Friday, September 30, 2011

NBA.com's Article on Players, owners arrive for pivotal weekend meetings

Here is the NBA.com's Article on Players, owners arrive for pivotal weekend meetings:


Players, owners arrive for pivotal weekend meetings


NEW YORK (AP) --

LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony, Kevin Durant and other NBA players arrived for meetings with owners that could determine if the season starts on time.


The sides will meet Friday and are prepared to talk through the weekend. Commissioner David Stern has said there must be progress toward a new labor deal this weekend or there will be "enormous consequences." The regular season is scheduled to begin Nov. 1.


Owners locked out players on July 1 and the sides continue to spar over the division of revenues and salary cap system.


Both sides have said they aren't close to a deal yet. They have been talking in small groups but summoned their full bargaining committees back for Friday's meeting.


Union leadership was briefing the players, while owners met among themselves before the bargaining meeting later in the afternoon. It was unclear how long the star players, who are not part of the executive committee, would remain.


The league has already postponed training camps that would have begun next week and canceled 43 preseason games scheduled for Oct. 9-15. NBA officials have said they will make decisions about the rest of the exhibition schedule as warranted.


But already real games are in danger, given it could take about four weeks from an agreement being reached to being able to play. The collective bargaining agreement would have to be written and a condensed free agency period allowed to happen first.


Coming off a strong 2010-11 season, the NBA is trying to avoid losing games to a work stoppage for only the second time. Owners, however, are seeking significant changes after saying they lost $300 million last season and lost hundreds of millions more in every other season of the previous CBA.


Union head Billy Hunter has said players would sit out rather than accept the deal owners have proposed, which would slash salaries and reduce the lengths of contracts. But Stern has warned that offers will only get worse once games are missed.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

NBA.com's Article on NBAPA, owners wrap up talks, agree to reconvene talks Friday

Here is the NBA.com's Article on NBAPA, owners wrap up talks, agree to reconvene talks Friday:


NBPA, owners wrap up talks, agree to reconvene talks Friday


A second consecutive day of collective bargaining talks between the National Basketball Players Association and NBA owners ended with the sides agreeing to meet again later this week and possibly into the weekend.


NBPA president Derek Fisher told reporters that both sides plan to meet again on Friday in New York, where the previous two days' meetings were held. Marquee players and up to 15 owners are expected to attend the talks, TNT's David Aldridge reports.


The sides have also blocked off Saturday and Sunday as potential dates for further negotiations, but the chances of talks over the weekend may hinge on what happens Friday.


The NBPA and owners will not meet the rest of today or on Thursday so that representatives from each side would have time to observe the Jewish holiday of Rosh Hashanah, which begins at sundown.


One insider told NBA.com's Steve Aschburner that "people should be encouraged we're talking. But [that] doesn't mean [a] deal is close. Not meeting would be much worse."


Commissioner David Stern warned there are "enormous consequences at play" as the sides try to preserve an on-time start to the season. Stern said there would be "a lot of risk" to not having an agreement by the end of this week. But both sides said there hasn't been enough progress to put them on the verge of a deal.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

NBA.com's Article on NBA, players meet briefly; talks to resume Wednesday

Here is the NBA.com's Article on NBA, players meet briefly; talks to resume Wednesday:


NBA, players meet briefly; talks to resume Wednesday


NEW YORK (AP) --

Negotiators for the NBA and its players have met for about two hours and will talk again Wednesday.


Both sides said the shortness of Tuesday's meeting is not cause for concern nor optimism but that they needed time to think about what had been discussed.


Commissioner David Stern hints that Wednesday's session will determine when more discussions are warranted.


With training camps postponed and a week of exhibition games already canceled, players and owners are trying to agree on a labor deal in time to avoid any further damage to the NBA calendar. The regular season begins Nov. 1. To start on time, an agreement must be done by mid-October.

Monday, September 26, 2011

NBA.com's Article on Report: Owners, players schedule labor meeting for Tuesday

Here is the NBA.com's Article on Report: Owners, players schedule labor meeting for Tuesday:



Report: Owners, players schedule labor meeting for Tuesday


With several preseason games already a casualty of the NBA lockout, the NBA and the players' union are finalizing details of further bargaining sessions to be held on Tuesday and possibly Wednesday, a source confirmed to TNT analyst David Aldridge on Monday.


The possible meetings were first reported by CBSSports.com.


The meetings would mark the fifth straight week that the two sides have met to negotiate terms of a new collective bargaining agreement, which would allow the 2011-12 NBA season to get under way.


On Friday, the league announced the indefinite postponement of NBA training camps and the cancellation of 43 preseason games scheduled from Oct. 9-15.

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Photos of the Revisiting the NBA's 1998 Lockout


Here are some of the Photos of the Revisiting the NBA's 1998 Lockout:




















David Stern's Beard in 1998.


















Patrick Ewing is showing some fancy footwork.


















Kenny Anderson is running down the court.


















Grant Hill and Tim Duncan for the 1-800-Tall-Men Commercial. 

Friday, September 23, 2011

NBA.com's Article on NBA calls off 43 preseason games, postpones training camps

Here is the NBA.com's Article on NBA calls off 43 preseason games, postpones training camps:


NBA calls off 43 preseason games, postpones training camps



NEW YORK (AP) --

The NBA postponed training camps indefinitely and canceled 43 preseason games Friday because it has not reached a new labor deal with players.


All games from Oct. 9-15 are off, the league said. Camps were expected to open Oct. 3.


"We have regretfully reached the point on the calendar where we are not able to open training camps on time and need to cancel the first week of preseason games,'' Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver said in a statement. "We will make further decisions as warranted.''


NBA.com's schedule page, which has a banner across the top listing the number of games on each day, was changed Friday morning to read "0 Games'' for each date until Oct. 16, when there are four games.


Those could be in jeopardy, too, without an agreement by the end of this month or very early October. The league scrapped the remainder of its preseason schedule on Oct. 6 in 1998, when the regular season was reduced to 50 games.


That remains the only time the NBA has lost games to a work stoppage.


The cancellations were inevitable after the latest meeting between owners and players Thursday ended without a collective bargaining agreement. Both sides still hope the entire regular season, scheduled to begin Nov. 1, can be saved.


The league locked out the players on July 1 after the expiration of the old labor agreement. Owners and players still haven't agreed on how to divide revenues - players were guaranteed 57 percent under the previous deal - or the structure of the salary cap.


The next talks aren't scheduled, but both sides said Thursday they hope to meet again next week. They probably need a deal by the middle of October to avoid canceling real games.


Asked Thursday if he thought things were far enough along to still believe that was possible, Commissioner David Stern said: "I don't have any response to that. I just don't. I don't know the answer.''

Thursday, September 22, 2011

NBA.com's Article on No News in latest labor talks looks like bad news

Here is the NBA.com's Article on No News in latest labor talks looks like bad news:


NEW YORK --

NBA commissioner David Stern emerged from the latest bargaining session between the league and its players union on Thursday with no news, which figures to be bad news for the possibility of starting training camps and the preseason on time.


Stern and other league negotiators met with National Basketball Players Association representatives for about five hours in an Upper East Side hotel -- their first full face-to-face session since last week -- but reported no real progress on forging a new collective bargaining agreement. And time is growing short.


"The calendar is not our friend," Stern told reporters on the street after the meeting, a sentiment echoed moments later by union president Derek Fisher. It is widely believed that a new CBA must be struck sometime in the next week -- or sooner -- for training camps and the preseason to start on time.


Stern said he had no announcements about a possible delay to the opening of camps or the start of the exhibition season. But at this point, that seems imminent. With camps scheduled to open Oct. 4, and the first exhibition game scheduled for Oct. 9 -- and with the two sides still far apart on many issues -- a deal that would save the start of the preseason looks unlikely.


The start of the regular season, too, is being threatened by the dragging pace of the negotiations. During the last lockout, in 1998, the league canceled the first two weeks of the regular season about three weeks before the scheduled start.


The 2011-12 season is scheduled to start Nov. 1, so if these negotiations follow form, the league could cancel the start of the upcoming season somewhere around Oct. 11. That's less than three weeks away.


The two sides also reported that no new bargaining sessions are scheduled, though Stern -- who celebrated his 69th birthday on Thursday -- told reporters that the two sides will try to get together again next week.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Nuggets.com's Article on Former NBA center Scott Hastings still talks a good game

Here is the Nuggets.com's Article on Former NBA center Scott Hastings still talks a good game:


When Scott Hastings reported to work as an NBA player, he wore sweatpants and T-shirts to practice and games.


Some things never change. On a summer day two decades later, Hastings is dressed in a red T-shirt and grey sweatpants as he steps into the elevator that will take him to the KKFN-FM studios in Greenwood Village.


“My whole wardrobe is T-shirts, sweats and suits,” Hastings says. “Nothing in between.”


During the NBA season, Hastings is a casually dressed sports-talk radio host by day and a dapper Denver Nuggets television analyst by night. He also spent two seasons coaching the Arapahoe High School girls basketball team, but talking hoops and sports has been his primary job since retiring from the NBA in 1993.


For a man who was a perennial candidate for the NBA’s All-Interview team, it’s a perfect fit.


“I always thought that when I retired, I would be a coach,” Hastings said as he prepped for his afternoon show with Mike Evans on 104.3 The Fan. “The media stuff, I kind of fell into it. My first job doing Nuggets television was a way to stay close to the team, with the next step being going into management or coaching. You wake up 17 years later and you’re still doing color commentary and you’ve got a radio show.”


Hastings, 51, was the 29th overall pick of the 1982 NBA Draft headlined by future Hall of Fame forwards James Worthy and Dominque Wilkins. He was traded by the New York Knicks to the Atlanta Hawks during his rookie year and played six seasons with Atlanta. Hastings was later a member of the Detroit Pistons 1989-90 championship team and finished his career with the Nuggets from 1991-93.


A hard-working player who always understood his role, Hastings approached practices as if they were games. He averaged 2.8 points, 2.2 rebounds and 10.4 minutes in 11 NBA seasons.


“I remember Scotty as a player,” Nuggets coach George Karl said. “He was a little better player than he portrays himself to be. He had a winningness to him. He did the dirty work and had an energy to help his teammates. If I had to say one thing about Scotty, he was probably a great teammate and a decent player.”


A Kansas native, Hastings stayed in Denver after his final season with the Nuggets in 1993 and started pondering his transition to the “real world." His broadcasting career was nearly put on hold when Mike Fratello took over as coach of the Cleveland Cavaliers that summer. Fratello was Hastings’ coach in Atlanta from 1984-88 and knew the value of a blue-collar 6-foot-11 big man who could serve as the backup to starting center Brad Daugherty.


Having endured two Detroit winters, Cleveland did not appeal to Hastings. He declined the offer and went to work as a sideline reporter for Prime Sports Rocky Mountain, which televised the Nuggets at the time. The Orlando Magic tried to sign Hastings in December 1993, but he wasn’t up for a midseason move.


“Heck, by then I had been eating cheeseburgers and doing all that stuff,” Hastings said. “It would’ve taken me too long to get back in shape. If Orlando would’ve called (during the summer) instead of Cleveland, it would’ve been a tougher decision. I probably would’ve gone.”


Instead, Hastings dived into his television job and started a radio show with former NFL wide receiver Dave Logan, a Wheat Ridge native who played football and basketball at the University of Colorado. With Logan playing the straight man and Hastings the wise-cracking country boy, their “Sports Zoo” show ran for 12 years on KOA 850 AM. They also were partners for Denver Broncos radio broadcasts from 1997-2004.


“I probably loosened Dave up and he professionalized me,” Hastings said. “I was just a goofball. I was a guy at the end of the bench screaming for attention. He’s probably the greatest athlete to come out of Colorado and a well-respected journalist. We just had a good chemistry.”


The same can be said of Hastings and his Nuggets broadcast partner Chris Marlowe. The two have been calling Nuggets games together on Altitude Sports & Entertainment since 2003.


“Scott is knowledgeable and he’s down-home funny,” Marlowe said. “I really enjoy having the big fellow with me.”


While the basketball arena is Hastings’ natural habitat, he has branched out considerably since leaving the NBA. He also hosts the pro football edition of the Altitude Sports Summit and Golf at Altitude.


"He’s the most versatile talent on our staff," said Altitude senior producer/director Scott Bay. "He does it all. I think his radio background helps him because he’s comfortable in all situations. Plus, fans really like him because he's down-to-earth. They relate to him and he’s approachable."


While his knack for connecting with fans and the media has always been one of Hastings' strengths, expanding his sports knowledge took more work than you might expect. In his early days of radio, Hastings said he subscribed to three newspapers and more than a dozen sports-related magazines. Now, he surfs the internet in his radio studio and shuffles through articles on his Amazon Kindle.


Given Hastings’ gift of gab, he probably could carry an entire show without much research. His interviews with guests are very conversational and driven from his own experiences in sports. It’s no different on this day as he talks to University of Colorado football coach Jon Embree, Colorado State University football coach Steve Fairchild and former NFL coach Brian Billick


“Johnny Carson was probably the greatest interviewer in the history of television, and he said all he tries to do is listen,” Hastings said of the late, great Tonight Show host. “I just try to listen.”


Make no mistake, Hastings does his share of talking as well. When he’s not making fun of himself, he’s often zinging his co-host, his producer or the pro athletes and coaches who provide ammunition on a daily basis.


“What sets Hastings apart from other radio talents in Colorado is his ability to speak his truth,” KKFN producer Scott DeHuff said. “He says what he believes. I love that, whether I agree with his opinion or not. There's a lot of guys – not all of them – in the media who tend to say one thing on the air and say another off the air.”


Whether he’s dissecting the Nuggets’ pick-and-roll defense, calling out former Broncos quarterback Jay Cutler or describing a scenic Colorado golf course, Hastings does his job with a blend of sarcasm, humor and honesty. Kind of a like a 6-11 version of presidential candidate Ross Perot circa 1992.


Perot was a Texas oil man who favored a suit.


Whenever possible, Hastings will stick with the T-shirt and sweats.

Monday, September 19, 2011

NBA.com's Article on Labor talks inch forward as negotiations enter critical week

Here is the NBA.com's Article on Labor talks inch forward as negotiations enter critical week:


Labor talks inch forward as negotiations enter critical week



First, many thanks to Kermit Washington, Kevin Johnson and Andrea Cavalli for guest Tipping for me while I was on vacation. I hope you enjoyed their words. Of course, no one is ever really that far away from the goings on, and -- in this case, unfortunately -- that means you're never too removed from the lockout. The good news is that so many people that care about the NBA desperately want the game back. The bad news is that we're not closer to a settlement than before.


Are we?


Last week was all about showing how united both sides were -- I thought either the players or owners would break out into Solidarity Forever on Thursday -- when there is division in both camps about the best way to proceed. Which should be expected, when you're talking about hundreds of millions of dollars, and successful people who are used to winning.


But there was, finally, some genuine movement in the last couple of weeks. Whether that movement is the basis for an agreement, or will be used to string one side along, tactically, is not clear at the moment. But there was, finally, some movement, as the players came down from their previous offer to reduce their share of Basketball Related Income from 54.5 percent to 53 percent.


Commissioner David Stern castigated an ESPN.com report that two of his owners shot down a potential agreement between the sides, and perhaps details of that version were incorrect.


But two sources who have been briefed on the talks indicated the following: sometime during the last of the small sessions between the two sides in New York, on Sept. 7 and 8, the union made its 53 percent concept to the owners. After the proposal was made, according to the sources, the union believed it had assurances from the other side that the offer would be viewed favorably by the owners' Labor Relations Committee. That was the basis of player optimism -- including union executive committee member Roger Mason's infamous "looks like a season" tweet a few days later. And that's why the union was so crestfallen on Sept. 13, when the meeting with each side's full negotiating committees failed to produce a breakthrough.


Stern and deputy commissioner Adam Silver said after the Board of Governors meeting in Dallas that owners remained unified behind a hard cap system, though there could be some differences in the specifics individual owners would seek. But the issue of revenue sharing has produced greater disagreements between owners. The union believes -- hopes? -- that those disagreements widen into fissures that will force groups of owners more willing to make a deal to the forefront.


Yet the union faces its own disagreements, with high-profile agents representing some of the biggest agencies looking to accelerate a vote on decertifiying the union.


Working backwards from the projected Nov. 1 starting date, this week is really the last week in which an agreement on a new CBA can be reached in order to save an on-time start of the season.


It would take at least two weeks to hammer out the details of a new CBA, and it would take at least two more weeks to have some kind of meaningful free-agent signing period. There would have to be at least a week to 10 days for an abbreviated training camp/preseason schedule. Which would bring us back to ... right now. Unless that breakthrough occurs in the next seven to 10 days, the season will not -- can not -- start on time.


That's where we are. So glad I'm back to give you the good news.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Slovenia vs. Serbia on Saturday September 17th


Here are some of the Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Slovenia vs. Serbia on Saturday September 17th:





















Mirza Begic goes up for the hook shot.



















Miloa Teodosic is looking to go up for the basket.




















Erazem Lorbek is driving to the basket.






































Nemanja Bjelica goes up for the basket.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Greece vs. Serbia on Friday September 16th


Here are some of the Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Greece vs. Serbia on Friday September 16th:













Konstantinos Papanikolaou goes up for basket while being defended by Milos Teodosic.


















Konstantinos Papanikolaou congratulates Milos Teodosic by padding him on the stomach.













Marko Keselj goes up for the layup.


















Antonios Fotsis goes up for the slam dunk.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Photos from the 2011 EuroBasket Tournament France vs. Greece on Thursday September 15th


Here are some of the Photos from the 2011 EuroBasket Tournament France vs. Greece on Thursday September 15th:



















Joakim Noah makes the slam dunk.


















Ioannis Bourousis taps in the shot.


















Tony Parker goes up for the Basket.

















Tony Parker is talking to Kevin Seraphin.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Spain vs. Slovenia on Wednesday September 14th


Here are some of the Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Spain vs. Slovenia on Wednesday September 14th:















Juan Carlos Navarro goes up for the layup.


















Jose Calderon is running down the court.


















Mirza Begic makes the slam dunk.



















Mirza Begic goes up for the basket.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

NBA.com's Article on Talk turns grim after latest labor negotiating session


Here is the NBA.com's Article on Talk turns grim after latest labor negotiating session:



NEW YORK -- NBA owners and players met again Tuesday with their full bargaining committees, but the initial reactions after a more than five-hour meeting were not positive. No further meetings are immediately planned.

"Just finished a long day of negotiations. Unfortunately we are No Where Near a deal! It's def disappointing!" union rep Roger Mason Jr. of the New York Knicks tweeted immediately afterward.

National Basketbal Players Association head Billy Hunter said the union was willing to move off its stance, but that the league was not willing to negotiate. He also sounded an ominous note about starting the season on time.

"Because of the calendar, we can't come out of this thinking that training camps and the season will start on time," he said.

"It's discouraging and it's unfortunate," said Los Angeles Lakers guard Derek Fisher, "but that's the reality of where we are right now."

The two sides started talks about 9 a.m. in a midtown Manhattan hotel.

With less than three weeks until training camps are scheduled to open, both sides know progress must be made soon to avoid having to make cancelations later this month. Both sides have said there is still time to reach a new labor deal that would keep the 2011-12 calendar intact.

After three meetings in the last two weeks between small groups, the owners' labor relations committee and the union's executive committee have rejoined the talks for the first time since late June, before the work stoppage began on July 1.

Among those seen entering the meetings were Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert and Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban. Both are members of the league's labor relations committee.

Players expressed frustration in the early stages of the lockout that owners were still sticking to points from their original proposal of early 2010. That included pay cuts and shorter contracts for the players, along with changes to the current salary cap system.

The process has been more cordial since, even if not significantly more productive, sparking hopes that the sides are more willing to compromise . But Fisher said last week that they couldn't go much further without bringing the large groups, who would help leadership know how to proceed.

"To think about where we were July 1 to now in terms of just the process itself, not what's being discussed and what type of deal it will end up being, just the process itself, we've put in a lot of time,'' he said last week. "And we're going to try to continue that process and see if we can get a fair deal done as soon as possible.''

Players and owners could meet again Wednesday in New York, but the real gauge of how much progress is being made may not be known until later this week when the sides will update their memberships on the state of the negotiations. That comes on Thursday when owners are scheduled to meet in Dallas, while the union is headed to Las Vegas to talk to players taking part in the Impact Academy basketball league.

During the 1998 lockout that reduced the season to 50 games, training camps that were scheduled to open Oct. 5 were postponed on Sept. 24. Camps are scheduled to open Oct. 3 this year.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Greece vs. Georgia on Monday September 12th


Here are some of the Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Greece vs. Georgia on Monday September 12th:












Nikolaos Zisis is going up for the basket.



Kosta Koufos goes up for the basket.





















Giorgi Shermadini goes up for the layup.













Konstantinos Sloukas drives to the basket.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament F.Y.R. of Macedonia vs. Slovenia on Saturday September 10th




Here are some of the Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament F.Y.R. of Macedonia vs. Slovenia on Saturday September 10th:













F.Y.R. of Macedonia Teammates are celebrating.















Bo McCalebb is pointing to one of his F.Y.R. of Macedonia Teammate. 













Vlado Ilievski is taking a breather.




















Gjorgij Chekovski goes up for the layup.

Friday, September 9, 2011

Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Germany vs. Turkey on Friday September 9th


Here are some of the Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Germany vs. Turkey on Friday September 9th:















Dirk Bauermann is showing a hand gesture.





















Dirk Nowitzki is celebrating after his basket. 














Dirk Nowitzki shoves Hedo Turkoglu out of the way.














Germany Teammates are celebrating on the sidelines.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Slovenia vs. Greece on Thursday September 8th


Here are some of the Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Slovenia vs. Greece on Thursday September 8th:
























Kosta Koufos goes up for the Slam Dunk.





















Kosta Koufos tries to block Goran Dragic's Shot.



















Nikolaos Zisis is celebrating after his three point shot.




















Ilias Zouros giving his Greece Team Instructions.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Germany vs. Spain on Wednesday September 7th


Here are some of the Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Germany vs. Spain on Wednesday September 7th:




















Pau Gasol is high fiving his Brother Marc Gasol.

Dirk Bauermann is talking to Heiko Schaffartzik.














Juan Carlos Navarro is putting up the basket.


Heiko Schaffartik goes up for the basket. 

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

NBA.com's September 6th Article on Report: Next labor negotiation session set for Wednesday


Here is the NBA.com's September 6th Article on Report: Next labor negotiation session set for Wednesday:


NEW YORK (AP) -- NBA players and owners will resume talks on Wednesday, two people with knowledge of the plans said Tuesday. This comes a week after the sides vowed to meet more frequently in hopes of reaching a new collective bargaining agreement.



The session will be just the third between top negotiators since the lockout started July 1. But with the opening of training camps less than a month away, both sides said they recognized the urgency to pick up the pace.
The meeting -- expected to be a small group -- will be in New York. The site hasn't been disclosed.
No new proposals were exchanged last week during a meeting that lasted about six hours. Neither side shared many details, saying they preferred to keep the nature of the talks private.
Commissioner David Stern said afterward there was still "clearly enough time" to make a deal that would allow the regular season to open as scheduled on Nov. 1. However, a gap remains between the financial changes owners are seeking and what players have been willing to accept.
"I could see it going either way," two-time MVP Steve Nash of the Phoenix Suns told The Canadian Press on Tuesday. "It looks like right now we probably won't start on time.
"Hopefully, as we start to get into the time of year where everyone is missing basketball, we can all start to concede on some points that each other are looking for and find a middle ground. That would be the best of both worlds."
Before last week, the only other meeting between top officials was on Aug. 1, after which Stern criticized the players for an unwillingness to compromise. The league filed an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board and a lawsuit against the players the next day, adding to the complaint the union had already filed with the NLRB.
But both sides have stressed that a deal can only be reached at the bargaining table, not the court system, and Stern and players' association president Derek Fisher of the Lakers said last week they would be holding many meetings.
One of the people confirmed an ESPN.com report that there could even be additional ones this week if Wednesday's session goes well.
Training camps are scheduled to open the first week of October, with the first preseason games set for Oct. 9.

Monday, September 5, 2011

Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Serbia vs. France on Monday September 5th


Here are some of the Photos from the 2011 Eurobasket Tournament Serbia vs. France on Monday September 5th:






















Nicolas Batum is hugged by Boris Diaw.



















Nemanja Bjelica gets his shot blocked by Nicolas Batum.





















Kosta Perovic goes up for the basket.






















Kosta Perovic goes up for the basket.

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Photos from the 2011 EuroBasket Tournament Bulgaria vs. Russia on Sunday September 4th


Here are some of the Photos from the 2011 EuroBasket Tournament Bulgaria vs. Russia on Sunday September 4th:



















Aleksey Shved driving to the basket.


















Vitaliy Fridzon heads to the basket.


















Kaloyan Ivanov goes up for the basket.


















Bozhidar Avramov looks to pass it off to his teammate.