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But the free agency bonanza also showed why owners want the changes. Stern has said they feel the pressure to spend as much as possible to show their fans a commitment to win. The smaller-market teams, meanwhile, don't have the luxury of taking those chances, knowing the money won't be coming in through ticket sales and local TV revenue if their teams struggle. So now they want a system that would curb their spending through a hard salary cap, which the players strongly oppose.
"We got max salaries, we got a limit on annual increases, we got restrictions on player movement, so we've got as far as I'm concerned pretty much a hard cap," union executive director Billy Hunter said.
The sides are scheduled to meet twice this week and say they hope for frequent discussions before the end of the month. Should those fail, the NBA could follow the NFL's labor situation right into the court system, which both sides say they want to avoid. So although a work stoppage in July wouldn't seem to have much effect since games aren't going on, Stern insists "we very much feel the weight of the deadline."
But can they get something done before it?
"I think this is going to be a scenario where the players are going to have to sacrifice and I think at the end of the day the owners are probably going sacrifice a little bit as well," player rep Roger Mason Jr. of the Knicks said. "I guess the biggest thing is figuring out what that middle ground is and we haven't been able to do that at this point."
[Associated Press;
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