"Even out the salaries," said Doug Dorrow, a fan in Milwaukee. "I know there's a salary cap [now], but a lot of people manipulate it ... however that works is way beyond me."From city to city,
NFL kint hats whoelsale, variations on the same theme kept popping up,
newport regular cigarettes, similar to what Hornets fan David Boyd said:"I like the way the NFL is set up where every team has a chance to win the Super Bowl."Stern has hinted at the same belief,
marlboro gold cigarettes, rhetorically asking reporters in December, "What do you think makes [the NFL] so competitive?"The answer is revenue sharing and a hard salary cap. The NBA can never be like the NFL, though, because the entire NFL television package is handled on a national network level, while the bulk of NBA games are televised by local stations. That's where the disparity kicks in. The annual local TV rights for some small-market teams don't even match the contract of the highest-paid player on their team. The Lakers, meanwhile, are about to create their own channel that will bring in a reported $150 million a year or more -- as much as $200, according to an SI.com report.