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Fines in the NBA can be incurred for various reason and by various people. Players, teams, coaches, and owners can all incur fines. From 2003 to 2013 the top 5 most fined offenses were for criticizing referees (81 times, for about $2.1 million), fan confrontation (42 times, for $672,500), interaction with referees (35 times, for $750,000), fighting (26 times, for about $1.5 million), and ...
The NBA salary cap is the limit to the total amount of money that National Basketball Association teams are allowed to pay their players. Like the other major professional sports leagues in North America, the NBA has a salary cap to control costs and benefit parity, defined by the league's collective bargaining agreement (CBA).
Los Angeles Clippers power forward P.J. Tucker is being fined $75,000 for openly asking to be traded, the NBA announced Thursday.. The league's statement cited "comments reported during the week ...
A sign-and-trade deal is treated as an "atomic transaction." [4] Under NBA rules, if the acquiring team voids the trade, then the new contract signed with the initial team is voided as well. This prevents the initial team from being 'stuck' with a player they either do not want and/or cannot afford to keep under the terms of the signed contract.
The NBA announced Tuesday it has fined Philadelphia 76ers guard James Harden $100,000 for what the league is calling “public trade demands.” NBA fines James Harden $100,000 for ‘public trade ...
Flopping will now result in a free throw for the other team. ... flopping is about to come at a real cost. The NBA Board of Governors approved a rule change that will ... then fines escalating ...
The NBA's statement cited Philadelphia's previous history of fines, and the most recent instance wasn't too long ago. On Feb. 1, the team had to pay $75,000 for another failure to adhere to league ...
Robertson v. National Basketball Association, 556 F.2d 682 (2d Cir. 1977), [1] was an antitrust lawsuit filed by American basketball player Oscar Robertson against the National Basketball Association (NBA). Filed in 1970, the lawsuit was settled in 1976 and resulted in the free agency rules now used in the NBA. [2]