середа, 31 серпня 2011 р.

Kobe Bryant could still play in China, however unofficially

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Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant can't play in the Chinese Basketball Association this season, whether the NBA's lockout of its players extends for the rest of this week or the rest of Barack Obama's administration (second term, or not).

The CBA does not want NBA players who are under contract, no matter how accomplished they are, if there's a chance that they'll leave should the lockout end during the CBA season. According to HoopsHype.com, that hasn't stopped Shanxi Zhongyu from attempting to sign Bryant for some exhibition work, or perhaps a simple jaunt through the layup line in warmups.

[Related: Five players who should take their acts overseas]

That's right. Shanxi Zhongyu wants to sign Kobe for strictly show-off purposes. Bryant would not be eligible to play in games that count, but he could take part in pregame drills, show off for fans, work up a nice sweat in exhibitions. Circumvent the Chinese Basketball Association legalities all you want, you're still going to get a basketball-obsessed stud in Kobe. And it's all legal.

Last week the CBA passed a law created to stop NBA players who were under contract for the 2011-12 season from working with CBA teams. The NBA may have put pressure on the CBA braintrust, and we wouldn't blame them for that; we also wouldn't blame CBA executives for asking their teams not to put the league in a compromising position by marketing American stars that may not be around for an entire season.

What's the way around that? Potentially, you pay the heck out of someone like Kobe Bryant (with, possibly, a certain shoe company's help) to show up and play in your exhibition season. Or, even more tactlessly, practice with your group in full view of cameras with someone like Kobe Bean Bryant amongst the 10 players sprinting back and forth. With the logo showing. And a smile on Kobe's face. After all, it's the best of Kobe's worlds. The man is a basketball junkie, he misses playing, and he'll be making money for an actual basketball team while keeping his mates at his shoe endorser happy.

On top of that, wouldn't the Chinese Basketball Association team benefit from his presence at a practice? Who loses here?

Besides competing shoe companies, of course.

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Not quite a mass migration, but NBA players are slowly trickling overseas

Kobe Bryant hasn't put pen to paper. Dwyane Wade is nowhere to be found. Carmelo Anthony and Chris Bosh are appearing on "Law and Order," and Kevin Love has taken up pro volleyball. There was a lot of bluster earlier this month and last as to whether or not NBA stars would take up residence overseas during the lockout, and with the NBA's stalemate failing to inch closer to a resolution, we're still not seeing many NBA players of note jump into action overseas.

By far, the biggest name (as reported by Yahoo! Sports' Adrian Wojnarowski) to make the jump is former Golden State Warriors scoring forward Reggie Williams, and his name was met with a resounding "who?" when I ranked him 30th amongst NBA small forwards this time last year. Williams will be playing in the Spanish League this year, with a pretty hefty buyout clause (he'd have to go halfsies with an NBA team on a million dollar buyout) likely making it so he'll stay overseas even if the NBA plays a full season this year.

Woj is also reporting that 2010 Final Four Most Outstanding Player, Duke product, and Detroit Pistons second-round pick Kyle Singler will also play in the Spanish League. Singler isn't the highest choice from last June's draft to make the leap, as former USC forward and Philadelphia 76ers' 16th overall selection Nikola Vucevic will be going back home to play for a team in his native Montenegro during the lockout.

Early Tuesday morning, ESPN.com's Marc Stein relayed that Cavaliers forward Omri Casspi could jet off to work with Tony Parker's team in France. It should be noted that Parker doesn't have any current designs on playing for that team, but should this lockout keep rolling along (and especially if the athletic Casspi hops on board), Parker could suit up for his squad.

Rasual Butler? He's heading to Spain, with no apparent opt-out clause according to CSN Chicago. Hawks second-rounder Keith Benson? Spain. Pooh Jeter? According to Wendell Maxey, potentially Spain.

And that about rounds it up. Hardly the tidal wave agents would have us expect, though I do submit that we're just entering late August and that late September could see another wave of guys you've never seen play signing with international squads.

UPDATE: Eighty seconds more surfing revealed this post written by Scott Schroeder of Ridiculous Upside that details several of the players I mentioned above, and a few stray ends beyond that. Give it a read.

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Dwight Howard turns to a free-throw maestro to help his stroke

With his free-throw percentages hardly improving seven seasons into what should be a Hall of Fame career, Dwight Howard has turned to a self-styled guru for help with a touch gone wrong.

The Orlando Magic center is a nice guy, a willing learner, a dominant force defensively and a terrible free-throw shooter. That last aspect isn't exactly his Achilles' heel -- the All-Star's dodgy teammates are the biggest reason the NBA's best center has made it out of his conference's bracket only once in his career -- but it would certainly help both Howard and his team if he could make, say, three-quarters of his gimmie attempts.

He's stuck at just below 58 percent from the stripe on his career, with a low of 52 percent and a high of 62 percent. Which is tough, because Howard has shown that he can stick a good elbow under the ball and showcase a good stroke.

This is where Ed Palubinskas comes in. The Aussie swears he can turn Howard from the last Shaquille O'Neal (who Palubinskas once worked with) into, at the very least, the next Patrick Ewing (who Howard once worked with). To say nothing of the next Jack Sikma.

This is what he offered to the Orlando Sentinel, recently. Here's Palubinskas, in an email to the Sentinel (before Howard hired him) from 2009:

"I will completely change his numbers in less than one week and you won't recognize him."

Well all right!

And this is what Palubinskas told the Orlando Sentinel during a 2009 Finals showing that saw Howard miss 15 of 37 charity attempts:

"Here we are with multimillion-dollar, superb, phenomenal athletes, and millions of people are watching [the Finals] and saying, 'I don't believe it.' I believe it because their mechanics are so flawed."

Howard's mechanics are flawed. His shooting elbow sticks way out too often, he doesn't utilize the same routine consistently, and he can use some help with his knee-bend bounce before he shoots. Take it from your "humble" free-throw guru/author, who converts about as many free throws as Howard does, without the pressure of 20,000 fans bearing down.

It's still a smart move for the reigning Defensive Player of the Year. More makes turn to more scores which leads to more respect from the refs which leads to less angry outbursts on the defensive end about what happened on the offensive end, which allows an already-dominant defensive player to perhaps play free and easy (read: scary) on the defensive end from the first quarter to the fourth. Whew. It's a long way of saying that a more serene turn at the free-throw line is good for everyone involved. Even, sometimes, the opposition.

Also, it could run Howard's scoring average up past 25 a game. If he develops the stroke, the game's best center could become even scarier.

Look out.

Julius Erving Patrick Ewing Walt Frazier George Gervin Hal Greer

Video: Betty White spurns Shaquille O?Neal?s marriage proposal

You remember Betty White, right? For several decades, she served as a hilarious player in classic series like "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and "Golden Girls." Then a bunch of youngsters saw her in the Sandra Bullock vehicle "The Proposal" and decided she was the perfect subject for semi-ironic Internet love. A Facebook group popped up to get her to host "Saturday Night Live," and Lorne Michaels assented. Two years later, she still exists on the periphery of popular culture, co-starring on TV Land's "Hot in Cleveland" and popping up in other bits of ephemera. It's a career resurgence, I guess, except that few willing to acknowledge that her age is being exploited at the expense of legitimate approval of a comedic legend.

Anyway, enough with the cultural commentary. Betty White is hanging out with Shaquille O'Neal, for some reason, and the Big Geriatric decided to propose marriage to her. She declined, sadly, because he's too old for her. Oh Betty, you so crazy!

It makes perfect sense that Shaq would be attracted to White, though. As we know, he is very attracted to women that are 1/16th his size.

(Video via TBJ)

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Carmelo Anthony and Chris Bosh will appear on ?Law and Order, SVU?

We're not sure what's more unsettling -- that the appearance of NBA All-Stars Chris Bosh and Carmelo Anthony on NBC's "Law and Order, SVU" could rank as the biggest NBA news item for all of September, or that former "Wonder Years" dad Dan Lauria will be set to play someone who really shouldn't be coming into contact with children. Brr.

Bosh and 'Melo will appear on the long-running and often-unsettling procedural drama on Sept. 28, according to TVGuide.com (via Pro Basketball Talk) in cameo appearances. Both lanky forwards will appear toward the beginning and end of the episode, and while there's no word as to whether or not their appearance will drive the plot much, it will give us something to talk about as the lockout drones on.

And hopefully their run will turn out better than Pau Gasol's time on CBS's "CSI Miami."

From TVGuide.com:

The episode, titled "Personal Fouls," focuses on a youth basketball coach (The Wonder Years' Dan Lauria) who is suspected of being a sexual predator.

Also appearing in the episode is True Blood and Necessary Roughness star Mehcad Brooks, who plays Prince Miller, a fictional basketball superstar who was once one of the suspected coaches' prodigies. Rapper/actor Heavy D will also guest-star as Miller's cousin and business manager.

Outside of laconic appearances on MTV's "Cribs" (Anthony) and too-funny behind-the-scenes photoshoot videos (Bosh), neither player has any significant acting and/or TV experience beyond playing hundreds of televised basketball games over the course of their career. It will be interesting to see how the rather gritty crime drama treats both Melo and Bosh, who are two pretty happy-go-lucky cats by all accounts.

Also, they better bring their acting chops. They're not going to like it if Aimee Mann tweets about them.

Bill Sharman John Stockton Isiah Thomas Nate Thurmond Wes Unseld

Brandon Jennings says Kobe Bryant shouldn?t play in the Drew League

If you walk around a random three-block area of the greater Los Angeles area, you are likely to see at least one Kobe Bryant jersey. He is the current icon of the city's sporting scene, a figure who will go down as at least as important in LA sports history as Magic Johnson, Tommy Lasorda, and Luc Robitaille. The man owns the town and can do no wrong.

Still, Kobe's King of LA designation was earned, not a birthright. His only tie to the city is the Lakers, not the deeper basketball subculture at summer pro-am competitions like the Drew League.

Like many NBA players, Kobe has taken advantage of the lockout to play in the Drew League -- he even hit a notable game-winner over James Harden two weeks ago. Still, not every LA basketball personality has welcomed Kobe to the league with open arms. Brandon Jennings, a Compton native and current Milwaukee Bucks point guard, says Kobe shouldn't appear at Drew League events. From Mark Medina for the Los Angeles Times:

If Kobe Bryant agrees to play in a proposed Drew League-Goodman League rematch, thousands of L.A. fans would flock to wherever the game takes place. And if he does, it appears Milwaukee Bucks guard Brandon Jennings would go on his own "birther" campaign, like Donald Trump did with President Barack Obama.

"He wasn't born and raised in L.A," Jennings told ESPN the Magazine's Chris Palmer regarding Bryant, who attended Lower Merion near Philadelphia. "You gotta be from L.A. for Drew. Show me a birth certificate." [...]

Don't mistake Brandon's gripes about Bryant as a personal attack, though. Even though the Compton native would benefit from playing alongside Bryant, his gripes point more to his belief that the Drew League is compromising its roots in representing L.A. players. Jennings, after all, reiterated to Palmer the same thing he told me at the 2010 ESPY awards.

After the jump, check out the anti-Kobe shirt Jennings sent out from his Twitter account last week. Someone is clearly not a big fan of the Black Mamba.

These comments from Jennings are both understandable and a little silly. On one hand, he grew up in the Drew League culture and knows that it represents the LA basketball scene in its purest form. However, appearances by Kobe and other stars help increase its profile, thereby boosting its popular and bringing some attention to the local, non-NBA legends who participate.

Purity tests are usually bad news for organizations, whether they're political parties or sports leagues. Openness and acceptance tend to be virtues. But in the case of the Drew League, the NBA's lost summer could in fact lead to some unintended negative consequences. It's a league that exists to boost basketball in Los Angeles. What's it like when new players come in and treat it as a side-project instead of an organization with a legitimate goal?

If Bryant doesn't understand the goals of the Drew League, then it might make sense for him not to play. But if he wants to, it's on local stars like Jennings to teach him about it, not to say he's not allowed. There's room for everyone here, but the success of such a partnership depends on all parties respecting the needs of each other. Deciding who's invited and barred isn't going to help anyone.

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The 10-man rotation, starring Arvydas Sabonis

With the lockout in full lockdown mode and news and NBA notes hard to come by, we often don't have enough fodder to fill out a daily or even weekly 10-man rotation, as most blips on the NBA radar end up deserving their own post. Today we're presenting a litany of links that you may have missed the first time, that weren't commented upon with a singular post. Enjoy.

C: The Painted Area. Haubs breaks down the perhaps too-legendary tale of Arvydas Sabonis dominating David Robinson in the 1988 Olympics. Also, Grantland's Jonathan Abrams discusses Sabas' legendary career, while the Oregonian welcomes him back to Portland.
PF: The Hoop Doctors. Seven memorable Dennis Rodman skirmishes.
SF: Basketball-Reference Blog. The '88 and '98 Cleveland Cavaliers were full of rookies.
SG: Mixmakers.net. Highlights from each of the Chicago Bulls' 1995-96 wins.
PG: NBA.com/Magic. Very cool pictorial evolution of each NBA logo.
6th: JasonKidd.com. Kidd recalls his heady "Mike Woodson play."
7th: NBA.com. Steve Aschburner makes the case for more assistant coaches in the Hall of Fame.
8th: NBA.com. Kevin McHale in the post. Take notes.
9th: Truthdig. Mark Heisler's all-over-the-place goodbye to the Los Angeles Times. Interesting read.
10th: NBAtradetracker.net. These are must-watches: "How Cazzie Russell Sparked the Steal of the Century."

Got a link or tip for Ball Don't Lie? Holler at me at KD_BDL_ED (at) yahoo.com, or follow me on Twitter.

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The NBA?s players can win the PR war, but they should attempt to end the mess

The kids are back in school, the NFL is about to spark up, and the NCAA isn't far off from tipping off its own hoops season. September is a few days, and the NBA has made absolutely no inroads or advancement as it "attempts" to bargain with its players. The 2011 lockout is about to finish its second full month, and absolutely nothing has been accomplished.

Outside of, surprisingly, a warming lack of blowhard dialogue from either side. David Stern and his owners haven't gone too far over the top in presenting their case, and no player has really done much to either embarrass or take away from the message emanating from the other side.

Training camps are set to start just about a month from now, though. And if you think a July 1 mindset -- a dogged adherence to pre-lockout talking points, and absolutely no consideration for the lives and fortunes lost by potentially losing a single preseason week to this lockout counts as any sort of advancement -- then you're probably part of the legal counsel representing either side of this mess. The owners and the players don't have a car to park, a ticket to take, a section to sweep, a keg to change, an ankle to tape, or a column to type up. No wonder they haven't moved an inch.

This doesn't mean there hasn't been some advancement. At this time, back in 1998, the North American sporting world had its eyes fixed upon Sammy Sosa and (mainly) Mark McGuire as they chased down Roger Maris' home run record with a litany of locker room supplements and not a dose (no pun intended; and this is from a St. Louis Cardinals fan) of shame. With Michael Jordan all but retired and the eyes of a sports-mad nation fixed elsewhere, the NBA's players could afford to act like absolute morons as they "argued" their side of a collective bargaining agreement that (somehow, smartly) just handed Kevin Garnett a $121 million deal just two years after he graduated high school.

Still, the players screwed it up. Not the deal, which worked out in their favor. Instead, it was the way they attempted to articulate their case, while hoping that Kevin Garnett's contract somehow turned into [David Falk's client's] contract.

And this time around, the players are acting their age. And, according to Howard Beck of the New York Times, this is no co-incidence:

"It was a huge emphasis," Derek Fisher, the president of the National Basketball Players Association, said in a telephone interview. "The reality is, we're in a great position, where guys have worked to put themselves in this place where they can potentially earn millions of dollars."

[?]

At Fisher's direction, the union last fall distributed a 56-page lockout handbook to its 400-plus players. Tucked between tabs on "budgeting" and "player services" is a section devoted to "media," with talking points on everything from the N.B.A.'s financial losses ("vastly overstated") to franchise values ("Warriors just sold for $450M").

But the key point, perhaps, is this simple reminder: "Please be sensitive about interviews or other media displays of a luxurious lifestyle."

Things have changed, and that goes beyond David Falk-sponsored athletes like Patrick Ewing or Kenny Anderson speaking as if the rest of the NBA-watching public was making an average of nearly eight figures a year.

In 1998, you had newspapers, and TV. That was it. You'll have to believe me when I tell you I wrote for the most popular non-mainstream NBA website (years before these things were called "blogs"), as evidenced by its status amongst the six NBA sites (your typical 2011-era NBA bookmarks, plus Nando.net and The Sporting News) you would see upon typing in "NBA" into any search engine. And our take didn't make a dent in anyone's line of thinking.

We tried. Not because we had a side in the fight, but because we knew the league. And despite the out-of-touch idiocy of some NBA players during the 1998 lockout, we still fell on their side because we knew better about what owners should have done better with the 1995 CBA.

In 2011? We know better. And the 2011 lockout is the owners' fault.

But if the 2011 lockout results in missed NBA games? Then it will be the players' fault.

This is not a change of heart. The owners had the blueprint in place to at least come close to working with shared revenue streams and various aspects of the 1999-era collective bargaining agreement (especially as modified in 2005) to keep salaries under control and say "no thanks" when it came to overpaying players and using smarts and analytics to sign a reasonable replacement for half the price.

Those owners declined. I don't completely agree with Malcolm Gladwell's assertion that owning an NBA team is a show-offy mess, but he's not far off. The owners could have, and especially should have, done better since 1999. If the summer of 2004 was no indication, then various summers since then should have been. This lockout is their fault. This lockout is the owners' fault. They bargained a bad deal, and then somehow utilized the worst aspects of it while they bid against themselves for players who didn't deserve what a supposedly player-grating CBA should have resulted in.

Why should this burden fall on the players? Why should they take the fall for pound-foolish business practices gone wrong? Why should a player earning a second contract in 2015 pay for an owner that foolishly bought his team for 200 percent of what it was worth in 2005?

I can't tell you. There's no legitimate reason why. Mortgaging the future of the type of player who will gladly take the jobs of NBA Players Association leaders like Derek Fisher and Maurice Evans in 2013 should be no concern to either Fisher and Evans (that old deli; or comedy team), current players that will stick with this league beyond 2015, or the rookies drafted last or this year. The NBA's players shouldn't give in.

But they should. And beyond all the rhetoric, they know it. It's not that it's their turn, but ? well, it's their turn.

The players made out in 1995. They made out in 1999, and they killed it again in 2005. Their fault? Hardly.

Their burden, to a game that owes them so much? To a group of incoming players set to sign to a league years from now? A league that North Americans could want nothing to do with for years on end following a missed 2011-12? �Catastrophic for those impending NBA-types that are a few years away.

Talk about the future employees that could be hurt by a bad deal, NBAPA. Try and remove the rhetoric and consider the future employees that will be hurt by a deal that costs all of 2011-12, NBAPA. You think that Jim in the Titans hat gives a crap about some 2014-15 rookie? He cares about a boring Thursday night next February, because "Community" is too "meta" for him, and he doesn't even know what "meta" means. I'm right there with him. I got the "Dinner With Andre" reference, I loved it, but I also like the Spurs/Nuggets game.

Jim also wants to watch the early LeBron and Derrick Rose contest, and the halftime bits that feature Charles Barkley. Why don't you get that, players and owners? This won't last.

The players? They've "given up" quite a bit. Now it's time to see how the other side feels.

The players took on rookie contracts so as to save payrolls to make it so the Milwaukee Bucks and Dallas Mavericks could afford to pay players 2-through-15 after the rookies were signed to guaranteed deals. They took on massive guaranteed contracts that were grandfathered into an era that supported ridiculous deals spent with no smart plan in place. The players dealt with an "average player" contract in the Mid-Level Exception that handed out five or six years to average players, forgetting of course that average players usually don't play that way after a year or so.

This is the owners' fault. This is their mess. But if the players want to keep goodwill, as discussed in the piece written by Howard Beck, then they have to step up. They have to understand that it is their turn.

Back in 1998, nobody was excited. Jordan was gone. Rodman was in Los Angeles with something called a "Carmen Electra" (read: kids? She was like Kim Kardashian, except she was a lot funnier). Nobody really cares about the NBA in late August of 2011, and they shouldn't. But that doesn't mean the goose is less golden.

This squawking bird is better off. It's a mess, no doubt, but that mess brings in the ratings. Players should know this. Times are different -- back in 1997-98, there were three nationally televised nights on TBS and TNT to work through. Right now? TNT's Thursday night (with 26 NBA teams, and all their players potentially watching, off the clock) reigns supreme. When Ernie Johnson Jr., Kenny Smith and Charles Barkley discuss the "issues" of the week, players pay attention. They're watching. You know they are.

Times are more engaged. And the world's lots larger than it looks today, now that the Internet and easy texts are at an arm's length. But, somehow, that brings everyone closer.

And though the players are under no obligation to settle for anything, they're sort of obligated to understand what came before them, how things were perverted, how they (and players that will never sniff the NBA again) took advantage, and what they should do from here on out.

It's on them. This is the owners' mess.

And this is the players' duty. The percentages in their favor have to come down. They have to help buy gas, on that jet ride from Orlando to Memphis. They have to fall back.

Again, this lockout is the owners' fault.

But if the NBA doesn't play a game in November? That's on the players. Don't stop for a second before blaming anyone else.

Earl Monroe Shaquille O Neal Hakeem Olajuwon Robert Parish Bob Pettit

вівторок, 30 серпня 2011 р.

Days of NBA Lives: Wherein Diddy visits UCLA

At this point, seemingly half the NBA is on Twitter. It's a wild world of training updates, questions as to which movies they should go see, and explanations of their Call of Duty prowess. Every so often, though, you also get a picture into the more interesting aspects of NBA life. This feature is your window into that world.

Baron Davis: Another great day at school. Recruited @iamdiddy to our history cl#!@%*#!! Good looking big bro. Professor Corey was excited!!@russwest44 @kevinlove

Kevin Love: You thought I was kidding? #whynot Wednesday.yfrog.com/hsgxagfnj

Roy Hibbert: As a kid I always wanted to be on the Price is Right. Planko was issh.

Andray Blatche: Left all my cash n the cab

Roger Mason: Played ball wit basically the whole Clippers yesterday. Gotta say i was impressed. Griffin and D Jordan dunk errything

You can also follow Eric Freeman on Twitter at @freemaneric.

Rick Barry Elgin Baylor Dave Bing Larry Bird Wilt Chamberlain

The Chinese Basketball Association bans an opt-out clause, stifling NBA expats

The state-run Chinese Basketball Association has effectively decided not to allow NBA players to join its ranks. They haven't outright banned NBA players, but the CBA has decided that it will not allow expatriates to join their teams with contracts that include an opt-out clause. Such clauses would make it easier for locked-out NBA players to leave their potential Chinese teams should the lockout end during the CBA season. China would like you to either sign for good, or stay away completely.

And while that might come off as hubris to some, how can you not applaud that line of thinking?

If anything, the CBA is thinking basketball first, and profits second. Teams from around the world, including NBA squads, have long hired players because of their ability to lure in profits from gate receipts even if their work might fly in the face of winning basketball. And while Chinese teams would no doubt rake in the cash from leasing even middle-road NBA stars to their teams for a truncated term; the coaches, team and league executives have made their voice heard.

Even if it costs China Kobe Bryant.

HoopsHype relayed the story earlier on Thursday, from Sports163.com (a piece you'll be unable to read if you're not fluent in Mandarin), and it falls in line with what we've heard for a few weeks now. The CBA has decided that opt-out clauses are a detriment to team chemistry, even if the team isn't all that good (and NBA players, relative or otherwise, are really, really good), and this could put a chokehold on the last real pipeline NBA players would have between their locked-out league and international employment.

Why? Well, the international basketball scene isn't exactly rolling in the dough these days. A Turkish team struck first in signing Deron Williams away from the New Jersey Nets last month, but Turkey is in a rare stratum due to their insistence on not being part of the European Union. With the EU dropping even in relation to the flailing U.S. dollar, international teams don't have much cash to throw around, so it falls to fringe types like Daequan Cook to fill out their rosters.

Even those roster spots are in short supply, though. And even if NBA stars want to take a significant pay cut from what they'd usually be making had the NBA not locked them out, there just isn't enough cash overseas to help these players live up to the "I'll take my guy to Greece! Or Russia!" bluster that most of their agents are trying.

And if the CBA, which famously took a chance on the mercurial (to say the least) Stephon Marbury, is passing on signing potential flight risks (no matter how many MVP awards they own), then you can be darn sure that less lucrative leagues will be doing the same. It just isn't worth it, even if you get to showcase an NBA First-Teamer for 25 games in your home arena.

There is always the chance that a player like Bryant, flush with inside knowledge regarding a lockout that might not end until the fall of 2012, will sign with a team in the CBA without an opt-out clause in place. But while the shoe companies would applaud such a move (and likely throw their heightened fiscal endorsement into the ring, considering the lucrative Chinese market), it's hard to understand why an NBA star would want to make that jump. Even for someone like Bryant, who is obsessed with playing as much basketball as he possibly can.

This all spirals back to the CBA, though, and the decision it's made. The Chinese Basketball Association has clearly chosen sound basketball chemistry over potential profits, and you've got to give it up to an organization like that.

Good basketball over cost certainty. What a novel concept. Pity the NBA and its players can't attempt to locate the same mindset.

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James to play in exhibition in Baltimore (AP)

Kevin Durant (right) drives against James Harden in Saturday's East-West pro-am game.

LeBron James says he will be joining fellow NBA All-Stars Kevin Durant, Chris Paul and Carmelo Anthony for a game in Baltimore on Tuesday. "I'm in," James said Sunday. The game is perhaps the biggest yet in a series of summer exhibitions featuring players who are waiting for the NBA lockout to end.


James Worthy Kareem Abdul Jabbar Nate Archibald Paul Arizin Charles Barkley

Brandon Jennings says Kobe Bryant shouldn?t play in the Drew League

If you walk around a random three-block area of the greater Los Angeles area, you are likely to see at least one Kobe Bryant jersey. He is the current icon of the city's sporting scene, a figure who will go down as at least as important in L.A. sports history as Magic Johnson, Tommy Lasorda and Luc Robitaille. The man owns the town and can do no wrong.

Still, Kobe's King of L.A. designation was earned, not a birthright. His only tie to the city is the Lakers, not the deeper basketball subculture at summer pro-am competitions like the Drew League.

Like many NBA players, Kobe has taken advantage of the lockout to play in the Drew League -- he even hit a notable game-winner over James Harden two weeks ago. Still, not every L.A. basketball personality has welcomed Kobe to the league with open arms. Brandon Jennings, a Compton native and current Milwaukee Bucks point guard, says Kobe shouldn't appear at Drew League events. From Mark Medina for the Los Angeles Times:

If Kobe Bryant agrees to play in a proposed Drew League-Goodman League rematch, thousands of L.A. fans would flock to wherever the game takes place. And if he does, it appears Milwaukee Bucks guard Brandon Jennings would go on his own "birther" campaign, like Donald Trump did with President Barack Obama.

"He wasn't born and raised in L.A," Jennings told ESPN the Magazine's Chris Palmer regarding Bryant, who attended Lower Merion near Philadelphia. "You gotta be from L.A. for Drew. Show me a birth certificate." [...]

Don't mistake Brandon's gripes about Bryant as a personal attack, though. Even though the Compton native would benefit from playing alongside Bryant, his gripes point more to his belief that the Drew League is compromising its roots in representing L.A. players. Jennings, after all, reiterated to Palmer the same thing he told me at the 2010 ESPY awards.

These comments from Jennings are both understandable and a little silly. On one hand, he grew up in the Drew League culture and knows that it represents the L.A. basketball scene in its purest form. However, appearances by Kobe and other stars help increase its profile, thereby boosting its popularity and bringing some attention to the local, non-NBA legends who participate.

Purity tests are usually bad news for organizations, whether they're political parties or sports leagues. Openness and acceptance tend to be virtues. But in the case of the Drew League, the NBA's lost summer could in fact lead to some unintended negative consequences. It's a league that exists to boost basketball in Los Angeles. What's it like when new players come in and treat it as a side-project instead of an organization with a legitimate goal?

If Bryant doesn't understand the goals of the Drew League, then it might make sense for him not to play. But if he wants to, it's on local stars like Jennings to teach him about it, not to say he's not allowed. There's room for everyone here, but the success of such a partnership depends on all parties respecting the needs of each other. Deciding who's invited and barred isn't going to help anyone.

Willis Reed Oscar Robertson David Robinson Bill Russell Dolph Schayes

Lockout videos: Isiah Thomas and the 1988 Finals

Since basic cable has given way to myriad channels up to and including NBA TV, we've lost some of the splendor that comes with the odd showing of something seemingly ancient on basic cable.

YouTube helps, though. And in the case of a forgotten legend like Isiah Thomas, whose playoff (if not career and/or statistical) accomplishments have been rightfully overshadowed by his pathetic turn as a broadcaster, league owner, coach, and team executive, YouTube is necessary.

It helps you remember instances like this: When CBS was in charge. More specifically, it's the time he badly sprained his ankle and still managed to drop 25 points in a quarter in Game 6 of the NBA Finals against the defending (and eventual) champion Los Angeles Lakers:

Detroit lost that game. They shouldn't have, mainly because their best player badly sprained his ankle (though he didn't exactly score all 25 on one ankle). They shouldn't have lost the Game 7 of this series, either, mainly because their leader sprained his ankle. Detroit was the better team.

To those of us whose recollections of NBA messes gone by were relegated to our own 1980s memories, the odd Sports Illustrated cover, and absolutely nothing else?

There was a show on ESPN in the mid 1990s, hosted by a slumming (yet enjoying it) Dan Patrick (that heralded Mason Comet), that managed to break down classic NBA playoff contests in 22 minutes or less. Usually sponsored by a famous terrible-taco chain. For those that dared think outside the bun, a between-gigs Isiah Thomas, talking about his team's "failures" in the 1988 Finals, was suitable for bronzing. Even without Zeke's tears, it was a hoop junkie's dream. I wish I could link to the clips.

The Pistons' captain attempted to explain, decked out in a ridiculous burgundy'ish blazer, why he could not attempt to articulate just how much that 1988 run to runner-up status meant to him. Thomas had, maybe, two minutes to explain to Patrick why he was so emotional over a Finals loss that happened just a half-decade before (as if, in 1994, 1988 was ancient history), and he just could not.

"You wouldn't understand," he kept telling Patrick. Not in a dismissive way. Not in some jock-ish way that precludes anyone from dropping 40 in an NBA game from ever "getting it."

Perhaps there was some of that. But less in Isiah at that point than I've seen in just about any other athlete who wants to tell me what's what.

No, it was in the same way that none of us will ever understand another person's greatest regret in life. Their longest fall. Their toughest defeat. The quip that could have worked. The line that may have sealed it. For love, for money, for happiness. The thing that meant the most, even if it meant the worst. I wish Isiah's interview with Patrick were online. It's in my garage somewhere, on a VHS tape, but you'll have to pardon me for not digging through the crates to find it. It's not like I've had an entire summer off to find it.

"You wouldn't understand," he told Patrick. After that he mentioned a few of his teammates. His "defeated" teammates, even though most observers knew that the 1987-88 Detroit Pistons were superior to the 1987-88 Los Angeles Lakers. Even though those teammates, outside of mainstay Adrian Dantley, were with Thomas as the Pistons went on to match the Lakers and win two consecutive championships in 1989 and 1990.

"You wouldn't understand," Thomas kept saying.

Also, there's one line beyond that, that I remember.

"To see Dennis, the way he was ..."

This interview with Patrick wasn't filmed with Dennis Rodman in Chicago, sporting the wedding dress. This wasn't Dennis, in Los Angeles, begging his way onto a team that could have used him but really should have had nothing to do with him. This wasn't Dennis, on basic cable, last year.

No, this was Dennis in San Antonio. Feuding with respected basketball minds, "dating" Madonna (a lot of "dates" down in San Antonio Mrs. Ciccone? A nice night out, wondering how far things should go beyond a peck in the back of a taxi?), throwing it all away. Figuring it all out, as we often do, while we mess it all up.

This was before "Dennis," the thing you'd gawk at, with an absence of tact. But it was during the idea of "Dennis," the guy that had a lot to figure out. Even if he was spending nights in a hotel room with, quite literally, the most famous woman in the Western world. In 1994, at least.

And it wasn't a comment, from Isiah. Nothing was planned. Nothing was set, to secure the legacy.

It was just a guy that missed the thing that happened 100 nights a year. The part of your night where some big guy would try to tap a basketball back to you at the start of a game, so that you could orchestrate a team as you saw fit.

At some point, I'll find that video. ESPN might sue the pants off of me, but I'll discover a way to post my second YouTube video beyond this one.

Until then? Watch these videos. Because Isiah Thomas, before he was a joke, was no joke. Who cares about a legacy, when your game speaks volumes?

Bill Sharman John Stockton Isiah Thomas Nate Thurmond Wes Unseld

Video: Kobe Bryant nails the game winner on James Harden ? in a tiny gym

It's a tie game. The seconds are winding down in the fourth quarter, Kobe Bryant has the ball and a chance to win the game as he attempts a one-on-one maneuver from the top of the key. Why in the heck is 6-3 Oklahoma City guard James Harden guarding Bryant in this situation?

Because it's the middle of August, there's an NBA lockout, and this is the Drew League. Harden is the best NBA player on site, and OKC's Thabo Sefolosha (who has usually defended Kobe quite well) is nowhere to be found.

Also, it's Kobe. He may not execute at the level you'd expect, but he has done this many (many, many) times before. He dropped 45 of his team's 139 points, and he nailed the game-winner on Tuesday night.

From HoopMixTape.com:

I understand that the 1998 lockout was a different time, with a different scope, and a different set of rules. And that summer leagues and acceptable summer nights out were a different story back then. During that summer I acted just as you have during this lockout, scouring everything my modem would let me glean from what actually leaked out.

It wasn't that you didn't see 35-year-old Michael Jordan at these gatherings in 1998. You also didn't see 23-year-old Ray Allen or the soon-to-be 20-year-old Kobe Bryant at these games, either.

And you certainly didn't get a lot of Kobe Bryant-types nailing game-winners in summer league championships, during the last lockout. Especially while wearing cheapo mesh jerseys with numbers (Kobe wore No. 20 in this performance) that weren't even their own. I'm not slamming the 1998 crew. I'm just telling you that things have improved.

And if nothing happens from here until September of 2012? Just watch this clip a few more times to tide you over. Thanks for that much, Kobester.

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The NBA?s players can win the PR war, but they should attempt to end the mess

The kids are back in school, the NFL is about to spark up, and the NCAA isn't far off from tipping off its own hoops season. September is a few days, and the NBA has made absolutely no inroads or advancement as it "attempts" to bargain with its players. The 2011 lockout is about to finish its second full month, and absolutely nothing has been accomplished.

Outside of, surprisingly, a warming lack of blowhard dialogue from either side. David Stern and his owners haven't gone too far over the top in presenting their case, and no player has really done much to either embarrass or take away from the message emanating from the other side.

Training camps are set to start just about a month from now, though. And if you think a July 1 mindset -- a dogged adherence to pre-lockout talking points, and absolutely no consideration for the lives and fortunes lost by potentially losing a single preseason week to this lockout counts as any sort of advancement -- then you're probably part of the legal counsel representing either side of this mess. The owners and the players don't have a car to park, a ticket to take, a section to sweep, a keg to change, an ankle to tape, or a column to type up. No wonder they haven't moved an inch.

This doesn't mean there hasn't been some advancement. At this time, back in 1998, the North American sporting world had its eyes fixed upon Sammy Sosa and (mainly) Mark McGuire as they chased down Roger Maris' home run record with a litany of locker room supplements and not a dose (no pun intended; and this is from a St. Louis Cardinals fan) of shame. With Michael Jordan all but retired and the eyes of a sports-mad nation fixed elsewhere, the NBA's players could afford to act like absolute morons as they "argued" their side of a collective bargaining agreement that (somehow, smartly) just handed Kevin Garnett a $121 million deal just two years after he graduated high school.

Still, the players screwed it up. Not the deal, which worked out in their favor. Instead, it was the way they attempted to articulate their case, while hoping that Kevin Garnett's contract somehow turned into [David Falk's client's] contract.

And this time around, the players are acting their age. And, according to Howard Beck of the New York Times, this is no co-incidence:

"It was a huge emphasis," Derek Fisher, the president of the National Basketball Players Association, said in a telephone interview. "The reality is, we're in a great position, where guys have worked to put themselves in this place where they can potentially earn millions of dollars."

[?]

At Fisher's direction, the union last fall distributed a 56-page lockout handbook to its 400-plus players. Tucked between tabs on "budgeting" and "player services" is a section devoted to "media," with talking points on everything from the N.B.A.'s financial losses ("vastly overstated") to franchise values ("Warriors just sold for $450M").

But the key point, perhaps, is this simple reminder: "Please be sensitive about interviews or other media displays of a luxurious lifestyle."

Things have changed, and that goes beyond David Falk-sponsored athletes like Patrick Ewing or Kenny Anderson speaking as if the rest of the NBA-watching public was making an average of nearly eight figures a year.

In 1998, you had newspapers, and TV. That was it. You'll have to believe me when I tell you I wrote for the most popular non-mainstream NBA website (years before these things were called "blogs"), as evidenced by its status amongst the six NBA sites (your typical 2011-era NBA bookmarks, plus Nando.net and The Sporting News) you would see upon typing in "NBA" into any search engine. And our take didn't make a dent in anyone's line of thinking.

We tried. Not because we had a side in the fight, but because we knew the league. And despite the out-of-touch idiocy of some NBA players during the 1998 lockout, we still fell on their side because we knew better about what owners should have done better with the 1995 CBA.

In 2011? We know better. And the 2011 lockout is the owners' fault.

But if the 2011 lockout results in missed NBA games? Then it will be the players' fault.

This is not a change of heart. The owners had the blueprint in place to at least come close to working with shared revenue streams and various aspects of the 1999-era collective bargaining agreement (especially as modified in 2005) to keep salaries under control and say "no thanks" when it came to overpaying players and using smarts and analytics to sign a reasonable replacement for half the price.

Those owners declined. I don't completely agree with Malcolm Gladwell's assertion that owning an NBA team is a show-offy mess, but he's not far off. The owners could have, and especially should have, done better since 1999. If the summer of 2004 was no indication, then various summers since then should have been. This lockout is their fault. This lockout is the owners' fault. They bargained a bad deal, and then somehow utilized the worst aspects of it while they bid against themselves for players who didn't deserve what a supposedly player-grating CBA should have resulted in.

Why should this burden fall on the players? Why should they take the fall for pound-foolish business practices gone wrong? Why should a player earning a second contract in 2015 pay for an owner that foolishly bought his team for 200 percent of what it was worth in 2005?

I can't tell you. There's no legitimate reason why. Mortgaging the future of the type of player who will gladly take the jobs of NBA Players Association leaders like Derek Fisher and Maurice Evans in 2013 should be no concern to either Fisher and Evans (that old deli; or comedy team), current players that will stick with this league beyond 2015, or the rookies drafted last or this year. The NBA's players shouldn't give in.

But they should. And beyond all the rhetoric, they know it. It's not that it's their turn, but ? well, it's their turn.

The players made out in 1995. They made out in 1999, and they killed it again in 2005. Their fault? Hardly.

Their burden, to a game that owes them so much? To a group of incoming players set to sign to a league years from now? A league that North Americans could want nothing to do with for years on end following a missed 2011-12? �Catastrophic for those impending NBA-types that are a few years away.

Talk about the future employees that could be hurt by a bad deal, NBAPA. Try and remove the rhetoric and consider the future employees that will be hurt by a deal that costs all of 2011-12, NBAPA. You think that Jim in the Titans hat gives a crap about some 2014-15 rookie? He cares about a boring Thursday night next February, because "Community" is too "meta" for him, and he doesn't even know what "meta" means. I'm right there with him. I got the "Dinner With Andre" reference, I loved it, but I also like the Spurs/Nuggets game.

Jim also wants to watch the early LeBron and Derrick Rose contest, and the halftime bits that feature Charles Barkley. Why don't you get that, players and owners? This won't last.

The players? They've "given up" quite a bit. Now it's time to see how the other side feels.

The players took on rookie contracts so as to save payrolls to make it so the Milwaukee Bucks and Dallas Mavericks could afford to pay players 2-through-15 after the rookies were signed to guaranteed deals. They took on massive guaranteed contracts that were grandfathered into an era that supported ridiculous deals spent with no smart plan in place. The players dealt with an "average player" contract in the Mid-Level Exception that handed out five or six years to average players, forgetting of course that average players usually don't play that way after a year or so.

This is the owners' fault. This is their mess. But if the players want to keep goodwill, as discussed in the piece written by Howard Beck, then they have to step up. They have to understand that it is their turn.

Back in 1998, nobody was excited. Jordan was gone. Rodman was in Los Angeles with something called a "Carmen Electra" (read: kids? She was like Kim Kardashian, except she was a lot funnier). Nobody really cares about the NBA in late August of 2011, and they shouldn't. But that doesn't mean the goose is less golden.

This squawking bird is better off. It's a mess, no doubt, but that mess brings in the ratings. Players should know this. Times are different -- back in 1997-98, there were three nationally televised nights on TBS and TNT to work through. Right now? TNT's Thursday night (with 26 NBA teams, and all their players potentially watching, off the clock) reigns supreme. When Ernie Johnson Jr., Kenny Smith and Charles Barkley discuss the "issues" of the week, players pay attention. They're watching. You know they are.

Times are more engaged. And the world's lots larger than it looks today, now that the Internet and easy texts are at an arm's length. But, somehow, that brings everyone closer.

And though the players are under no obligation to settle for anything, they're sort of obligated to understand what came before them, how things were perverted, how they (and players that will never sniff the NBA again) took advantage, and what they should do from here on out.

It's on them. This is the owners' mess.

And this is the players' duty. The percentages in their favor have to come down. They have to help buy gas, on that jet ride from Orlando to Memphis. They have to fall back.

Again, this lockout is the owners' fault.

But if the NBA doesn't play a game in November? That's on the players. Don't stop for a second before blaming anyone else.

Isiah Thomas Nate Thurmond Wes Unseld Bill Walton Jerry West

Video: Jordan Farmar is a nice Jewish boy, beloved in Israel

When Omri Casspi entered the NBA in 2009, he was hailed for representing Jewish athletic dominance. Many cities held heritage nights when the Sacramento Kings came to town, and his trip to New York was a bona fide media event. Jews like to see their own kind succeed, no matter the field. Take it from me, a guy who grew up with lamb's blood smeared on his door and a pan of kugel in the oven at all times.

Oddly enough, Casspi was and is still not the only Jew in the NBA. Point guard Jordan Farmar was raised in a Jewish household and even had a bar mitzvah. Yet, for whatever reason, racial or otherwise, he was not embraced with the same fervor as Casspi.

In Israel, though, he's some kind of hero. Above, watch a video of Farmar, complete with "Nice Jewish Boy" T-shirt, arriving in Israel to finalize his agreement to play with Maccabi Tel Aviv during the NBA lockout. There's a sizable crowd to greet him at the airport, and Farmar seems legitimately excited to be there.

The length of his stay is yet to be determined, but it's nice to see him getting some love. I'm not exactly sure why he never caught on in the Jewish community to the same degree as Casspi, but he's deserving of the same kind of identification. We diasporic Jews need to stick together.

(Original video via PBT)

Earl Monroe Shaquille O Neal Hakeem Olajuwon Robert Parish Bob Pettit

понеділок, 29 серпня 2011 р.

Kobe Bryant and Luke Walton sent thousands of bucks to laid-off Laker employees

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Since pro athletes began earning millions of dollars for a season's work, the idea of a "playoff bonus" seems almost quaint. The reward for making the playoffs, or even winning a series or two, numbers in the tens of thousands; but when you're potentially making eight figures a year those bonuses hardly seem like a big deal.

To regular schmos, though, that cash can go a long way. And the Los Angeles Lakers players, with Kobe Bryant and Luke Walton leading the charge, made sure the bonuses from last season's disappointing playoff run went into the hands of the Lakers that needed it most. Namely, two video coordinators who were laid off by the Lakers as soon as the lockout started.

The Los Angeles Times has the scoop:

Kobe Bryant insisted on giving some of the team's playoff bonus to two members of the Lakers' video department whose contracts were not renewed after the season. Chris Bodaken and Patrick O'Keefe split about $65,000 of the Lakers' playoff bonus.

Bodaken started with the Lakers as a ball boy in 1986 and spent the last 10 seasons as their director of video services. O'Keefe was the Lakers' video coordinator for six seasons. They both hope to be re-hired by the team when the NBA lockout ends. For now, they are thankful for Bryant's financial gesture.

"He always looks out for people who are lower on the totem pole," O'Keefe said.

The article goes on to point out that Walton gave an undisclosed amount to the teams' training staff, and that the Lakers have laid off 20 employees since the season ended. Most could be re-hired once the NBA lockout ends, but chalk up another 20 casualties of a lockout that shows no sign of ending.

The Lakers are under no obligation to pay for team employees to work over the offseason. They're also under no such obligation to pay employees during a spell where teams are precluded from even speaking or emailing or even tweeting with their players. Team employees are almost scared to make eye contact with players, much less help a backup small forward work on his knee rehab over the summer.

This goes well beyond a famous general manager having a round of golf with his highest-paid player. Earlier this month we heard of a ridiculous but true story about a low-level Orlando Magic employee that had to silently dash out of a convenience store after co-worker Dwight Howard strolled in, with Howard essentially giving the team employee the "seriously?" shrugged-shoulders look in response. It wasn't her fault, and she wasn't being rude. It's just the letter of the law, these days. It's that ridiculous.

With those rules in place, though, let's not pretend like the Lakers are a typical case. They had a massive payroll last season, including former coach Phil Jackson, and yet only made it to the second round. Still, the then-defending champs were massively profitable, and they recently signed a local TV deal that could earn the team potential billions over the course of the run. Should the NBA cancel the 2011-12 season, the Lakers will still take in guaranteed national TV money, without having to pay a dime to the team's players.

That's a long way of saying that they could certainly afford to keep those 20 employees on, even if they're under no obligation to.

The Laker players, most notably Bryant and Walton, clearly felt some obligation. Good for them.

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Days of NBA Lives: Wherein Kevin Love takes Intro to Sports Guy Studies

At this point, seemingly half the NBA is on Twitter. It's a wild world of training updates, questions as to which movies they should go see, and explanations of their Call of Duty prowess. Every so often, though, you also get a picture into the more interesting aspects of NBA life. This feature is your window into that world.

Blake Griffin: Shout out to the dude in the hummer on the 405 who just flipped off an old lady for no reason. The devil is smiling. #LA

Kevin Love: Interesting question posed in class. In context of American popular culture, who would YOU put on your cultural Mt. Rushmore?

Nazr Mohammed: The only players that can get away with buying homes where they play are the franchise players. Better chances of being there long term. ? I learned my lesson... Didn't listen to my financial advisor 2x's and bought a house where I played and lost big both x's. #RealtorWasHappy

Jameer Nelson: OMGoodness. This laday next to me on the plane has a bunch of Fried fish and other Ish!!!! She got the plane on stink... Ewww and she's spilling stuff everywhere. I can't even concentrate on this Carter 4 right now.

Sonny Weems: At least in Spain and Italy you can say some of the words in there language, but here you can't pronounce anything at all lol

You can also follow Eric Freeman on Twitter at @freemaneric.

Dave Cowens Billy Cunningham Dave DeBusschere Clyde Drexler Julius Erving

The NBA might lose its recently announced preseason, and that?s a big deal

The NBA announced its preseason schedule on Thursday, to be played should the lockout resolve itself by autumn. And laugh all you want at the idea of a lost month of basketball that nobody cares about, but there is value to NBA basketball in October.

On Oct. 9, the strongest and saddest of NBA junkies will likely tune into the NBA League Pass subscription's free preview that they've probably already paid for, in order to ignore both the baseball playoffs and the NFL's Sunday night lineup, and take in a preseason game between the Detroit Pistons and Minnesota Timberwolves. That night those sickies will also flip around to see what's going on with the Mark Jackson-"led" Warriors and the Mike Brown-"helmed" Lakers at the Save-Mart Center in Fresno, Calif. And, if San Antonio's FOX Sports provider deigns to send a crew out, they'll probably click over to see how the Hornets are faring against the Spurs in Texas that night.

This obscure scenario takes place every fall, and it's not a minute too soon for NBA fans that are already bored with a month-old NFL season, or ticked that their favorite baseball team didn't challenge for the pennant. The problem getting in the way of this yearly routine this time around is that the NBA is seven weeks into a lockout. No progress has been made on either side in an attempt to create a new collective bargaining agreement between the league and its players, and the entire 2011-12 season is in jeopardy as a result.

Along with a minor casualty, at least in the eyes of most. The NBA's preseason will be the first to go.

The NBA's warm-up stage, as is the case with baseball's spring training or the NFL's oft-mocked (but highly watched) preseason, is a bit of a joke. Teams will field eventual regular-season starters, but they're often hooked off the court a few minutes into the opening quarter of each half, and a litany of roster invites and rookies will do most of the heavy lifting before a crowd of very few.

On top of that, even with the inherent team-building exercises and attempts at building chemistry or learning a new coach's system, you never hear of teams turning a corner because of a preseason gone right. You've never heard an eventual champion point to Oct. 17, in Minot, N.D., as the point where everything started to click. Unless they're talking about some sort of cell phone app that told them which restaurants were open after 11:30 at night in Minot, N.D.

There is value to that month of anonymity, though.

As is the case with regular-season games in winter that hardly matter, or aren't highly regarded, the sheer financial impact behind these contests is significant. Not only will those roster invites earn more in a month than they might make in a half-season spent in the minors or overseas, but the addition to the resume is profound. They get to go on record as having been a member of an NBA team for a short spell, and this isn't huge because they'll get to keep their uniform and the team-issued sweats. The real count is when they're potentially called into service midseason on that or another team, and they remember what Flip Saunders likes to run coming off a made free throw. That stuff counts, to a coach, when it's time to throw the midseason injury replacement into action late in the third quarter.

And the local impact? Whether it's Minot or Manhattan, these games bring people out of their living rooms and into an arena. And along the way those people have to pay for gas, swipe a subway pass card, buy a pretzel, tip on a beer, pay for parking, get something "for the kids," and fork over cash for myriad other transactions. Even in preseason, this stuff counts. Even during the preseason, there is someone on the other side of that transaction planning out that week's bills and what they can spend on groceries knowing that they'll make a certain amount of cash during the Nets/76ers game that might not even be televised locally.

Of course, the NBA wants you to believe that there will be a preseason this year. And the NBA's players would like you to believe that they're optimistic that things will work out soon enough and that the Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids, Mich., will get to see the Raptors and Pistons on Oct. 12.

That's just talk, at this point. And that's all there has been, since July 1 when this lockout began.

There's just too much ground to cover, before we can consider rocking the Van Andel Arena. The owners have to figure out how they're going to slice up their share of the pie in terms of revenue sharing between large and small markets, even before they present to the players what they think a fair sharing of pie would include. The players have to come clean on the fact that they've gotten fat with pie time and again since 1999, and though poor business and basketball decisions have a part in that, that it is time to give in. And both sides haven't even gotten into the millions that are spent each month in team expenses, costs that aren't even factored into this particular pie.

It's mid-August. Kids are sizing themselves up for backpacks, football season is starting, and baseball fans are learning how to calculate the magic numbers needed to take the division. Nobody is thinking about the NBA's preseason, which is usually the case even in mid-October.

The NBA and its players should be, though. Even with games that don't count, there's still quite a lot to lose.

James Worthy Kareem Abdul Jabbar Nate Archibald Paul Arizin Charles Barkley