Ginobili fue discriminado en la NBA

El mejor basquetbolista argentino de la historia aseguró haber sido menospreciado por ser «blanco y sudamericano».

Emanuel Ginobili, el mejor basquetbolista argentino de la historia, reveló, en una entrevista con la revista de cultura villera «La Garganta Poderosa», haber sido discriminado en Estados Unidos por su color de piel y su procedencia sudamericana.

«Fui menospreciado por ser blanquito, por venir de Sudamérica, porque nadie me conocía. Lo notaba por ejemplo cuando estaba defendiendo a un rival; notaba cómo me miraba, seguramente pensando: `¿y éste de dónde viene, quién es?`, y le decía a sus compañeros: «Dámela a mí, que me marca éste», señaló Ginobili.

El jugador del seleccionado nacional, que ganó la medalla de oro en los Juegos Olímpicos de Atenas 2004, el bronce en Beijing 2008 y que participará de Londres 2012, agregó: «Discriminación hay en todo el mundo» y que la vivió «en todos lados, con diversas excusas».

Igualmente, el jugador de San Antonio Spurs en la NBA de Estados Unidos, explicó que en su caso los prejuicios fueron sólo dentro de la cancha.

«La discriminación no me tocó por ser un personaje popular y porque el básquet en San Antonio es muy importante. Eso es lamentable porque hay muchas personas anónimas que sí la sufren», enfatizó.

Fuente: Lv7

AP source: NBA owners hold conference call

NEW YORK (AP)—A person with knowledge of the details says NBA owners have held a conference call to receive an update on the lockout.
Also Thursday, the antitrust lawsuit filed by players in California was reassigned to U.S. District Judge Samuel Conti. The first case management conference has been scheduled for 10 a.m. March 9, 2012.
The players’ association disbanded Monday, and players filed two lawsuits Tuesday, one each in California and Minnesota.
The conference call involving the league’s Board of Governors was not in response to the litigation, but rather a planned update on the status of the collective bargaining negotiations, the person told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the details were to be kept private.

Players file antitrust complaint against league

NEW YORK (AP)—NBA players filed an antitrust complaint against the league in Minnesota and plan to file another complaint in California later Tuesday.
The first antitrust suit vs. the NBA was filed in Minneapolis, where NFL players had some level of success in a similar court proceeding this summer.

Timberwolves forward Anthony Tolliver(notes), Pistons guard Ben Gordon(notes), free agent forward Caron Butler(notes) and Derrick Williams(notes), the second overall draft pick by Minnesota in June who has yet to sign a rookie contract because of the lockout, are listed as plaintiffs in the Minnesota case.

NBA players’ association executive director Billy Hunter said another complaint will be filed in the Northern District of California. Those plaintiffs include Carmelo Anthony(notes), Chauncey Billups(notes), Kevin Durant(notes), Kawhi Leonard(notes) and Leon Powe(notes).

According to the Minnesota complaint, the class-action lawsuit has been broken up into “subclasses” because they are “so numerous and geographically so widely dispersed that joinder of all members is impracticable.”

The plaintiffs argue that the lockout “constitutes an illegal group boycott, price-fixing agreement, and/or restraint of trade in violation of the Sherman Act” and that the owners’ final offer for a new CBA would have “wiped out the competitive market for most NBA players.”

David Boies, an attorney for the players, said in a press conference Tuesday afternoon the lawsuit was an attempt to restore competitive free-market conditions.

“We hope it’s not necessary to go to trial,” he said.

The NBA already has filed a pre-emptive lawsuit in New York seeking to prove the lockout is legal and contends that without a union that collectively bargained them, the players’ guaranteed contracts could legally be voided. During oral arguments on Nov. 2, the NBA asked U.S. District Judge Paul Gardephe to decide the legality of its lockout, but he was reluctant to wade into the league’s labor mess. Gardephe has yet to issue a ruling.

The league through its earlier lawsuit had tried to gain the legal home court.

Now, various judges will have to sort who which court or courts will decide the issues.

The Minnesota district court has been favorable to the NFLPA during litigation dating to the 1980s. The federal court in San Francisco is under the jurisdiction of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, considered the most liberal of the 13 circuit courts. Sixteen of the 25 active judges were appointed by Democratic presidents, and the U.S. Supreme Court reversed the 9th Circuit’s Judge Stephen Reinhardt three times in just the last term.

In a sign of the importance of the court, U.S. District Judge Susan Richard Nelson in Minneapolis issued a preliminary injunction ending NFL lockout on April 25, but her decision was overturned by the more conservative 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis.

Boies argued for the NFL in that case but has since decided to take up with the players in the NBA’s labor struggle.

Attorney Barbara Berens represented some NFL players in their antitrust lawsuit as well. She wrote in the Minneapolis filing Tuesday that the NBA’s antitrust exemption no longer applies after the players disclaimed interest in the union.

“The collective bargaining process and relationship have completely broken down, and the NBA players have exercised their labor law right not to be a union,” Berens wrote.

Boies said players will not seek a preliminary injunction to lift the lockout. Because the lockout “arguably grew out of prior collective bargaining discussions,” Boies said he believes it would be very difficult to get a preliminary injunction and could delay the case.

He added that it’s in “everybody’s interests to resolve this quickly,” adding the longer it goes on, the greater the damages to the players, teams and fans.
sports.yahoo.com

NBA players reject offer, put season in jeopardy

NBA Commissioner David Stern speaks at a press conference after NBA labour negotiations.
The National Basketball Players Association (NBPA) rejected the owners’ latest proposal for a new labour agreement and will file an antitrust lawsuit against the league, union chief Billy Hunter said on Monday.
The NBPA said it would no longer continue in collective bargaining and would dissolve the union to become a trade association in order to pursue legal action against the NBA, a move that threatens the entire 2011-12 season.
«We have arrived at the conclusion that the collective bargaining process has completely broken down,» NBPA executive director Hunter said at a news conference in New York.
«As a result, within the last hour we served a notice of disclaimer on Commissioner (David) Stern and the NBA.»
Stern, who already canceled the first month of a regular season that was scheduled to begin two weeks ago, admitted the 2011-12 campaign is in jeopardy but that the NBA was prepared for the union’s latest move.
«In anticipation of this day, the NBA filed an unfair labor practice charge before the National Labor Relations Board asserting that, by virtue of its continued threats, the union was not bargaining in good faith,» Stern said in a statement.
«We also began a litigation in federal court in anticipation of this same bargaining tactic.»
The NBA, which claims it lost $300 million last season with 22 of its 30 teams in the red, locked out players on July 1.
The latest offer by the NBA called for a 50-50 split of basketball related income between the owners and players and would have provided for a 72-game season to start on Dec. 15.
Players, who received 57 percent of basketball income in the previous contract, also are at odds with the owners over rules governing contracts and free agency.
«We have negotiated in good faith for over two years and we’ve done everything anybody could reasonably expect of us particularly when you look at the number of give-backs and concessions,» said Hunter.
«But the players just felt that they have given enough, that the NBA was not willing or prepared to continue to negotiate. Things were not going to get better and they were going to continue to reach and grab.»
Stern had told the players that if they did not accept the latest owners’ proposal, that their next offer would be rolled back to 47 percent of the pie for the players.
buenosairesherald.com

NBA season could be saved or sunk in coming days

NEW YORK (AP)—The time for talk in the NBA is over.
David Stern made that clear Thursday, saying the league is done negotiating. The next time he hears from the players’ association, he expects an answer: Yes, players will accept the league’s latest proposal for a new collective bargaining agreement, or no they won’t.

If they do, the NBA will commence with a 72-game season on Dec. 15.

Derek Fisher fears the entire NBA season will be lost.
(AP)
And if no? Then the next time LeBron James(notes), Kobe Bryant(notes) and the rest of the NBA’s biggest stars are in uniform, it might be in London during next summer’s Olympics.
So the NBA’s lengthy labor fight could come to an end this week. Or, the next phase might just be beginning.

Should players reject this deal—and they certainly don’t love it—the next one comes with terms they would never accept, likely sending them into the court system to file an antitrust lawsuit against the league after disbanding the union. That’s far from an assured victory, but it practically assures there would be no 2011-12 season.

Stern knows which he prefers—and which he thinks the union should accept.

“We both recognize the seriousness of what we’re facing,” he said. “I think both sides would like to begin the season on Dec. 15th, if that’s possible. I think our teams want to start playing. That desire is matched by our players. We’ve done the best we can to cause that to happen. I think the events of the week and the offer that we presented had the desired impact of causing us both to focus intensely on whether there was a deal here to be done. We very much want to make the deal that’s on the table that would get our players into training camp and to begin the 2011-12 season.

“I don’t have a crystal ball. I just have the ability to hope that it will come to that and that our players will accept this revised proposal from the NBA.”

That’s far from guaranteed.

The revised proposal makes some improvements over the one players said was unacceptable after a meeting of team representatives earlier in the week. A person directly involved with the talks told The Associated Press on Friday that there are some within the league—including owners—who “can’t believe” players would hesitate to accept it.

“All this deal does is slow the growth of player salaries,” the person said. “No one will be taking any cut. Their response to the movement on Wednesday and Thursday is very disappointing.”

But it doesn’t address all the players’ concerns about the salary cap system. They have said before they would agree to the financial concessions owners are demanding if there is more movement toward their issues with the system.

“There are some important issues we feel that we need to close this out in order to get a deal done, in particular when you consider the economic concessions we have made thus far,” union president Derek Fisher(notes) said.

The revised proposal will allow teams over the luxury tax to participate in sign-and-trades for the first two years of the 10-year deal, which would have the union’s desired opt-out after six years. The “mini” midlevel exception for taxpayers would be for three years and $3 million annually, up from two years and $2.5 million, and another midlevel would be included for teams that are under the cap.

Annual raises were upped to 6.5 percent for “Bird” players re-signing with their own teams and 3.5 percent for others, but that’s still far below the 10.5 percent and 8 percent in the expired CBA. And players remain concerned that the “repeater” penalties the league wants to charge teams that are over the tax more than three times in a five-year span would be so punitive that it would scare some teams from spending, limiting the options they would have in free agency.

The revised proposal also includes additional salary limitations on teams over the cap that use the midlevel or sign-and-trades that would prevent them from using the Bird exception, and would not only raise the escrow from 8 percent to 10 percent of salaries, but if there was a shortfall would make up the rest through deductions the following season.

Union officials have repeatedly said the system issues are perhaps more important to them than the split of basketball-related income, but owners say they need fundamental changes in both to allow for a chance to profit and to ensure more competitive balance throughout the league.

“They’re trying to put a system in place that severely restricts the players when competitive balance can be absolutely taken care of through proper revenue sharing,” agent Mark Bartelstein said.

Displeasure with the proposal from the players’ side was all over the internet Friday. Problem is, players know what comes next if they reject this deal: one that would call for 53-47 split of BRI in the owners’ favor, a flex cap with a hard ceiling, and rollbacks of current contracts. That’s why Fisher and union executive director Billy Hunter, who said it was “not the greatest proposal in the world,” have little choice but to see if it’s one the players could support.

So Hunter said he’ll have the player reps back to New York on Monday and “sit them down to say, `You sent us out to get something, here is what we’re coming back with. Let’s sit down and decide what our next option is. What are we going to do? Are we going to go back and attempt to engage the NBA again to see if we can get something or what are our other options?”’

They can forget that one. After a two-month flurry of meetings in hotels throughout New York, Stern is all talked out and wants the deal done.

“We have done everything possible that was possible to do given our joint goals of both having a sound economic model and having the most competitive league,” he said. “The union raised some issues, and we discussed those with the (labor relations) committee. We moved as far as we could move. So now we are at where we’re at. I’m optimistic that the NBA owners will approve it if the union approves it. We await the response from the union. We’ve done our best.”

Many players want to go back to work, and a 72-game season allows them to make back some of the money that seemed lost. They would collectively be out $250 million in salaries, about $100 million less than Hunter had said they would forfeit for every month they were locked out.

But Hunter said Tuesday on NBA TV he was aware that perhaps 200 players were in the process of signing decertification cards, so the fight may soon be out of his hands. He has only a few days left to see if that can be avoided.

“It’s been a long haul, man,” he said. “We’re coming near the end of it. We’re trying to get this thing done.”

Follow Brian Mahoney on Twitter: twitter.com/Briancmahoney

NBA: Labor dispute talks to continue

National Basketball Association (NBA) owners and players will resume labor dispute talks Thursday after 12 hours of discussions in New York ended late in the night with the sides no closer to a resolution.
«We’ve agreed to stop the clock while we continue to negotiate. We have agreed to convene here tomorrow at noon time,» NBA Commissioner David Stern told reporters.
«I would not read into this optimism or pessimism we are just continuing to negotiate. Nothing was worked out today.»
The talks at a Manhattan hotel on Wednesday had gone past Stern’s 17:00 ET deadline for players to accept his latest offer or get a worse deal on the table.
Stern had said the offer would switch to 53-47 in favor of the owners unless an agreement was reached Wednesday. However, with talks still ongoing, Stern said they would revert to that offer when this latest round of discussions ended.
«We are trying to demonstrate our good faith and the union is trying to demonstrate its good faith,» Stern said.
After the marathon meeting, NBA Players Association President Derek Fisher said they had failed to move any closer to a deal.
«We can’t say there was significant progress today,» Fisher told reporters. «We’ll be back tomorrow … and we’ll see if we can continue to make the efforts at least to finish this out.»
buenosairesherald.com

NBA: Owners meet with union to try to broker labor deal

There is renewed optimism the NBA season could soon resume after players and owners spent more than 10 hours locked in discussions about reaching a labor agreement.
Talks had broken off last week with little sign of progress toward ending a lockout that has been in place since July 1 and forced the cancellation of the pre-season and first two weeks of regular season games.
Commissioner David Stern rejoined the discussions, after he had missed the last meeting with the flu, which also included players union executive director Billy Hunter and president Derek Fisher, NBA TV reported on Wednesday.
Last week’s meeting ended when it was reported the owners demanded a 50-50 split of revenues. The players had lowered their demands from 57 to 52.5 percent.
It was anticipated that Stern would announce further cancellations this week. His failure to yet do so could be seen as a positive sign though it is unclear whether an 82-game season could still be salvaged.
buenosairesherald.com

NBA approves sale of 76ers as lockout drags on

The sale of the Philadelphia 76ers to a group led by Apollo Global Management co-founder Josh Harris was approved by the National Basketball Association’s (NBA) board of governors, the league said.
Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
Comcast-Spectacor, led by Ed Snider, purchased the 76ers in 1996 and the team was valued at US$330 million in a Forbes survey earlier this year, below the league average of US$369 million.
Harris, who co-founded the private equity player in 1990, is joined in the ownership group by David Blitzer, a senior managing director of global private equity giant Blackstone Group.
«We are delighted that the NBA’s Board of Governors has approved Josh Harris and David Blitzer’s purchase of the 76ers,» NBA Commissioner David Stern said in a statement.
«Josh and David bring vast business experience that will greatly benefit the team as it continues to grow both on and off the court.»
The 76ers, who have not won an NBA championship since 1983, finished 41-41 last season and lost to the Miami Heat in the first round of the playoffs.
The approval of the sale comes as the NBA is in the midst of a lockout that began July 1 and has forced the cancellation of at least the first two weeks of the 2011-12 regular season.
buenosairesherald.com

Argentina’s Scola «nervous» over NBA conflict

BUENOS AIRES- The Argentine basketball player Luis Scola on Monday said he is «very nervous» due to the ongoing lack of clarity in the U.S. National Basketball Association (NBA) conflict which has caused him not to play.

Scola, 31, a power forward player of the NBA Houston Rockets, said he would not rule out the possibility of playing for an Argentine team until the lockout set by the NBA is resolved but agreed it would be unlikely as he would «run into an insurance problem.»

«It is a complicated period. At first, it seemed almost fun, but now I am becoming very nervous and I want the conflict to be solved,» he said about the conflict in the main basketball league in the world.

Scola also said he had not put any date as to when he will define what to do about his future and pointed out that he «likes to play in the NBA» but that he cannot «be months without playing basketball.»

«I need to be in shape and competing. I don’t feel like going to the other side, make my family adapt to another country, adapt myself to other rules, another coach. I am not used to it,» said the former partner of the Chinese player Yao Ming in the Houston Rockets.

Source: Xinhua

Scola abrió una puerta

Nunca dije que fuera una locura jugar en nuestro país”, declaró Luis. Como en la NBA todavía no se sabe si habrá acción…

La solución para el cierre patronal que pone en peligro el inicio de la temporada de la NBA no llega y la demora permite que se escuchen declaraciones que en otro momento parecerían utópicas. “Nunca dije que fuera una locura jugar en nuestro país, tampoco lo descarto”, manifestó Luis Scola, ante la indefinición del conflicto generado entre los jugadores y los dueños de las franquicias de la liga más importante del mundo. A pesar de las ilusiones que crearon sus palabras, el capitán del seleccionado argentino se encargó de aclarar que igualmente su prioridad será “jugar en una liga muy competitiva para mantenerme en un nivel interesante”. Lógica pura.

A raíz del lockout, ya hay 66 basquetbolistas que firmaron contratos con equipos fuera de los Estados Unidos. Por su parte, Luifa afirmó que “si no se encuentra la salida en dos semanas” empezará a pensar seriamente en dónde continuará su carrera. “Está claro que quiero y necesito jugar”, remarcó el ex Ferro.

Lo más probable es que Scola deba replantearse pronto su futuro, dado que las reuniones de negociación llevadas a cabo ayer no arrojaron un acuerdo y los representantes de los jugadores dijeron que no volverán a juntarse a discutir del asunto hasta dentro de uno o dos meses. ¿Qué vas a hacer, Luifa?

Fuente: La Razón

No NBA deal after day of salary cap talks

NEW YORK (AP) — With a month until the NBA season, players and owners don’t sound much closer to a labor deal than they did when the lockout began.
They’re so far apart on money they decided to leave it alone Saturday and focused mainly on the salary cap.
They couldn’t solve that one, either.
«I wouldn’t say there was any progress. What happened was, they put some concepts up, we put some concepts up, and we’re still miles apart,» union executive director Billy Hunter said. «There’s a huge bridge, gap, that I don’t know if we’re going to be able to close it or not.»
The sides will meet again Monday — the day training camps were to have begun — though time is getting short to save the start of the regular season, scheduled for Nov. 1. Neither side sounds optimistic.
In a seven-hour bargaining session, their longest since the lockout began July 1, the sides talked about one of the two major issues that divides them. Owners want a hard cap, or at least want a number of changes to the current soft cap system, which the players prefer to keep largely intact.
The sides didn’t even attempt to deal with the division of revenues, the other big obstacle to a labor agreement that would end the lockout.
Commissioner David Stern said he had nothing to announce in terms of cancellations. But the remainder of the preseason schedule is in jeopardy — some games already have been canceled. Regular-season games could now be threatened, too.
«Our desire would be to not cancel, and we had been hopeful that this weekend would be a broader marker, but for reasons which we understand, the players suggested that we resume on Monday, and we said ‘fine,'» Stern said.
Stern did indicate some level of progress, saying: «We’re not near anything, but wherever that is, we’re closer than we were before.»
The sides will meet in small groups, then bring large groups back for another meeting Tuesday.
Hunter again said owners haven’t moved off their proposal to trim the players’ guarantee of basketball-related income to 46 percent, down from the 57 percent they were guaranteed in the previous collective bargaining agreement.
With the gulf so wide on money, Hunter suggested they separate the issues and attack one at a time. They started with the cap, where the league has transitioned from a desire for a hard cap to a proposal that would make the luxury tax more severe for the highest-spending teams. Union officials fear that would act like a hard cap by scaring teams into spending less to avoid a harsh penalty.
Stern, Hunter and Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver all said they felt some good came of going at the cap issue first. But they couldn’t resolve it, and it leaves another problem on the horizon largely untouched.
«I can’t necessarily characterize things as we made progress and that I’m somehow more optimistic than I was yesterday,» union president Derek Fisher of the Lakers said. «The reality is we still have an extremely long way to go. Even with the exchanges that we made today, there’s still huge gaps in what we’ve proposed compared to what they’ve proposed, and then obviously we still have the economics that are just kind of sitting out there waiting for us to tackle. So there’s a lot of work left to be done, but we’ll keep at this.»
Fisher said the players basically gave the owners a list of things they wanted kept in the next cap, likely things such as the midlevel and Larry Bird exceptions that allow teams to exceed the cap. However, the league is looking for ways to keep costs down for owners, and those items are easy targets.
Stern also confirmed he and Miami All-Star Dwyane Wade had a «heated exchange of some kind» during Friday’s meeting. Most of the star players had left by Saturday, but Stern and Silver said they were pleased by the number of players who did show up, singling out Boston’s Paul Pierce as one who said some meaningful things.
Hunter said he assumed it would be possible to save the entire season if the sides agreed to a deal by the middle of next week. But that will be difficult, given it could take as much as month between an agreement being reached and the time games could be played, so that free agency and exhibition games can first take place.
Hunter added the union hadn’t even signed off on the league’s plan for enhanced revenue sharing among teams, after Stern indicated Friday that players would be OK with it.
Even though Stern had warned of «enormous consequences» of not making significant progress toward a deal this weekend, he is remaining hopeful.
«If we didn’t think that there was any hope, we wouldn’t be scheduling the meetings,» he said. «But that’s the best I would say right now.»

NBA players not taking serious look overseas yet

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — John Wall isn’t taking his game overseas yet.
If the NBA lockout continues to drag on, well, he just might.
«Maybe down the road, but not right now,» the former No. 1 overall pick said Saturday night when asked about the possibility before a loosely organized exhibition game in Indianapolis.
One day after league officials announced the postponement of training camp and the cancellation of 43 preseason games, 16 NBA players participated in a game that could become the new normal for NBA fans. Most participants played high school, college or pro ball near Indianapolis.
The game, of course, came without many of the NBA’s usual trimmings.
Instead of thousands of fans, only a few hundred showed up at the University of Indianapolis, a Division II school that will be the practice site for this year’s Super Bowl team from the NFC.
Instead of hearing a live person sing the National Anthem, a recording was played over the public address system.
Instead of wearing clearly distinguishing colors, the team with black jerseys was told to turn theirs inside out just before tip-off in an effort to delineate themselves from the navy blue team.
And instead of making money, the proceeds from Saturday’s Indy Pro Am Lockout League game will benefit foundations headed by new Pacers player George Hill, former Indiana Mr. Basketball Eric Gordon and WNBA MVP Tamika Catchings.
Officials wore gray shirts with an NBA logo but were not sanctioned by the league, and team officials were not allowed to attend.
Players will take it, for now.
«I don’t know how many games we’ll miss or how long we’ll be locked out,» Atlanta Hawks guard Jeff Teague said. «But this going to have to do because it’s the only way to play against the best talent and be at an NBA level when it (the lockout) ends.»
Nobody’s sure when the lockout will end, so players are taking precautions.
Five of them told The Associated Press they are carrying insurance to cover any potential injuries during the lockout, and that’s not the only way they’re protecting themselves.
«The best thing about games like this is that all the guys realize you have careers,» former Butler star and current Utah Jazz player Gordon Hayward said. «So we’re not going to do something stupid.»
Perhaps that accounted for the lack of defense Saturday night.
The blue team, Goodman League, won 170-167. Wall had 41 points, 12 assists and 11 rebounds. DeMarcus Cousins had 33 points and 15 rebounds. Gordon led the Knox team with 40 points and nine assists. All but three of the 16 players reached double figures.
Whether it was Wall, the Washington Wizards point guard, or Eric Gordon, who plays for the Los Angeles Clippers, the key concern was staying in shape, to be ready for the return of NBA ball.
The players said they aren’t even sure the league owners know what they want in a new deal.
«That’s what it seems like from what I’ve seen in the media and from what I hear,» Gordon said. «It’s going to take a collective agreement by everybody to get this thing settled.»
In the meantime, they’ll continue working on their own.
Hayward is going through his training at St.Vincent Sports Performance in Indy. Some are working in groups, and others are playing in games like this, where there are almost as many smiles as dunks. Teague plans to return to Atlanta next week, where he will continue playing pro am games.
But each player has his own primary concern.
Josh McRoberts, an Indiana native who played with the Pacers last season, is a free agent who hasn’t been able to negotiate a new deal. Shelvin Mack left Butler after his junior season, was selected by Washington in the second round of this year’s NBA draft and is still unsigned.
«It’s kind of tough,» Mack said. «We’ve got things like this so we can still work on our skills, but you’d really like to get back to work.»
For some players, that could come sooner — if they decide to move overseas. Kobe Bryant has been offered a $6.7 million, one-season contract to play for the Italian team Virtus Bologna.
Gordon said that while he’s had offers, he’s not jumping at the chance and neither is D.J. White, the former Indiana star who now plays for Charlotte.
«I’ve really not thought much about it,» White said. «You really just want to work on your game and we’ll see what happens. It’s hard to put a time table (on deciding to play overseas).»

Sindicato de NBA no aceptaría cualquier acuerdo para evitar paro

NUEVA YORK (AP) — Con estrellas de la NBA a su lado, como el veterano Kevin Garnett y el novato del año Blake Griffin, el presidente del sindicato de jugadores Derek Fisher advirtió el jueves que los jugadores no aceptarán un mal acuerdo para evitar una suspensión de actividades.

«Nos encantaría evitar un cierre patronal, pero estamos unidos en el sentido de no tener temor si eso es lo que tenemos que enfrentar», dijo el alero de los Lakers de Los Angeles.

Jugadores representantes de cada equipo estuvieron en la ciudad para su reunión de verano y recibieron información actualizada respecto del estado de las negociaciones con los dueños. El contrato colectivo de trabajo expira el 30 de junio, y las partes aún están lejos de llegar a un acuerdo. Se volverán a reunir el viernes.

Garnett y Paul Pierce de los Celtics, Griffin de los Clippers, Chris Paul de los Hornets y Jason Terry de los campeones Mavericks de Dallas estaban entre los 60 jugadores que se unieron a Fisher en la conferencia de prensa. Garnett dijo que los dueños quieren el «control».

«Es desafortunado, para ser honestos, porque estamos en un gran momento ahora mismo», dijo Garnett, cuyo contrato colosal en Minnesota fue el catalizador para los cambios que buscaron los dueños y que desembocó en el cierre patronal de 1998.

Las partes intercambiaron propuestas el martes, pero eso no las llevó a concluir el tema. La liga propone lo que llama un límite salarial «flexible», en el que los equipos tendrán como objetivo gastar no más de 62 millones de dólares pero podrían incrementar esa cifra mediante el uso de varias excepciones.

Sin embargo, hay un límite a final de cuentas en una cifra que no se especifica, por lo que los jugadores aún consideran que eso constituye un tope salarial estricto.

Es similar al sistema de límite salarial de la liga de hockey de Estados Unidos, que se instituyó luego de un cierre patronal en la temporada 2004-05 y que Billy Hunter, director ejecutivo de la asociación de jugadores de baloncesto, llamó «el peor acuerdo en todos los deportes profesionales».

Hunter dijo que los propietarios de equipos de hockey pudieron ganar ese acuerdo luego de romper el sindicato de jugadores, y sostiene que la intención de los dueños de la NBA es dejar fuera a los basquetbolistas, con intenciones similares.

Los jugadores dijeron que eso no pasaría; Garnett cree que la unidad es más fuerte de lo que fue en 1998.

Los jugadores dijeron que su propuesta contemplaba que dejaran de percibir 500 millones de dólares en salarios durante cinco años al reducir su participación de ingresos garantizados de 57% a 54,3%, una oferta que el comisionado David Stern calificó de «modesta».

«Calificar de modesta nuestra oferta no es preciso», dijo Fish.

Gran actuación de Delfino en la NBA

El escolta argentino Carlos Delfino aportó 13 tantos y 9 rebotes en el triunfo de su equipo, Milwaukee Bucks, por 94-88 sobre Minnesota Timberwolves, mientras que también jugó el pivote Luis Scola en la victoria de Houston Rockets por 108-100 ante Detroit Pistons.

El santafesino Delfino participó del juego durante poco más de 37 minutos en el estadio Bradley Center de Milwaukee, y encestó 1 de 1 en dobles, 3 de 9 en triples, 2 de 2 en lanzamientos libres y además capturó siete rebotes defensivos y dos ofensivos, dio una asistencia, recuperó dos pelotas y se lució con un tapón.

Según detalló el sitio oficial de la NBA y el periódico deportivo AS, el argentino perdió dos pelotas e incurrió en dos faltas, y fue clave en el triunfo de los Bucks, que tuvieron también como puntos altos al base Brandon Jennings (27) y al escolta John Salmons (12).

En los Timberwolves se destacaron el alero Michael Beasley (21) y el ala pivote Kevin Love (20 y 17 rebotes).

En el Palace de Auburn Hills, en Detroit, Scola jugó 27 minutos y medio, y contribuyó al éxito de los Rockets con 8 tantos, al encestar 4 de los 14 dobles que lanzó al aro, muy poca eficacia, ya que también falló el único triple que intentó, pero en su favor capturó 9 rebotes (seis defensivos), dio una asistencia y se lució con dos bloqueos.

El argentino incurrió en tres pérdidas de pelota, cometió tres faltas y recuperó un solo balón, dentro de un equipo que mostró como puntos altos al novato Patrick Patterson (20) y el alero Kevin Martin (16).

En los Pistons, que no contaron con Richard Hamilton, se destacaron el reserva Will Bynum (21), el base Rodney Stuckey (19) y el escolta Ben Gordon (15).

Houston volverá a jugar esta noche ante Cleveland Cavaliers, mientras que Milwaukee enfrentará a New York Knicks, que anunció la presencia de su flamante incorporación: Carmelo Anthony.

En tanto, San Antonio Spurs, con Emanuel Ginóbili en un gran momento tras haber jugado para el Oeste en el Juego de las Estrellas, se medirá con Oklahoma City Thunder, mientras que Philadelphia Sixers, con al alero santafecino Andrés Nocioni, enfrentará a Washington Wizards.

En los demás partidos jugados entre anoche y esta madrugada se dieron los siguientes resultados: Toronto Raptors 101-Charlotte Bobcats 114; Indiana Pacers 113-Washington Wizards 96; Sacramento Kings 97-Miami Heat 117; Los Angeles Clippers 88-Oklahoma City Thunder 111; Memphis Grizzlies 107-Denver Nuggets 120; Boston Celtics 115-Godlen State Warriors 93 y Atlanta Hawks 80-Los Angeles Lakers 104.

Fuente: Telám

Houston sigue a los tumbos

Con 15 puntos del argentino Luis Scola, anoche Houston no pudo ante Dallas Mavericks y cayó por 101-91 en una nueva jornada de la NBA. De esta manera, los Rockets (5-12) no levantan cabeza en la Conferencia Oeste y se ubican en las últimas posiciones. Esta noche vuelve a ser el el turno de Ginóbili y Nocioni.

En los 20 minutos y 51 segundos que estuvo en cancha, el ex Ferro anotó 15 puntos (6/13 dobles y 3/6 libres), capturó cinco rebotes, hizo dos asistencias, perdió una pelota y cometió dos faltas personales. El alemán Dirk Nowitzki de Dallas fue el goleador del partido con 20 tantos, mientras que Kevin Martin con 17 tantos fue el máximo artillero de los Rockets.

Esta noche, San Antonio (14-2), con Emanuel Ginóbili, jugará a las 0.30 local ante Golden State (8-9), mientras que Philadelphia (4-13), con Andrés Nocioni, recibirá a Portland (8-8) a las 21.

Fuente: Clarín

Jugaron los cinco, festejaron dos

En una intensa jornada de NBA que tuvo 13 partidos, Ginóbili y Oberto terminaron con sonrisas por las victorias de San Antonio y Portland. En cambio hubo derrotas para Houston (pese al monumental Scola), Philadelphia (con Nocioni) y Milwaukee (Delfino).

Después de un año intrascendente en Washington, Fabricio Oberto tuvo una importante participación en la victoria de Portland ante Los Angeles Clippers por 98-88. El cordobés jugo diez minutos y medio en los que aportó 3 puntos (1/1 dobles y 1/2 libres) y 3 rebotes. El goleador de los Blazers, que anoche sumaron su segunda victoria en dos partidos fue Brandon Roy (22).

Entre los que perdieron, seguramente la mayor frustración la vivió Luis Scola. El capitán de la Selección tuvo otra actuación descomunal, pero a Houston no le alcanzó y otra vez perdió como visitante un partido de trámite muy parejo. Esta vez fue 132-128 ante Golden State, con 36 puntos (14/24 dobles y 8/14 libres), 16 rebotes, 1 robo y 1 tapa del argentino, que estuvo 38 minutos en cancha. El goleador del partido fue el local Monta Ellis, que igualó su récord personal con 46.

Casi 20 minutos en cancha estuvo Andrés Nocioni en la derrota de Philadelphia ante el estelar Miami por 97-87. Chapu tuvo una buena actuación y firmó una planilla de 10 puntos (2/4 dobles, 2/5 triples), 5 rebotes, 3 asistencias, y 1 tapa. Los Sixers terminaron con seis jugadores con 10 o más puntos, pero no pudieron impedir la victoria del equipo de Wade (30 puntos), LeBron James (16), Chris Bosh (15) y James Jones (20), que se recuperó de la derrota ante Boston en el debut.

El repaso a la actuación de los argentinos se completa con la muy buena labor de Carlos Delfino, aunque él tampoco pudo hacer ganar a su equipo. Milwaukee perdió como visitante frente a New Orleans por 95-91. El santafesino fue el máximo anotador de los Bucks con 19 puntos (2/2 dobles y 5/10 triples) y además sumó 5 rebotes y 3 robos en algo más de 38 minutos.

Esta noche no habrá actividad para los equipos con argentinos (sólo juegan Orlando-Washington y Utah-Phoenix), y recién mañana volverán a jugar Milwaukee (visitante frente a Minnesota) y Philadelphia (recibe a Atlanta).

Fuente: Infobae

Los cinco fantásticos

Con la presencia de cinco argentinos (Ginóbili, Nocioni, Delfino, Scola y Oberto) arranca una nueva temporada de la NBA. Los principales candidatos a quedarse con el anillo son Los Angeles (actuales bicampeones) y Miami, que ahora cuenta con LeBron James. ¿Podrá Manu a sus 33 años ganar su cuarto título?

Nueva temporada de la NBA, nueva ilusión en marcha. De los 30 equipos en competición en cinco hay jugadores argentinos. A repasar…

Emanuel Ginóbili disputará su novena temporada consecutiva en los Spurs de San Antonio e irá por su cuarto título luego de las consagraciones en 2003, 2005 y 2007. Manu, a sus 33 años, tendrá la responsabilidad de ser uno de los tres jugadores en los que recaerán las ilusiones del equipo junto con Tim Duncan y Tony Parker. Si el tridente funciona bien, San Antonio aumentará sus posibilidades en la competitiva Conferencia Oeste.

Andrés Nocioni comenzará su octavo año luego de los pasos por Chicago (cinco años) y Sacramento (dos). El Chapu ahora firmó con Philadelphia 76ers, el mismo equipo que lo bajó a último momento del Mundial de Turquía.

Luis Scola, cada vez más clave en el funcionamiento de Houston, iniciará su cuarto año consecutivo en busca de dar definitivamente el salto en los playoffs. Luifa, que no se perdió ningún partido en la fase regular de las tres temporadas anteriores, debutará ante los bicampeones Angeles Lakers en el Staples Center.

Carlos Delfino seguirá en Milwaukee Bucks, donde el año pasado llegó hasta la primera ronda de los playoffs. El objetivo será afinar la mira y apuntar más lejos. Será el sexto año de Delfino en la NBA, ya que anteriormente había pasado por Detroit y Toronto.

Por último, Fabricio Oberto finalmente firmó como agente libre con Portland y aseguró su continuidad en la Liga de las Estrellas. Después de haber pasado por San Antonio durante cuatro años y un breve paso por Washington de doce meses. El desafío de Fabri será lograr un poco de continuidad en los Blazers que buscarán llegar a los playoffs por tercer año consecutivo.

En líneas generales, los dos principales candidatos a quedarse con el anillo de campeón son Los Angeles Lakers en la Conferencia Oeste y los Miami Heat en el Este.

Los Lakers no comenzarán de la mejor manera debido a las intervenciones que sufrieron Kobe Bryant y Andrew Bynum. El español Pau Gasol será el encargado del plantel hasta que Phil Jackson pueda disponer de todas sus figuras. En la Conferencia tendrán como principales rivales a Houston (si el chino Yao Ming se recupera totalmente), a Denver (Carmelo Anthony y Chauncey Billups) y a Oklahoma (ahora con Nenad Krstic y Kevin Durant, máximo anotador del pasado año).

Los Heat saltaron de simples espectadores a favoritos del Este gracias a la llegada de la estrella LeBron James y el zurdo Chris Bosh, quienes aprovecharon su condición de agentes libres para unirse a Dwyane Wade. Miami tendrá que imponerse en la competitiva Conferencia Este a Boston (sumó a Shaquille O’Neal y tiene además a Paul Pierce, Ray Allen y Kevin Garnett) y Orlando (Rashard Lewis y Vince Carter).

Fuente: Olé

NBA: poco de Scola y Delfino en el comienzo de la pretemporada

Los argentinos volvieron a sus equipos tras el Mundial de Turquía y tuvieron regulares actuaciones en la derrota de Houston y la victoria de Milwaukee. Mañana vuelve Ginóbili

Luis Scola anotó 4 puntos y colaboró con 6 rebotes y un robo en la derrota de los Rockets ante Orlando por 97 a 88 , en la que estuvo poco más de 19 minutos en cancha.

En tanto, Carlos Delfino sumó 7 puntos, con una planilla de 2/3 en dobles y 1/4 en triples, y aportó 7 rebotes, 2 asistencias y 2 recuperos en algo más de 25 minutos en cancha, en la victoria de los Bucks de Milwaukee sobre Chicago por 92 a 83.

Por su parte, el santafesino Andrés Nocioni no fue parte del equipo de Philadelphia que cayó ante New Jersey 103 a 96 porque aún se recupera de la lesión que le impidió disputar el Mundial de Turquía.

Mañana será el turno de la presentación del bahiense Emanuel Ginóbili , quien no fue parte del seleccionado en Turquía para optimizar su preparación de cara a una nueva temporada, cuando San Antonio Spurs se mida ante los Rockets de Scola.

Fuente: DyN