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NBA players thrilled, as lockout nears ends

The Associated Press
By The Associated Press
4 Min Read Nov. 27, 2011 | 14 years Ago
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MIAMI -- Surprise, relief, joy and even some caution.

Those were the reactions of many NBA players and fans Saturday, amid news that the labor dispute that led to the cancellation of hundreds of games and threatened the entire season was nearing an end.

No schedules are out, the collective bargaining agreement has not been drafted and formal votes on the deal remain unscheduled. Still, for the first time in months, optimism seemed to take the lead over pessimism on the NBA's emotional scoreboard.

"The journey now begins!!" soon-to-be Cleveland guard Kyrie Irving, the league's No. 1 draft pick, wrote on Twitter.

Well, soon enough, anyway.

Barring either side rejecting the deal, training camps will open Dec. 9, with the league's first three games set to be played on Christmas. The Utah Jazz invited fans to start calling again to discuss ticket options, the reigning NBA champion Dallas Mavericks wrote "Go Mavs" on Twitter shortly after the middle-of-the-night news conference to announce the breakthrough, and Shaquille O'Neal recorded a brief video to show his excitement.

"Haven't crossed the finish line yet," wrote Orlando guard J.J. Redick, "but there's definitely a reason to be optimistic."

The league and the union announced around 3 a.m. that they had struck a tentative deal calling for a 66-game season, meaning many owners -- and players -- were asleep, unaware of the news until they awoke. Miami guard Dwyane Wade was text-messaging with an associate shortly after 4 a.m., and his reaction was subdued given the lateness of the hour.

"All I feel right now is, 'Finally,' " Wade said to The Associated Press.

Free agent Shane Battier said he was getting "mad love" from fans in Memphis, Miami, Oklahoma City and Houston -- teams that all figure to be in the mix for his services.

Even former players were relieved, including Basketball Hall of Fame player Isiah Thomas, a former union president during his time with the Detroit Pistons.

"I'm extremely pleased and relieved," said Thomas, now the Florida International coach. "Basketball in society is extremely important for social reasons, for economic reasons, and the game has always been used to bring people together -- not tear them apart. That being said, I think the owners and the players realized that they are not bigger than the game. By them coming together and continuing to work together, I'm pleased with that. That's the way it should be."

Thomas added that he got very concerned when lawsuits started getting filed. Had the sides started waging battles in courtrooms, Thomas feared the worst.

"Once the owners and players are going to court, relationships are severely damaged and severed forever," he said. "Now that they're back working together to better the game, those relationships have a chance to continue to exist."

It should come as no surprise that the Heat -- who will be among the favorites for the NBA title when the season gets rolling -- were overjoyed by the news. LeBron James, Mario Chalmers and even team owner Micky Arison told their Twitter followers that they couldn't wait to get started.

But not everyone was celebrating.

"With high school and college basketball now playing, who really needed the NBA?" asked Ed White of Allentown, Pa. who was at Saturday's NJIT-St. Francis (NY) men's basketball game in Newark. "I think they're going to lose some fans because of this. The NBA treats its fans like they really don't care. I'm personally offended by both the owners and the players' attitudes through all of this. They play for the fans. ... I think people will go back eventually, but not right away. It's always about the money. The owners always want more. The players always want more. But when was the last time someone spent money to see an owner score a basket• The owners should realize that."

Teams largely remained quiet, since the league's lockout rules technically are still in place -- and likely will stay that way until the deal is actually ratified and signed.

Many details of the agreement are still getting finalized, but it's clear that owners gave in on a few issues to get the deal done -- including the plan that players would get no more than 47 percent of basketball-related income. The target is still a 50-50 split, but with a band from 49 percent to 51 percent that gives the players a better chance of reaching the highest limit than previously proposed.

For players, getting those 3 BRI points back is no small victory -- each point is worth around $40 million annually.

"I woke up and saw that they had come to a tentative agreement, and I was a little bit surprised that the owners had given more," said ESPN's Jeff Van Gundy, the former NBA coach and brother of Orlando Magic coach Stan Van Gundy. "I think the players did a good job in extracting as much as they were going to extract from ownership it seems. And I like the length of the season. I think that should be the length of the season under normal circumstances."

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