GrindCityHustle wrote:In 2k you can use it to bring a 68 level to a 81 level in 2 seasons if you do it right
Right. If there is one thing I could change about the NBA, I'd make it more like a video game.
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GrindCityHustle wrote:In 2k you can use it to bring a 68 level to a 81 level in 2 seasons if you do it right
JujitsuFlip wrote:I mean... They run the exact same offense and defense as the NBA parent club.ejftw wrote:JujitsuFlip wrote:What do you mean? All 30 teams now have their own G League affiliate, how much more exclusive do you want it to be?
Teams owning a G League side in itself doesn't make it exclusive. Making it something similar to how MLS does it with the Next Pro League would be a better way to go.
I mean, if the Stockton Kings sign someone and develop him or he ends up being a gem that fell through the cracks, the Wizards being able to swoop them right away takes away from any sort of exclusivity. While in Next Pro, if Los Dos have a player that Inter Miami want, they can't just sign him, they would need to make an offer to Los Dos for said player.
And its not like there is no protection for G League, they're just called two-way contracts, each NBA team gets 3 of them. There are also exhibit 10 contracts that keep prospects in the pipeline for 60 days.
What you're describing limits the players potential. Keep in mind, the NBA is a player driven league. If the Kings only see a player as a G League prospect and the Wizards see him as a NBA player, by all means that guy should go get his money and opportunity.
It doesn't though, it just makes the NBA parent club be intelligent about who they protect with two-way contracts, exhibit 10 contracts, and rare now days but retaining draft rights.ejftw wrote:JujitsuFlip wrote:I mean... They run the exact same offense and defense as the NBA parent club.ejftw wrote:
Teams owning a G League side in itself doesn't make it exclusive. Making it something similar to how MLS does it with the Next Pro League would be a better way to go.
I mean, if the Stockton Kings sign someone and develop him or he ends up being a gem that fell through the cracks, the Wizards being able to swoop them right away takes away from any sort of exclusivity. While in Next Pro, if Los Dos have a player that Inter Miami want, they can't just sign him, they would need to make an offer to Los Dos for said player.
And its not like there is no protection for G League, they're just called two-way contracts, each NBA team gets 3 of them. There are also exhibit 10 contracts that keep prospects in the pipeline for 60 days.
What you're describing limits the players potential. Keep in mind, the NBA is a player driven league. If the Kings only see a player as a G League prospect and the Wizards see him as a NBA player, by all means that guy should go get his money and opportunity.
I mean, as much as it may take away from player movement, it takes away from the true farm system and exclusivity I initially mentioned.
Though, I'm pretty sure those in Next Pro and A-AA-AAA prefer having a true farm system versus what the G League provides

GrindCityHustle wrote:All three guys who finished top 3 in MVP voting i doubt will ever be contributors in the NBA.
What is the real point of the g league? I see some star player practice there back from injury but that's about it.
In 2k you can use it to bring a 68 level to a 81 level in 2 seasons if you do it right
Explain to me because I think I am missing the boat somewhere. It seems the minor leagues were better back in the day somehow.
JujitsuFlip wrote:It doesn't though, it just makes the NBA parent club be intelligent about who they protect with two-way contracts, exhibit 10 contracts, and rare now days but retaining draft rights.ejftw wrote:JujitsuFlip wrote:I mean... They run the exact same offense and defense as the NBA parent club.
And its not like there is no protection for G League, they're just called two-way contracts, each NBA team gets 3 of them. There are also exhibit 10 contracts that keep prospects in the pipeline for 60 days.
What you're describing limits the players potential. Keep in mind, the NBA is a player driven league. If the Kings only see a player as a G League prospect and the Wizards see him as a NBA player, by all means that guy should go get his money and opportunity.
I mean, as much as it may take away from player movement, it takes away from the true farm system and exclusivity I initially mentioned.
Though, I'm pretty sure those in Next Pro and A-AA-AAA prefer having a true farm system versus what the G League provides
You're saying every player on a G League affiliate should be protected, that's silly.
Plus guys can be sent down who are on standard NBA contracts too.
The G League does exactly what it was designed to do.
I can't imagine the amount of cap hell that would cause.ChiTownHero1992 wrote:Right now its wasted potential...the NBA needs to turn it in to a true minor league system like MLB and NHL. Every franchise gets 30 contracts, but only 15 can be on the NBA level team at a time. You can move players up / down throughout the season. It would make things much better and likely open doors for many prospects and find more hidden talent.
It's just dumb because only 5 guys can be on the floor at once.ejftw wrote:JujitsuFlip wrote:It doesn't though, it just makes the NBA parent club be intelligent about who they protect with two-way contracts, exhibit 10 contracts, and rare now days but retaining draft rights.ejftw wrote:
I mean, as much as it may take away from player movement, it takes away from the true farm system and exclusivity I initially mentioned.
Though, I'm pretty sure those in Next Pro and A-AA-AAA prefer having a true farm system versus what the G League provides
You're saying every player on a G League affiliate should be protected, that's silly.
Plus guys can be sent down who are on standard NBA contracts too.
The G League does exactly what it was designed to do.
Correct, I want it to be utilized as a true farm system/youth academy type of setting versus just a lesser league being subsidized by the NBA franchise owners because the league wants to monopolize any sort of (legit) professional (or semi) basketball.
I get that's not everyone's cup of tea, but, just the way it works for MLB and MLS in the states (not to mention youth academies in every football league across the globe and I'm sure FIBA teams have it as well, not as well versed in them), I just feel it would pay dividends
JujitsuFlip wrote:It's just dumb because only 5 guys can be on the floor at once.ejftw wrote:JujitsuFlip wrote:It doesn't though, it just makes the NBA parent club be intelligent about who they protect with two-way contracts, exhibit 10 contracts, and rare now days but retaining draft rights.
You're saying every player on a G League affiliate should be protected, that's silly.
Plus guys can be sent down who are on standard NBA contracts too.
The G League does exactly what it was designed to do.
Correct, I want it to be utilized as a true farm system/youth academy type of setting versus just a lesser league being subsidized by the NBA franchise owners because the league wants to monopolize any sort of (legit) professional (or semi) basketball.
I get that's not everyone's cup of tea, but, just the way it works for MLB and MLS in the states (not to mention youth academies in every football league across the globe and I'm sure FIBA teams have it as well, not as well versed in them), I just feel it would pay dividends
You're literally handcuffing the talent with your idea. If a player is with a team and the franchise sees them solely as a prospect, they have no avenue to the NBA.
All this would do is push more players overseas to get paid and get a real league opportunity.
It's not broken right now, no reason to mess with it.
You're speaking about 2 inferior leagues............ejftw wrote:JujitsuFlip wrote:It's just dumb because only 5 guys can be on the floor at once.ejftw wrote:
Correct, I want it to be utilized as a true farm system/youth academy type of setting versus just a lesser league being subsidized by the NBA franchise owners because the league wants to monopolize any sort of (legit) professional (or semi) basketball.
I get that's not everyone's cup of tea, but, just the way it works for MLB and MLS in the states (not to mention youth academies in every football league across the globe and I'm sure FIBA teams have it as well, not as well versed in them), I just feel it would pay dividends
You're literally handcuffing the talent with your idea. If a player is with a team and the franchise sees them solely as a prospect, they have no avenue to the NBA.
All this would do is push more players overseas to get paid and get a real league opportunity.
It's not broken right now, no reason to mess with it.
Ah yes, the beautiful throwing of ad hominems when there is nothing much left to say.
And it's quite amazing, I didn't know that A/AA/AAA or NextPro/Youth Academies was handcuffing talent. Because, you know, trades don't happen. Buy outs don't happen. Players don't hit free agency.
JujitsuFlip wrote:I can't imagine the amount of cap hell that would cause.ChiTownHero1992 wrote:Right now its wasted potential...the NBA needs to turn it in to a true minor league system like MLB and NHL. Every franchise gets 30 contracts, but only 15 can be on the NBA level team at a time. You can move players up / down throughout the season. It would make things much better and likely open doors for many prospects and find more hidden talent.
ChiTownHero1992 wrote:JujitsuFlip wrote:I can't imagine the amount of cap hell that would cause.ChiTownHero1992 wrote:Right now its wasted potential...the NBA needs to turn it in to a true minor league system like MLB and NHL. Every franchise gets 30 contracts, but only 15 can be on the NBA level team at a time. You can move players up / down throughout the season. It would make things much better and likely open doors for many prospects and find more hidden talent.
NHL does it just fine, Salary Floor and Hard Cap at the top level that all teams have to stay within, then a salary cap for the Minors. Some contracts can be One-Way (top level players), some can be Two-Way (guys who will bump back and forth). Its actually quite simple in the NHL and should be the model for NBA. Basically you'd have as follows, salary cap is currently 140M and G-Leaguers make a flat rate $40,500 so lets just say a 1-2 Million Minor league salary:
120M - 10 - Full Time NBA Contracts (non-rookie, rotational guys in the NBA, can only go to Minors by clearing waivers)
20M - 10 - Two-Way Contracts (guys on the verge of NBA rosters and Rookie Contracts)
1-2M - 10 - Minor League Contracts (guys likely never to make it but each franchise is trying to groom/test, they can be called up but if pushed back down to Minor's have to clear waivers)
They already basically do this but only control maybe 3-5 G-Leaguers in their franchise rather than all 12-15 players. Trading would become "slightly" harder, but that's because you'd have to match contracts slightly more, you couldn't just trade 5 minor leaguers for one Full-NBA contract and "blow it up" persay as you'd have to have the right amount of contracts and reach the salary floor (this helps with tanking slightly).