SEVERAL NBA PLAYERS ARE CONSIDERING PLAYING OVERSEAS
Photo: New Jersey Nets' Deron Williams, one of the top point guards in the NBA, has already agreed to play in Turkey this year as long as the lockout continues.
The idea is as perplexing as it is emboldening.
NBA players are talking more than ever about playing basketball overseas if the NBA lockout becomes prolonged, as most are predicting.
This past week, the NBA Players Association told its members — especially the biggest stars — to do just that. In a memo to players, union executive director Billy Hunter not only gave players a full-fledged endorsement to pursue overseas opportunities, he came just short of ordering players to do so.
"This lockout is intended to economically pressure our players to agree to an unfavorable collective bargaining agreement," Hunter said in the letter, a copy of which was obtained by The New York Times. "It is important for owners to understand that there may be significant consequences to their decision to put their own players in these difficult economic circumstances. If the owners will not give our players a forum in which to play basketball here in the United States, they risk losing the greatest players in the world to the international basketball federations that are more than willing to employ them."
New Jersey Nets star point guard Deron Williams already has agreed to play for Besiktas in Turkey, should the lockout persist. Other stars have said they are open to playing overseas. So, too, has Nuggets point guard Ty Lawson. He made it clear this week he will play abroad instead of sitting and waiting for the end of the NBA lockout. He was asked why so many players have overseas basketball on their minds.
"Different experience, stay in shape, some people might need the money," Lawson said. "It's different type things. It depends on what their family needs and stuff like that. But for me, it's to stay in shape and experience something new."
During his kids' camp in Florida on Thursday, Miami Heat star Dwyane Wade said he would consider playing overseas.
"I'm not ruling it out," he told reporters. "At the end of the day, we get that itch as a basketball player. You want to play the game. I have no idea when I will get that itch."
The key phrase in all of this remains "if the lockout lasts a long time."
It is the kind of out-clause that has led many skeptics to wonder if any of these players will actually board a plane to play elsewhere. A look at why they might:
• Opportunity: This is a different time than the 1998-98 lockout, which lasted 6 1/2 months, in one key facet — there actually is an opportunity to play elsewhere. No players hopped a plane and went overseas during the previous work stoppage because FIBA honored NBA contracts.
Not this time.
Contracts are suspended during the lockout so players are free to do whatever they wish. NBA commissioner David Stern has made that clear.
There are also bigger dollars being dangled by foreign clubs, and huge interest by fans in Europe to see NBA players. Many clubs are calling players to try to entice them.
• Business-minded players: This is a different, more business and brand-cognizant group of athletes as compared with a decade ago. Athletes endorse more products, many have started businesses on the side and some even orchestrated their way to on-court basketball unions (see: Miami Heat).
They won't let a lockout stop them from making money. Williams' overseas deal, reported at $5 million for one year, is on top of the $16 million he's scheduled to make next season, and the $15 million he banked from last season.
Recently retired Celtics center Shaquille O'Neal said Thursday in a teleconference he would not have thought about going overseas if he was still playing, but understands those who do.
"Each player has to make their own decision," O'Neal said. "These guys have a lifestyle. They have families. So, I'm sure if the opportunity comes up where they can make good money in Europe, or they can make a name for themselves and help grow their brand in a different country, I'm sure the top players are going to be looking to do that."
There is almost no risk for the players, other than injury. They get to play, stay in shape, make money and still come back to the NBA when an agreement is reached.
"I just know that in the lockout situation the only people that are suffering really is the fans," O'Neal said. "The fans don't really understand billionaires vs. millionaires. So, hopefully the intelligent people that are having these business conversations can sit down, conversate and construct a new agreement."