NBA monopoly under threat from star exodus to the Euroleague


With the continuing global popularity of basketball, the future of whether the NBA can keep 99% of the best players in the world all in one league becomes less likely with each passing season.
With the 2007-08 NBA season in full-swing, I’m sure David Stern has taken notice of a small but significant pattern from this off-season. I’m not talking about perennial Kobe Bryant drama or the KG trade; this involves names that aren’t all household names, but the direction of the moves are making the NBA Commissioner a little more than uneasy.
This 2007 summer has seen a number of players who have either left the NBA for leagues in Europe or have used the European leagues as leverage in their contract negotiations. Every day we come closer to the start of NBA training camps, and NBA heads should pay close attention to several situations that have already past and more importantly, to the outstanding issues that have yet to be resolved. Vasillis Spanoulis, the little-used Greek guard that was pivotal in defeating Team USA at the 2006 World Championships and a bench-warmer for the Houston Rockets last season, has already decided he would rather return to Panathinaikos in the Greek league rather that ride the bench for another team in Texas - the San Antonio Spurs (the team he was traded to). Not that big of news right? I agree. Of itself, it’s another case of Arvydas Macijauskas, a player that will be easily forgotten in the US. Though Macijauskas is a huge star in Europe, he never gained any traction in the NBA as the Lithuanian sharpshooter rode the bench for New Orleans during the 05-06 season. Macas, as he is known, chose to return to Europe after that one season. He chose more playing time rather than earning his time in the NBA. It makes more sense. It’s a matter of what’s best for the player in the short-term. That’s more than likely how Spanoulis will be remembered. However in early September, Sarunas Jasikevicius, the Lithuanian guard that led his home-country Lithuania to qualify for the 2008 Olympics, asked the Golden State Warriors to release or trade him. The Warriors chose the former and waived Jasikevicius. Since then, the European superstar has returned to the Euroleague and hasn’t missed a step, joining Spanoulis in Panathinaikos's back court. Again, nothing earth-shattering, but Jasikevicius was one of the many international players that had a reputation in the NBA. If Sarunas had stayed, he could have found a job in the NBA - there are several NBA teams looking for an experienced leader on the floor and a proven winner. At this point, you may be asking yourself “What are you getting at?” Add Sasha Pavlovic to the mix. The guard-forward who had a breakout last season with Cleveland cannot come to terms with the Cavs on his contract extension. If the two sides don’t get any closer to signing a contract, Pavlovic and his agent have made it clear that they are ready to do more than just entertain talks with European teams that are interested in the Serbian’s services. As of this post, Pavlovic has missed every one of Cleveland’s pre-season games. Then there’s the case of Andrei Kirilenko, who led Russia to a gold medal at this year’s Eurobasket. The Eurobasket MVP announced through a Russian blog that he is willing to drop the remaining amount of his $63m contract and head back to Europe rather than returning to Salt Lake City to endure another season of Jerry Sloan. The former NBA all-star was explicit and adamant about his position and AK can certainly play anywhere in the world. AK has since been tight-lipped and is participating in Utah’s summer leagues and camp. If it was only Spanoulis and Jasikevicius leaving, many would simplify the moves as frustrated Europeans unable to make it in the NBA. However, if an up-and-coming player like Pavlovic and former NBA All-Star Kirilenko decides to head home to play, I believe that signifies a trend that would immediately dilute the NBA talent pool and give rise to a competing league. Just five or six years ago, no one would believe that an international player returning home would dilute NBA talent. In fact it was more likely that they would believe it would actually enhance the NBA’s talent pool. Back then, it was arguable. Now, however, is a different era and the same xenophobic attitude will get you laughed out of serious basketball conversations. With the influx of international superstars into the NBA (Nowitzki, Yao Ming, Manu Ginobili, Steve Nash), national teams from around the world defeating the US in international competitions are becoming less jaw-dropping. And some of the top-European clubs defeating NBA teams in friendly matches (Maccabi Tel Aviv defeating the Toronto Raptors (2005), FC Barcelona topping the Philadelphia 76ers (2006), and CSKA Moscow defeating the LA Clippers (2006)), there is no doubt that basketball is on more equal footing globally. And that balance is especially apparent in the European leagues where the development and talent is second only to the NBA. This trend is becoming an issue for even American-born players. Just these last couple months, three NBA players made waves by utilizing the Euroleagues as leverage for their NBA negotiations. Charlie Bell, a former Michigan State player and current Milwaukee Buck, threatened to sign with Greek team Olympiakos in order to escape the Bucks. It didn'twork as the Bucks matched the offer sheet by the Miami Heat, but the fact that he and his agent used Olympiakos as leverage shows that this isn’t your father’s Euroleague anymore. There is the case of Dee Brown, the former Illinois-star and promising, young NBA player, who decided to leave the Utah Jazz in favor of Turkish club Galatasaray. Brown, a bench player last season, says it’s only temporary and hopes to catch on with another NBA club next year. The next natural move is for more and more players to not just threaten to leave the NBA, but to leave the NBA for the leagues in Europe. It’s no secret that the NBA wants a global league. The NBA has seen this coming for some time now and has been smart enough to realize that if they don’t stake their claims overseas right now while the NBA still has a virtual monopoly of talent, that with each passing season the world gets better. And the balance tips a little more out of the NBA’s favor. On paper, one huge world league would be ideal. I’m all for it, but it’s just not going to happen. Besides the obvious logistical issues, I just don’t see one big world league ever coming together, but it won’t be for the lack of trying by Stern and the NBA. The NBA may be successful in convincing two or three teams to participate in a NBA global expansion, but what’s more realistic are the continued development of two super-leagues (a la the NBA and ABA in the 1970s) competing for the world’s best basketball talent. Those two leagues will be the NBA and the Euroleague (ULEB). Basketball is constantly changing in favor of the world. Look at what has happened the last five years; that’s what happens when something becomes popular. There may be a child born in Sudan, India or Slovenia this very minute and in 16-17 years, there may be scouts from two clubs from two separate leagues, both offering the same amount of money, fame, and competition. No doubt the NBA has the upper-hand, it’s a huge locomotive with great history, reputation, and deep pockets as momentum. However, as salary levels get closer to one another and the talent gap continues to get smaller season after season, you’ll see the Euroleague competing for players more and more. We’re getting a good whiff of it this off-season. There were definitely more words than action this off-season, but I bet David Stern has a folder somewhere noting the small waves that have occurred. He knows that an exodus of both international and American-born NBA players is bound to happen in future off-seasons (and certainly during an NBA strike). On the surface, he is playing ambassador trying to spread NBA goodwill, but behind close doors Stern is working on a plan to somehow prevent the eventual loss of NBA players. It would be ironic if the globalization that Stern and the NBA has been promoting the last decade or so is the cause of an eventual exodus from the NBA that would balance the playing field.

0 comments

Post a Comment
Copyright © SPORTS TIMES .