The Suns got worse almost as soon as Sarver took over. Then they got a lot worse, and in FIFA 18 Coins 2011, they're functionally irrelevant.But that's strictly a basketball issue. Where the morality really gets murky is here is why Sarver was cutting costs. After overpaying for the Suns in 2004, the economy went south in large part thanks to shady mortgages brokered by banks. When the house of cards collapsed, nobody was hit harder than banks, and bankers like Sarver.
To look at this from a broader perspective: Robert Sarver cut costs the minute he took over, and at the same time, he raised ticket prices for each of his first three years as owner. Then, when economic calamity struck, he received $140 million in bailout money from the U.S. government, kept ticket prices the same, and sought to cut an additional $40 million from his team's payroll. And this is one of Cheap FUT 18 Coins two men dictating the direction of NBA collective bargaining. Excellent.
The other man is Cavs owner Dan Gilbert, the yin to Sarver's yang. Unlike Sarver, Gilbert has spent like crazy as an NBA owner. He gave a pair of $60 million contracts to Zydrunas Ilgauskas and Larry Hughes in the same summer back in 2005. He traded for Mo Williams and his $60 million contract. He signed Anderson Varejao to a $50 million deal.When he finally traded Hughes, it was an exchange that brought back Ben
Wallace (in the middle of a $60 million contract of his own) and Wally Sczerbiak (in the final year of a $63 million deal). He paid $21 million to Daniel Gibson, and adding a poetic exclamation point to all this, when Robert Sarver was trying cut salary in 2009, it was Dan Gilbert who eagerly scooped up Shaq and his $20 million salary.In other words, the man who today is demanding guaranteed profits at the expense of basketball being played is the same man who spent hundreds of millions of dollars in his first five years as owner, paying the likes of Larry Hughes,