New York Daily News

Bayern tops

-

Spencer Dinwiddie’s attempt at crowdfundi­ng his free agency hasn’t taken off yet.

As of Sunday afternoon, the business-driven Dinwiddie had raised less than $1,000 on his GoFundMe page, well short of the pace necessary to finish with his stated goal of $24,632,630. He opened the page Friday and accumulati­ng $1,000 every two days would require 136 years of fundraisin­g to reach the target.

The second-highest donation, as of Sunday afternoon, was $69 from a Nets fan who added the message, “Knicks are Poopiepoop­buttbuttso­up.”

So maybe this is not being taken so seriously. Or a kindergart­ner has disposable income. Only an $88 donation from Charles Nocera was higher than the “Poopiepoop­buttbuttso­up” donor.

If he somehow hits the goal, Dinwiddie says he will allow the fans to determine his next destinatio­n and he’ll sign a one-year deal with that team. He’s expected to hit free agency in 2021.

If his fundraisin­g falls short, Dinwiddie said he’ll donate all the money to charity. He announced the project with the understand­ing he probably won’t reach the goal.

“Overall a potential FA is influenced by many things. Family, winning, state taxes, shoe companies, agency, market size etc,” he tweeted. “I simply want to choose my influences and democratiz­e this access in the process. …obviously $24M is VERY steep and that’s on purpose. The reason why 100% of the proceeds go to charity if we are even a dime short of our target on this project is because I understand the likelihood, or lack thereof in this experiment.

“Hopefully we opened some eyes and can do some good in the process amidst a pandemic.”

Beyond the unlikeliho­od of Dinwiddie raising more than $24 million, the NBA will almost certainly kill the idea of a player crowdsourc­ing his free agency. For starters, it’s a circumvent­ion of the salary cap. If Dinwiddie, a potential All-Star, signs for minimum it provides capped-out teams an advantage.

The Lakers, for instance, could sign Dinwiddie to play alongside LeBron James and Anthony Davis, even if they have no cap space. It’s one thing for a player to make a decision to take less money to play for a team, and another to raise money to make such a decision. The Lakers also have a huge fan base and Dinwiddie is from L.A. (it probably wasn’t a coincidenc­e that Dinwiddie photoshopp­ed himself into three uniforms on the GoFundMe page — the Nets, Lakers and Clippers).

It’s a question of competitiv­e balance.

But Dinwiddie is no stranger to fighting the NBA. The 27-year-old’s separate plan to turn his contract into digital tokens — and selling those tokens — was ruled by the league as illegal.

A strong police and media presence outside the stadium provided the only clues that Union Berlin was about to play Bayern Munich in its biggest — and quietest — Bundesliga game of the season on Sunday.

Only a few diehard soccer fans showed up outside promoted Union’s stadium and were quickly made to move on. The game, which Bayern won, 2-0, was held amid strict hygiene measures because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“We were hoping to get something of the game, but they’re not letting anyone through,” Union fan Helga Wischke told The Associated Press. “We’re always here, we have season tickets. Maybe we’ll hear something from the game.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States