The News-Times (Sunday)

Here’s what we know about the next NBA season: not much

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LOS ANGELES — Now what?

It was the underlying emotion for a lot of people in the NBA over the final weeks of the league’s quarantine­d residency at Disney World, especially as the finish line for the bubble came into clear sight.

Yes, the season was saved. Yes, a champion was crowned. Yes, no players tested positive for the virus and no games had to be canceled. And yes, commitment­s to the league’s television partners were satisfied.

The plan succeeded beyond the NBA’s expectatio­ns.

But what now?

The only date on the upcoming NBA calendar that’s set is the 2020 NBA draft (Nov. 18). Free agency could get started by early December, the season might start as soon as mid-January and maybe the playoffs will stretch deep into next summer.

Could. Might. Maybe. These are the words the NBA’s immediate future hinge on.

The NBA and the NBPA, the union that represents the league’s players, are currently negotiatin­g modificati­ons of the league’s collective bargaining agreement, its financial models unequipped for the crippling blows of the global pandemic that are still being absorbed.

With the bubble officially bursting with success Monday, the expectatio­n is that talks will intensify next week.

The sides, according to people with knowledge of the situation, agreed to extend the deadline for negotiatio­ns to Oct. 30.

And while either side could notify the other they’re backing out of the agreement, triggering a stoppage, that’s not expected.

“I don’t have any expectatio­ns of labor issues, I think, in the way you’re suggesting it, meaning that we won’t be able to resolve them,” NBA Commission­er Adam Silver said in response to that question before the NBA Finals. “There’s no doubt there are issues on the table that need to be negotiated. I think it’s — we’ve managed to work through every other issue so far. I think we have a constructi­ve relationsh­ip with them. We share all informatio­n. We look at our various business models together.

”So I think while no doubt there will be issues and there will be some difficult negotiatio­ns ahead, I fully expect we’ll work them out, as we always have.”

Over the next two weeks, the sides will have to come to agreements of the framework for the NBA’s immediate financial future.

One of the biggest challenges will be negotiatin­g the terms of next season’s salary cap. That number is typically derived from the league’s revenues, but the pandemic cost the league an estimated $1.5 billion, according to people not authorized to speak publicly, so that formula is untenable.

A massive salary cap drop would push the overwhelmi­ng majority of the league deep into the luxury tax while drying up the free-agent market in an instant at the same time.

To avoid a significan­t reduction in the salary cap, the two sides will have to negotiate how much of player salaries will be deferred and put into an escrow account. Last year, the salary cap was set at $109.1 million with the luxury tax kicking in at $132.6 million.

 ?? Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press ?? The Lakers’ Anthony Davis celebrates after his team defeated the Heat in Game 6 to win the NBA Finals on Oct. 11.
Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press The Lakers’ Anthony Davis celebrates after his team defeated the Heat in Game 6 to win the NBA Finals on Oct. 11.

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