certainly part of things, and we really feel good about this thing.”

Brendan Haywood becomes the starting center, the job he was expected to have last season before Chandler arrived and proved to be a perfect fit. Third-year guard Rodrigue Beaubois could become the exciting, change-of-pace player off the bench that Barea used to be, providing he’s overcome his foot injuries and learned to play enough defense to satisfy Carlisle.

All those things will fall into place over time.

For now, there’s one mystery remaining. The bling.

Never one for tradition, Cuban threatened to do something other than rings. He relented, but because he decided to give players input in the design, the rings won’t be ready for opening night. So there will be at least two celebrations of the title: at the opener on Christmas Day – which just so happens to be against the Heat in an NBA finals rematch – and again whenever the ring ceremony is held.

“We would’ve loved to have raised the banner and got our rings Nov. 1, but we’ve had this little delay,” Nowitzki said. “That (opener) can’t even come fast enough. We’re looking forward to it so much, just to see that banner go up.

“We’re going to see it there for the rest of our careers – for the rest of our lives, really. That always means it was a special season with a bunch of guys that I loved playing with. They are always going to be like family to me, no matter where they play.”

By JAIME ARON, AP Sports Writer

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NBA cancels all games through Nov. 30

Category : NBA Lockout 2011


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NBA cancels all games through Nov. 30

NEW YORK (AP) – As NBA players and owners wait to see who will blink first, fans are stuck staring at a blank calendar.

NBA Commissioner David Stern canceled the rest of the November games Friday, saying there will not be a full NBA season “under any circumstances.”

The move came about after labor negotiations broke down again when both sides refused to budge on how to split the league’s revenues, the same issue that derailed talks last week.

Now, a full month of NBA games have been canceled, and Stern said there’s no way of getting them back.

“We held out that joint hope together, but in light of the breakdown of talks, there will not be a full NBA season under any circumstances,” he said.

“It’s not practical, possible or prudent to have a full season now,” added Stern, who previously canceled the first two weeks of the season.

And he repeated his warnings that the proposals might now get even harsher as the league tries to make up the hundreds of millions of dollars that will be lost as the lockout drags on.

“We’re going to have to recalculate how bad the damage is,” Stern said. “The next offer will reflect the extraordinary losses that are piling up now.”

Just a day earlier, Stern had said he would consider it a failure if the sides didn’t reach a deal in the next few days and vowed they would take “one heck of a shot” to get it done.

Instead, negotiations broke off again over the division of basketball-related income, just as they did last Thursday. Union executive director Billy Hunter said the league again insisted it had to be split 50-50, while Stern said Hunter just walked out and left rather than discuss going below 52 percent.

Owners are insistent on a 50-50 split, while players last formally proposed they get 52.5 percent, leaving them about $100 million apart annually. Players were guaranteed 57 percent in the previous collective bargaining agreement.

“Derek (Fisher) and I made it clear that we could not take the 50-50 deal to our membership. Not with all the concessions that we granted,” Hunter said. “We said we got to have some dollars.”

Instead, they’ll now be out roughly $350 million, the losses Hunter previously projected for each month the players were locked out. He believed a full season could be played if a deal was made this weekend, but Stern emphatically ruled out any hope of that now.

“These are not punitive announcements; these are calendar generated announcements,” Stern said.

No further talks have been scheduled.

There was a sense of optimism entering the day after progress was made on salary cap issues during about 24 hours of talks over the previous two days. Then the sides brought the revenue split back into the discussion Friday and promptly got stuck on both issues.

Stern said the NBA owners were “willing” to go to 50 percent. But he said Hunter was unwilling to “go a penny below 52,” that he had been getting many calls from agents and then closed up his book and walked out of the room.

Hunter said the league initially moved its target down to 47 percent during Friday’s six-hour session, then returned to its previous proposal of 50 percent of revenues.

“We made a lot of concessions, but unfortunately at this time it’s not enough, and we’re not prepared or unable at this time to move any further,” Hunter said.

Union president Fisher said it was difficult to say why talks broke down, or when they would start up again.

“We’re here, we’ve always been here, but today just wasn’t the day to try and finish this out,” he said.

There was some good news.

Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver said there was essentially a “tentative agreement” on most system issues, with Stern rattling off some of them: Owners agreed to keep the midlevel exception starting at $5 million a year; and contract lengths would be five years for players staying with their teams and four when leaving for another.

“And then we hit a wall,” Stern said.

The small groups that were meeting the previous two days grew a bit Friday. Union vice presidents Chris Paul – wearing a Yankees cap for his trip to New York – and Theo Ratliff joined the talks, and economist Kevin Murphy returned after he was unavailable Thursday. Mavericks owner Mark Cuban stayed for the session after taking part Thursday.

Fisher said there were still too many restrictions in the owners’ proposal. Players want to keep a system similar to the old one, and fear owners’ ideas would limit player movement and the choices available to them in free agency.

And though they might be inclined to give up one if they received more concessions on the other, players make it sound as if they are the ones doing all the giving back.

The old cap system allowed teams to exceed it through the use of a number of exceptions, many of which the league wants to tweak or even eliminate. Hunter has called a hard cap a “blood issue” to players, and though the league has backed off its initial proposal calling for one, players think the changes owners want would work like one.

“We’ve told them that we don’t want a hard cap. We don’t want a hard cap any kind of way, either an obvious hard cap or a hard cap that may not be as obvious to most people but we know it works like a hard cap,” Hunter said. “And so you get there, and then all of a sudden they say, `Well, we also have to have our number.’ And you say, `Well wait a minute, you’re not negotiating in good faith.”’

But if players think what’s being proposed is a hard cap, here’s another warning: Silver won’t rule out the league seeking one again.

“Our response is then let’s have a hard cap, which is what we wanted,” he said.

“We don’t think it’s a hard cap. … We’ve all been wasting our time if they believe this is a hard cap. We’ve been spending literally hundreds of hours negotiating the specifics of a system, where they’re now saying is the equivalent of a hard cap. We’ve been clear from the beginning from a league standpoint we would prefer a hard cap.”

When players offered to reduce their guarantee from 57 percent to 53 percent, Hunter said that would have transferred about $1.1 billion to owners over six years. Now, at 52.5, he said that would grow to more than $1.5 billion.

But even a 50-50 split would be too high for some hardline owners, because it would reduce only $280 million of the $300 million they said they lost last season. Owners initially proposed a BRI split that players said would have had them around 40 percent.

Though they will miss a paycheck on Nov. 15, Hunter said each player would have received a minimum of $100,000 from the escrow money that was returned to them to make up the difference after salaries fell short of the guaranteed 57 percent of revenues last season.

The real losses, though, could be felt by arena staff and other people who work in fields connected to the game. Stern apologized to them in making the announcement.

But Jeff Lee, a 37-year-old cafe owner and Warriors season-ticketholder in the East Bay, said he isn’t discouraged about Friday’s setback.

“I’m pretty certain that the season’s going to start sooner or later,” Lee said. “I know when the season starts it’s going to be well worth the wait.”

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By BRIAN MAHONEY, AP Basketball Writer. Janie McCauley in Oakland, Calif. contributed to this report.

Union, not Cuban, proposed eliminating cap

Category : NBA Lockout 2011


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Union, not Cuban, proposed eliminating cap

NEW YORK (AP) – The NBA players’ association, not Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, proposed the elimination of the salary cap during negotiations aimed at ending months of labor strife, a league official said Tuesday.

NBA senior vice president Mike Bass said union executive director Billy Hunter made “several misstatements” during an hour-long podcast with ESPN.com on Monday. Among them was the revelation of the salary cap plan, which Bass said was actually an exception to the cap, not the elimination of it.

Hunter said that, during a meeting last week, Cuban proposed what he called a “game changer” – a plan to replace the salary cap with a heavy tax for teams that spent to a certain level. Hunter said the players were interested in discussing it further and that two or three other owners in the room were really excited about it, but then were told by the owners they wouldn’t pursue it.

“On behalf of the league, Mark Cuban proposed adding a new salary cap exception, not eliminating the salary cap,” Bass said. “It was the union that, in response, proposed eliminating the salary cap, a proposal that was even worse for the NBA than the union’s prior proposals.”

Hunter speculated during the podcast that owners backed away from the idea of eliminating the salary cap because it had been implemented under Commissioner David Stern long ago.

“And so I don’t know whether there’s any pushback because of that,” Hunter said. “But we were prepared to pursue that whole idea of going into a different direction, where we would be able to, wouldn’t have to worry about a cap. So the exceptions, salaries, all of that would be, there would be no limit with the exception of there being obviously a cap at the top, i.e., a quite heavy tax that teams would have to confront if they went above a certain number.

“But what happened was the owners decided, at least the leaders of their delegation, decided they had to take it back in a different direction. They said we don’t want to address that.”

The NBA does not allow owners to comment on the negotiations. A person briefed on the content of the meetings said Cuban’s actual proposal was much different than what Hunter suggested, and was surprised the union ignored it given that it would have met much of what players were seeking.

The sides met for three days with a federal mediator before talks broke down after players said owners insisted they commit to a 50-50 split of revenues before any further discussions about the salary cap system could continue. Though staffs from the sides have met since, no full bargaining sessions have been held and the NBA is expected to announce soon that more games will be canceled.

Union officials were angry with the league’s characterization of the breakdown of the talks Thursday. Now the league is unhappy with Hunter’s portrayal of the negotiations, such as when he mentioned items like a hard salary cap and salary rollbacks that owners are no longer proposing.

“In his podcast interview with Bill Simmons, Billy Hunter makes several misstatements and blatantly mischaracterizes the parties’ negotiations, the financial benefit to players from the NBA’s latest offer, and the benefits from the system changes the NBA has proposed to improve team competitiveness,” Bass said.

Bass also said the union has proposed a 10-year collective bargaining agreement, with mutual opt-outs after years six and eight. Owners have been seeking a 10-year deal, but the union has repeatedly said it doesn’t want to go longer than six years.

The union would like players to get out from the rookie salary scale quicker than five years, with Hunter mentioning MVP Derrick Rose and Rookie of the Year Blake Griffin on the podcast as players who are underpaid because they are still locked into their scale figures.

“In response to the union’s suggestion that top-performing rookies have an opportunity to get higher pay, we have proposed a new bonus pool for rookie scale players who earn designated league honors like MVP and All-NBA first, second, or third teams,” Bass said. “Billy fails to mention this.”

However, union spokesman Dan Wasserman said the league has never presented a dollar figure that would go with the bonus pool.

Bass also disputed Hunter’s notion that the owners are seeking a more favorable CBA because many of them lost money in their other businesses as a result of the economic downtown.

“The owners reasonably believe they should have the opportunity to make a profit in a business that annually generates over $4 billion in revenue and pays the players over $2 billion,” Bass said. “It has nothing whatsoever to do with making up for losses in other businesses.”

By BRIAN MAHONEY, AP Basketball Writer
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NBA owners’ dual wants put more games in jeopardy

Category : NBA Lockout 2011


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NBA owners’ dual wants put more games in jeopardy

NEW YORK (AP) – NBA owners have their priorities, and playing games isn’t first on that list.

Instead, the league is looking beyond this month – and maybe beyond this season, if that’s what it takes – to implement an extreme financial makeover after years of sizeable losses. The goal, in the words of Spurs owner Peter Holt, “an opportunity to make a few bucks.”

Owners are determined to reshape the league by creating a system like the NFL or NHL, where spending is capped and small-market teams truly can compete with the big boys. But reforming the NHL’s financial structure required a lengthy lockout, wiping out the entire 2004-05 season. And the NFL is making money, not losing it.

After NBA labor talks broke down Thursday night, Holt was asked if owners might be willing to sit out a year to get the changes they crave.

“The competitive issues and the economic issues, certainly we don’t want to lose the season, I don’t think the NHL did either. It ended up happening,” said Holt, chairman of the owners’ labor relations committee. “There are certain things that we feel we must have.”

And that makes a lost NBA season a possibility.

That comes as no surprise to players’ association executive director Billy Hunter. He started to believe two or three years ago that owners intended to lock out the players so they could force through the changes they wanted. Now he doesn’t see enough owners who can stop it from happening.

He identified big-market owners Jerry Buss of the Lakers, the Knicks’ Jim Dolan, Miami’s Micky Arison and Dallas’ Mark Cuban as owners he believed were open to anything that could lead to games, but there were many more from the small markets “that were dug in, and I think they’re carrying the day.”

“And unfortunately. I think what we have to do is we have to miss more games for it to really set in,” Hunter said. “And that’s what I kept trying to tell them is that this thing is on a slippery slope and we’re already losing games, the first two weeks, and if we continue to go in that decline, it may become intractable to get people to move from their respective positions.”

The first two weeks of the season – 100 games in all – already have been canceled. And it won’t be long before more games are scrapped.

That’s in stark contrast to the NFL lockout, in which only the preseason Hall of Fame game was canceled. The NFL always insisted that it would play, a rallying cry that is absent from the NBA negotiations. Of course, the NFL players and owners were fighting over how to split billions of dollars of revenue whereas the NBA says it lost $300 million last season and that only eight of its 30 clubs made money.

“Different dynamic, I mean no doubt about it,” said Holt, who added his small-market Spurs lost money the last two years, which hadn’t happened before.

“We’re losing games, so there’s a cost to that. And we also were in a very different position. NFL essentially was fighting over how to divide more riches. We’re trying to figure out how to get our expenses down so we’ve got 30 teams that have an opportunity to make a little money, and so it’s a very different situation.”

One that could be crippling in many NBA cities, particularly a small-market one such as Memphis.

Ty Agee, president of the Beale Street Merchants Association, said the timing couldn’t have been worse for the city, Beale Street and the Grizzlies. After years of anemic play and small crowds, the team’s 2011 playoff run brought people downtown not only toward the end of the regular season, but into two rounds of the playoffs – an unexpected boost for a club that had never won a playoff game.

Now, instead of riding momentum and benefiting from more customers, businesses in the entertainment district are watching labor negotiations.

“I get nervous, and I get more and more frustrated,” said Agee, who owns Miss Polly’s Cafe. “All we want is for them to get their stuff together.

“It’s a double-edge sword for me because I’m a fan and a business owner.”

Commissioner David Stern has long warned that once games are missed, both sides might stiffen their proposals in hopes of recovering what’s been lost, which is why he said last week he feared games could be lost through Christmas without a deal this week.

After three days and 30 hours of meetings with a federal mediator, negotiations fell apart when union officials said they were told they must commit to a 50-50 split of revenues before owners would agree to discuss the salary cap system.

“Right now, they’re saying it’s got to be a precondition. If we’re going to meet, you’ve got to agree to accept 50-50. So as long as that edict is out there, then when are we going to meet?” Hunter said. “We’re saying we’re unwilling to meet unless we can talk about the system independent of the number.”

There is no indication owners will be prepared to go beyond a 50-50 split, and with players currently at 52.5 or 53, the sides are about $100 million apart on an annual basis.

Players seem willing to give on one of the issues if they scored concessions on the other – they’ve already offered to reduce their guarantee of revenues from 57 percent – but management has made it clear it must have both. That doesn’t leave much room for compromise.

Or a season.

By BRIAN MAHONEY, AP Basketball Writer. Clay Bailey in Memphis, Tenn., contributed to this report.

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Cuban’s lips unzipped, he remains somewhat humble

Category : Playoff 2011

MIAMI (AP) – Mark Cuban zipped his lips and won a championship.

And when it was time for his old nemesis David Stern to hand him the shiny gold trophy, this was his big chance to say anything he wanted, with everyone watching.

So, what did he do?

He stood behind a 78-year-old man and let him take center stage, a reward for Donald Carter having founded the team 31 long years ago. He brought his wife and three kids on the podium to enjoy the moment. He even realized how corny he was being when he told his toddler son, “This could be yours.”

Then, out came the Mark Cuban most sports fans remember.

He swore in multiple TV interviews to emphasize how proud he was of his fans. He walked into a postgame news conference talking on the phone, hung up and hollered, “Did anybody inform you guys, we’re the world champions?!” On his way out, he took the trophy with him and declared it was spending the night in his room.

Meet Mark Cuban 2.0 – an NBA champion who can be humble one moment, back to his raucous roots the next.

“You know, I probably won’t even shower for six months,” Cuban said, laughing. “My biggest fear is that I can’t remember every little part of it, every emotion, every feeling that I went through as the clock was winding down. … I was just hoping I could just do an emotional videotape of myself and just keep it. So that’s my biggest hope and fear that I’ll be able to feel this forever.”

Cuban hadn’t spoken publicly since winning the Western Conference championship, when he proclaimed “We ain’t done yet!”

On Sunday night, he spoke into the microphone with a voice scratchy from screaming and choked with emotion. He talked about being happy for his players, complimenting them for having “so much heart, so much determination and so much more than that.”

“I love every one of them,” he said.

A pivotal moment in getting to this point came last summer, at Cuban’s house. Dirk Nowitzki was a free agent and he wanted Cuban’s vow that if he re-signed, the owner would keep the core of the team intact and do all he could to find the pieces needed to make them champions.

He did, and they did.

“I give Mark a lot of credit,” Nowitzki said. “He stuck with me through thick and thin. He brought all the right players always in, always trying to spend money and make this organization better and this team better. So Mark is the best.”

Nowitzki was among those who appreciated Cuban censoring himself the past six weeks. It started after the Mavs won their first-round series against Portland.

Cuban held his tongue throughout a sweep of the Lakers, which had to be tough considering his past verbal jabs with Phil Jackson and Ron Artest. He remained silent again through the conference finals against Oklahoma City, even refusing to answer questions about why he’d stopped doing interviews.

He kept it up during the finals, all the more remarkable considering he was front and center during Dallas’ 2006 trip to the finals against Miami, causing such a ruckus he was fined $250,000 – part of a tab that’s well over $1 million.

Sitting next to the Larry O’Brien Trophy, wearing his favorite new hat, he finally explained why his silence.

“The big mystery, huh?” he said. “It didn’t make any sense to say anything,” he said, reciting the litany of questions he knew would surround each series. “The quieter I got, the more we won. I didn’t want to break the karma.”

Not that he thought there was a correlation between his silence and the team’s success.

“Do you really think these guys are going to play any harder or less hard because of what I say?” he said. “That’s disrespectful. They put it on the line. They didn’t care if I was naked at every game. They were going to go out there and play as hard as they could.”

In a corner of the jubilant locker room Sunday night, coach Rick Carlisle acknowledged that he helped convince Cuban to let the players and their performance on the court do all the talking.

“We kind of mutually talked about it,” Carlisle said. “He was great about it. He understood and he knew it was the right thing. … Mark’s a much more humble person than a lot of people want to believe. His heart is always in the right place. It gives us the tools to succeed. He was extremely disciplined during this run and it helped us.”

During the trophy presentation, and again at the start of his postgame interview, Carlisle used the line, “Our owner is now available for interviews.” It was his way of saying the muzzle was off.

“Look, he’s a smart guy,” Carlisle said. “He understands that certain things are sacred.”

Carter started the Mavericks in 1980 after a long, hard fight for an expansion team. He sold the club to Ross Perot Jr. in 1996, and in 2000 he sold it to Cuban. Mr. C, as he’s fondly known, has remained a part of the organization and a constant presence in courtside seats directly across from the Mavs bench – always wearing the white cowboy hat that was part of the club’s original logo.

Cuban approached Carter at game’s end and asked him to accept the trophy from Stern. It was a classy move and, by Carter’s estimation, the continuation of a run of great moves by Cuban this postseason.

“There wasn’t a script written for him that I know of, but he played it down exactly on when to say something, when not to,” Carter said. “He was everything I would ask an owner to be.”

With his voice cracking, Carter added: “I’ll just say he has become the owner I’ve always wanted because of his love of the game. I’d put him up against any of the owners and I’ve been around for 31 years.”

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By JAIME ARON, AP Sports Writer

1 win from title, Mavs not getting excited yet

Category : Playoff 2011

MIAMI (AP) – Here’s where all their age and experience, heartbreak and disappointment actually benefit Dirk Nowitzki and the Dallas Mavericks.

They’ve had two days to get ready for Game 6 of the NBA finals – plenty of time to daydream about commissioner David Stern handing them the shiny, gold Larry O’Brien Trophy as confetti falls and they pull on hats and T-shirts with the words 2011 NBA champions.

Yet their steely resolve remains.

They’re strictly thinking about what it will take to beat the Miami Heat on Sunday night, not what will happen if they do.

“I don’t allow myself to sit back and relax now,” Nowitzki said Saturday. “In these playoffs, one win or one loss can switch the whole momentum. You don’t ever want a snowball to start. I don’t allow myself to sit back all of a sudden and be satisfied. We got one more big win hopefully to get, and then I can be satisfied.”

Nowitzki isn’t giving his version of the “one game at a time” cliche. He’s been this way the last two months – the last five years, really, ever since the Mavericks went from being on the verge of taking a 3-0 lead in the 2006 finals to losing in six games. The Mavs wound up watching the Miami Heat celebrate their first championship on Dallas’ floor.

Nowitzki and Jason Terry are the only players left from that club, and the emotional scars from that collapse haven’t healed.

They could Sunday night.

But until it happens, they aren’t about to let their guard down. Terry, for instance, said Saturday he’s still haunted by the memory of his off-target jumper that could’ve sent the ’06 finale into overtime.

“Sometimes middle of the night, a lot of times first thing when I wake up in the morning,” he said. “Definitely every day when I walk into that gym, into that arena. It’s something you live with.”

The burden remains for everyone else in the organization.

Case in point: owner Mark Cuban’s continued silence, likely to be cracked only when the series is done.

“I think the first time in the finals, the experience was a little blissful,” said Donnie Nelson, the team’s president of basketball operations in ’06 and still today. “Eventually, we did get caught up in (thoughts of winning). Then that opportunity was ripped away. We didn’t understand how bad it was going to be.”

How bad was it?

Dallas lost in the first round of the playoffs three of the last four years. Nelson and Cuban kept surrounding Nowitzki with older players, many past their prime. This season, the entire lot of them has a total of zero rings. They also are mostly in their 30s and veterans of at least 10 NBA seasons – guys like Jason Kidd, who has been to two NBA finals; or Shawn Marion and Peja Stojakovic, who in their prime were key players on perennial contenders that couldn’t get out of the conference finals.

“Every second-place guy goes through this, whether it’s the Olympics or minor league baseball,” Nelson said. “You’ve got to go through that pain. What it does, it creates an insatiable hunger. It forces you to be non-emotional about the moment because you will not allow yourself to get your hopes up. … When someone steals your car or your girlfriend, you seldom get a second chance. For us to get a second chance, in this fashion, it’s really unique.”

The wait has felt interminable to Mavs fans because the club hasn’t even been close since 2006.

Dallas has been KO’d in the first round of the playoffs three of the last four years, winning a single series the other time.

Whenever they were bounced, Nowitzki would shrug and say it didn’t matter the round because they’re all lost seasons if they don’t end in a title. That same we-ain’t-done-nothing-yet vibe has spread across the locker room.

“We addressed it today,” Nowitzki said Saturday.

Nowitzki also talked about a video that showed Dwyane Wade and LeBron James appearing to mock the Mavs star for his recent sinus infection.

Wade said he really did cough and turned it into a generic joke specifically because cameras were rolling. He and James blamed others for trying to make a big deal out of it.

While Nowitzki called it “a little childish, a little ignorant,” he also brought up that nothing as silly as that will matter Sunday night.

“We’re one win away from my dream, what I’ve worked on for half of my life,” he said. “This is all I’m focusing on.”

Kidd is 38, probably closer to his Hall of Fame induction than to his prime years. He’s already the oldest guard to start in the NBA finals, and it would be a terrific cap to his career for him to be the oldest ever to win it.

Excited, right?

Wrong. His goal Saturday was maintaining the shooting touch he had Thursday night.

“It’s not about ‘if we win we win a championship,”’ he said. “It’s about doing what we’ve done all season and having to play hard and find a way to win. Then everything else will fall into place.”

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By JAIME ARON, AP Sports Writer

Nowitzki leads Mavs to brink of title

Category : Playoff 2011

DALLAS – In the aftermath of their loss to the Miami Heat in the 2006 NBA Finals, the Dallas Mavericks couldn’t stop making excuses. The Heat hadn’t so much won the title, Dallas decided, as it had been given to them, courtesy of poor officiating or the Mavs fumbling away the critical third game.

Eventually the whining so annoyed Dwyane Wade, the MVP of that series, that he went right back at Dallas, right back at Dirk Nowitzki’s version of events, and blasted it all.

“Dirk says they gave us the championship last year, but he’s the reason they lost,” Wade told Miami reporters in 2007. It’s “because he wasn’t the leader that he’s supposed to be in the closing moments.”

With his supporting cast now contributing in the clutch, Dirk Nowitzki and the Mavs sit one win away from their first NBA title.

“At the end of the day, you’re remembered for what you did at the end.”

Nowitzki has said nothing during this series about those words, about that charge against him half a decade ago.

Whatever his failure then has been corrected. Dallas has taken control of these Finals, taken mighty Miami and its all-star crew to the brink, taken the veneer of inevitability and invincibility right off LeBron James and Co. because Nowitzki has turned into a leader for the ages.

Dallas beat Miami 112-103 here Thursday and the Mavericks are now up 3-2 heading into Sunday’s Game 6 back in Florida. And it wasn’t just Nowitzki’s game-high 29 points that made it so.

It was how he’s helped build up a supporting crew of castoffs and role players, how he’s demanded excellence from starters and subs alike, how he’s found the perfect balance of knowing when to take command of a game and when to defer to a better option.

The Heat are a collection of talent still searching for their roles, still seeking consistency and accountability and urgency. It’s LeBron trying to sunshine another loss with “we played good enough to win.” Dallas has turned into this machine that keeps coming and coming and coming, undeterred by talent, unwilling to compromise.

“Persistence is our game,” Mavs coach Rick Carlisle said.

When six straight points gave the Heat a 96-95 lead with just 5:16 remaining, when America Airlines Center had gone from deafening to doubting, when it all seemed to be slipping away, there was the 7-foot German in the huddle during a timeout, pleading for exactly that persistence.

“Just stick with it,” he shouted. “Just stick with it.”

This was the series on the line. The Mavs had hit a million shots and were losing anyway. They were in the process of holding LeBron to another quiet fourth quarter (just two points) and were about to blow it still. So after Nowitzki was done talking – and after Wade had increased Miami’s lead with a 3-pointer – Nowitzki demanded the ball, got to the lane, got fouled and, of course, knocked down his free throws.

“Kind of settle everyone down,” he said. “I thought it was big of us not to shoot a bad jumper and they go down in transition again.”

He then stepped back and let his guys rise up. It was Jason Terry, who Nowitzki had called out earlier in this series, draining two back-breaking 3-pointers. It was Shawn Marion, previously benched in crunch time, producing a key steal. It was blue-collar Tyson Chandler delivering a huge block. It was Jason Kidd burying a 24-footer.

Jason Terry’s late 3-pointer all but ended any chance of a Miami Heat comeback Thursday.

After his free throws, Nowitzki would never need to score again. Dallas would deliver a 17-4 knockout run, and the most clutch performer in these playoffs – hero of big shot after big shot – didn’t need to do all the scoring.

Nowitzki has the Mavericks exactly where he wants them – believing so fully in themselves that they’ve found a way to close out games that all of Miami’s heavy hitters can’t.

And yes, it’s his team. It’s unequivocally his Mavericks. There isn’t a debate here; no star-by-committee system. He’s taken a hold of this group the way he grabs the news conference microphone. Owner Mark Cuban has stopped talking to the media, seemingly lifting a mountain of pressure off his troops. Carlisle is comfortable deflecting praise onto the players and spends half his time crediting Dirk effusively.

After the game, Terry talked about one of his late, contested threes, and acknowledged he was so confident he probably would’ve taken it even if the shot clock wasn’t running down.

“Dirk don’t want to hear that,” Terry said.

Not Carlisle, the coach. Dirk, the leader.

This has been an impossibly tight series, every game coming down to the final minute, if not the final shot. Across the way the Heat are still fumbling with how to finish, wondering who should take the shot, who should step up on defense. They stand around and look at each other. Some won’t shoot. Some shoot too much. Some won’t defend. Some chase themselves out of position.

Until these Finals, the Heat were able to overwhelm opponents in the final minutes. They just swallowed up the Philadelphia 76ers, Boston Celtics and Chicago Bulls. Now they’ve met an opponent with even more will, with an even greater killer instinct.

It was supposed to be the Heat that could count on a committee at the end. It was supposed to be this purposefully assembled triumvirate that would cause the defensive chaos. Would Wade take the final shot? Would LeBron? Would they drop down to Chris Bosh? Was there any way to cover them all?

Instead it was Miami coach Erik Spoelstra who looked out of ideas, looked resigned to the fact that Dallas just won’t stop coming for the crown.

“It is not easy against this team,” he said.

When everyone thought it would be Nowitzki who would try to win it, he flipped the script and here came Terry, Marion and Kidd. Here, earlier in the game, came J.J. Barea, this 5-foot-9 blur seemingly out of a pick-up game at the Y, torturing the Heat with 17 gut-punch points.

“Nowitzki requires at least the attention of 1½ and often two guys,” Spoelstra said. “…A lot of actions involve Nowitzki.”

It all comes through Dirk now, here in this tightest of Finals, here in this endless parade of pressurized moments. Torn tendon. High fever. Double teams. Nothing is stopping him. Nothing is keeping him from doing exactly what Dwyane Wade roasted him about five years ago.

“At the end of the day,” Wade said back then, “you’re remembered for what you did at the end.”

It’s 3-2 Dallas now. It’s one game from everything for these Mavericks. It’s one win from answering that long-ago criticism for Dirk Nowitzki.

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By Dan Wetzel, Yahoo! Sports