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More NBA talks set for tomorrow

By Rachel Cohen
Associated Press / November 4, 2011

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NEW YORK - NBA players and owners will start negotiating again tomorrow, and the union’s leaders say they’re unified as they seek to resolve the lockout.

Union president Derek Fisher, executive director Billy Hunter, and executive committee members said after meeting for about three hours yesterday that there was no truth to reports of a rift among them.

“We’ve had no problems, and that’s the reality,’’ Hunter said.

Hunter said they spent no more than 10-15 minutes on a conference call earlier this week and during yesterday’s gathering discussing the reports.

“The battle is not within our union,’’ Bucks guard Keyon Dooling said. “Derek Fisher’s the best president our union has ever seen. We’ll stand as committee members - I’m the first vice president and I stand behind him.’’

Later yesterday came reports from Yahoo! and the New York Times that a group of about 50 disgruntled players held a conference call with an antitrust lawyer about the possibility of pursuing decertification of the union. The players reportedly would consider pursuing the tactic if union leaders made more concessions during negotiations.

Thirty percent of players would have to sign a petition, then a majority would have to vote in favor for decertification. Mere talk of decertification also could give the players’ side leverage in negotiations.

Owners and players haven’t met since talks broke off last Friday. Hunter said federal mediator George Cohen contacted him this week about possibly rejoining the negotiations. Cohen probably won’t be involved tomorrow, but the conversation led to Hunter calling commissioner David Stern on Wednesday about resuming talks.

Hunter said union leaders had spent the last several days cautioning players that the sides were still far apart on several system issues, so completing a deal was not as simple as a compromise on the revenue split.

“Our guys are in a position of they still want us to negotiate a fair deal,’’ Fisher said. “They’ve given us that power. They’ve given us that support.

“Obviously we’re going to have individual members in individual sets of circumstances that want to get back to play. We want to get back to play. But we realize the ramifications of agreeing to a bad deal at this moment. This particular collective bargaining agreement will forever impact the circumstances of NBA basketball players. We can’t rush into a deal we feel is a bad deal just to save this season.’’

The lockout, which began July 1, has already led to the cancellation of a month of regular-season games. The sides met for three days last week, but again the talks stalled when they turned to the revenue split.

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