This Top 5 Sports Business Blunder Is Not What You'd Think

The world of sports is high flying, faced paced, and filled with excitement. But not only do the players in such marquis leagues as the NFL, NBA, and NHL take amazing risks and reap amazing rewards, but franchise owners and the leagues to which they are affiliated also take their fair share of risks. Some of these bets pay off, like drafting 6th round quarterback Tom Brady and replacing $100 million QB Drew Bledsoe with him. But sometimes sports bets not only fail to payoff in the short term, but can cost big in the long term. This is exactly what happened when the NBA signed a little known deal with a couple of brothers in 1976.

The background of the NBA’s biggest blunder, in fact one of the most colossal errors of judgment in sports history, started with the NBA acquisition of the American Basketball Association. The NBA agreed to integrate four teams from the ABA, which included the teams know known as the Nets, Nuggets, Pacers and Spurs. But two remaining teams, the Kentucky Colonels, and the St. Louis Spirits, were not to be absorbed – the latter of which being owned by brothers Ozzie and Dan Salina. The owner of the Colonels, Dan Y. Brown, accepted a $3.3 million buyout, and went his merry way. But the Salina brothers wanted more. In a highly contentious meeting, which reportedly lasted all night, the brothers negotiated a deal which netted them $2.2 million upfront and TV revenue in perpetuity.

The magnitude of this blunder is difficult to imagine today. But to the NBA’s credit, TV revenue was not very lucrative at the time of the agreement. Still, deciding to pay anything in perpetuity is difficult to understand from a business perspective. This means that not only would the Salina bothers be paid out as a result of the deal, but potentially their dependents would as well. The brothers have reaped millions of dollars of profits since the 1980-81 season, when the payments initially started. According to published reports the bothers have pocketed at least $300 million since the inception of the contract, and only stand to earn more as the NBA looks to renegotiate its television contracts in 2015. As it stands, the contracts are worth a reported $7.4 billion.

In the years since the agreement the NBA has attempted to get out of the contract various times, but to no avail. Finally, in January 2014, it was announced that the NBA and the Salina bothers agreed to a $500 settlement to terminate the contract once and for all.

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