


Ever since I was a kid, the NBA has been talking about going
global. But really, all it has been is talk. I remember hearing about a
European expansion, which always sounded like a cool idea and nowadays, as the
NBA's European players are some of the best in the game, it seems more and more
likely. In 1992, the U.S. Olympic "Dream Team" achieved the first wave of the
NBA's globalization as the squad showcased the NBA product for the rest of the
world. Then in 1995, the league actually became global when it initiated two
non-American teams into the league-- the Toronto Raptors and the Vancouver
Grizzlies. In the NBA's story of globalization, this expansion represents the
greatest effort to grow the league beyond U.S. borders. Besides the Toronto
Huskies, a team in the defunct Basketball Association of America that only
played the 1946-47 season, until 1995, U.S. basketball was limited to the U.S.
Canada has always been a difficult place to house NBA teams, due to a weak
currency and an even weaker interest. In 2001, the Grizzlies left Canada
for Memphis and the Raptors, while still a viable franchise, have not become the
success story that the league had hoped in its prized foreign franchise
financially or athletically.
While Canada, no doubt, is the easiest place for the NBA to
expand, it is not the international market that wants or demands the NBA
product. And the NBA seems to be wising up to this fact. On Tuesday, NBA
Commisioner David Stern discussed in an interview with Reuters the current state
of the NBA's globalization and how China will be the next frontier for the
league. According to Stern, who has always been a major proponent of
international expansion, the NBA in China will soon be a reality. "The model
that we're working on now is the placement of all of our assets in China in an
enterprise with all NBA rights," Stern said from New York Tuesday, "That would
include rights to sponsorship and merchandise revenue, TV deals there, and the
ability to operate a league such as NBA of China." Stern believes that as China
embraces the free movement of labor in other business areas, so too will it
allow the best players to play in the Chinese league. Currently, there are rules
restricting how many foreign players play for each Chinese team.
Despite what Stern says on the record, if the Commish had his
way, and he may get it, the Chinese league would become NBA China, and the
allure of the American game would replace the drab CBA. Stern views the Beijing
Olympics as the ultimate force to drive his globalization goals. He said of the
'08 games, "It's going to be an awesome tournament. Beijing is going to be to
the globalization game what the Dream Team was to the beginning of
globalization." And he may be right. The Olympic tournament will bring to China
what the Communist nation has been begging for the last decade-- the best
players in the world playing the prevalent Chinese sport on Chinese soil.
There is no mistaking the importance of China in the future
of the NBA. Wednesday, the NBA's president of international business
operations announced the first foreign NBA store will open on Beijing's
Wangfujing, the city's premier shopping avenue. A store in Shanghai and
NBA-themed restaurants in China will follow. The NBA has a 50% annual rate
growth in China making it, by far, the league's fastest-growing market. It's
shocking that while so many international companies have moved into China over
the last few years, the one company that dominates China has been so timid in
its expansion here. Clothing stores, restaurants, expanded television coverage
are all fine. But let's go Stern. Enough is enough. Bring the game to the
country that wants it most. Bring the NBA to China.
•Reuters:
Commissioner Wants To Give China NBA's Expertise
•People's
Daily: NBA To Open First Overseas Store
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