Why Basketball Australia should be ashamed
TweetAS long as our "One Basketball" world remains driven by private and personal agendas, the sport cannot progress in the eyes of the people who matter - those who DON'T currently support basketball.
The sponsors, corporates and fans we want coming to our game - or returning to it - need to see a thriving entity to jump aboard. So too the media.
Returning an NBL team to Brisbane is something the league desperately needs.
A thriving NBL is something the sport desperately needs.
So Basketball Australia, or more specifically the Board of BA which made the decision, should hang its collective head in shame for initially charging the NBL $50,000 for the return of the Brisbane Bullets' IP.
In a world where it is increasingly more difficult to be surprised by the idiocy of so many pushing their agendas in so many areas, to have the sport's governing body pull such a conniving, disgraceful, money-grubbing stunt is beyond my comprehension.
Sure, the BA Board met last Thursday and on Monday told NBL Chairman Graeme Wade that it now could have the IP back - still with certain stipulations but with the immoral fee withdrawn - and naturally the league jumped at the chance to regain the Bullets' name.
But when the clever boffins at BA first decided to charge the NBL 50 grand for the return of an IP which belonged to the NBL in the first place, was received FOR FREE by BA (when it took over running the league) and should in all conscience have been returned when the demerger occurred in 2013, all they achieved was sabotaging the one genuine bid the NBL had for a Brisbane team in 2015-16.
Even as I type that sentence, my mind boggles that a federation could act in such a way and still claim to have the sport's best interests at heart.
Just to be clear, you got the IP - and all other NBL-related paperwork - for free when you initially saved and took over running the NBL.
But when the "oversight" occurred in 2013 that the Bullets IP was not handed over, it then became a potential legal wrangle?
So instead you simply asked the NBL for $50,000?
In its infinite naivety or inexperience, the NBL then took that back to the bidder for the Brisbane license - Paul Bendat - telling him it did not own the Bullets IP and asking him to pony up the 50G.
Guess what he said?
That was the NBL's biggest mistake in this.
What it should have done the SECOND it was presented with this option by BA was to release a media statement and tell the world what was happening. (You know, that TRANSPARENCY we so often covet?)
BA would (rightly) have been shredded and shamed by every media outlet that covers our sport. (Yes, I know some of you will be thinking "that isn't many" but trust me, the media LOVES this kind of embarrassing story.)
OK, so now BA has done the right thing (sort of) and (conditionally) released the IP back to its rightful owners without a monetary fee.
Congratulations. The Bendat bid is gone and now the NBL is scurrying around trying to keep the Brisbane dream alive.
Scott Derwin, as Chairman of the BA Board, has been across some amazing decisions during his watch. In recent times The Derwinator oversaw the death of the Gold Coast Blaze and the Logan Thunder, an interesting SE Queensland track record.
Andrew Gaze also is on the BA Board. I know Andrew well enough to believe his recent comments about the league "being broken" and needing to take "a hiatus" come from genuine concerns and aren't necessarily fuelled by any agenda beyond those concerns.
But all he did with his high profile was deal the NBL a further blow.
At the same time, a player still IN the league, such as Mark Worthington, has stayed positive and upbeat, his #WeAreTheNBL hashtag trending strongly on social media.
Our sport has many passionate people such as Wortho - look back at what the Kerles, Turners and Coles achieved long ago - and I have no doubt whatsoever the NBL will survive and work its way through this, even if its management does not understand the meaning of transparency.
But BA, and its Board members, should slink quietly off into a corner somewhere or, better yet, find a mirror, stare into it and ask: Was what we did in the best interests of the sport we are here to serve?
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