Poll: NBA Top 72 or Top 75
Posted: Thu Jun 2, 2022 9:13 pm
IMO, all of our Top 75 lists should be a Top 72 right now.
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Owly wrote:So I guess the question is how long has the NBA existed?
So I'd ask why you think 49-50 is the start is it the name or is it the merger?
i think the NBL was the better league for two years and that can get underplayed where official records focus on BAA. But the BAA is the organization that survived (not quite the ABA merger but my understanding is it's the BAA organization taking in NBL teams) and the BAA had already taken in most of the NBL's best players, short term teams and most viable long-term franchises (I think the Hawks and Nats are the long term survivors that come with the merger, the Packers the best short term team, Schayes the big talent left - but also a lot of teams that didn't make it).
If one wanted to make an argument that 48-49 was when the organization that becomes the NBA became the big league I hear that. But first and foremost I think this is about the organization so I'd need persuading that 46-47 isn't the start of the organization or else something else a good reason the organization would/should (the latter might be easier but less relevant to IRL practicalities) mark something else.
wojoaderge wrote:Owly wrote:So I guess the question is how long has the NBA existed?
So I'd ask why you think 49-50 is the start is it the name or is it the merger?
i think the NBL was the better league for two years and that can get underplayed where official records focus on BAA. But the BAA is the organization that survived (not quite the ABA merger but my understanding is it's the BAA organization taking in NBL teams) and the BAA had already taken in most of the NBL's best players, short term teams and most viable long-term franchises (I think the Hawks and Nats are the long term survivors that come with the merger, the Packers the best short term team, Schayes the big talent left - but also a lot of teams that didn't make it).
If one wanted to make an argument that 48-49 was when the organization that becomes the NBA became the big league I hear that. But first and foremost I think this is about the organization so I'd need persuading that 46-47 isn't the start of the organization or else something else a good reason the organization would/should (the latter might be easier but less relevant to IRL practicalities) mark something else.
I definitely think it's the merger.
wojoaderge wrote:The NBA had 10 out of 17 ex-NBL teams (as well as the 6 surviving NBL teams) when it started and only 6 that were BAA teams.
Owly wrote:What is the it in this sentence?
Owly wrote:The NBA had 10 out of 17 ex-NBL teams (as well as the 6 surviving NBL teams) when it started and only 6 that were BAA teams.
BAA had already poached the Lakers, Royals, Pistons and Kautskys a year earlier Those teams wanted to be part of the major league operation with the bigger arenas etc..
If you are arguing for the merger I think you have argue based on the alignment immediately prior to the merger.
prior to merger BAA has
Capitols: ended during '51
Knicks: alive
Baltimore Bullets: ended '54/early into '55 season
Warriors: Alive
Celtics: Alive
Steamrollers: dies in '49 prior to merger
Royals (later Kings): Alive
Lakers: (alive)
Stags: ended '50
Bombers: ended '50
Pistons: Alive
Jets: dies in '49 prior to merger.
So 10 of those teams make it to the merger.
by 55-56 the NBA has 8 teams. 6 of them were in the BAA when that name ended.
Do the same with the NBL and you see a bunch of teams that quickly fold, try to reform a version of their old league (NBPL, failed to reach it's first postseason), then fold. At that point letting them join and fail was easier than continue fighting or trying to figure out and coax the few viable teams left. Per above the Nats and (Black)Hawks survive (and fwiw, neither in their original market, BAA's Knicks and Celtics remain in theirs).
If you look at the earlier dates as I say NBL was the more talented league, but the BAA had already taken most of the best of it and by the merger was, as best I can tell, eating it up and spitting a bunch of it out.
Some of the arguments offered in the articles are flawed "Whether it was a merger or, as the NBA now claims, merely a name change?". It can be called a merger and not reset the more powerful organization's timeline (see ABA merger). The name shows it's "a merger of equals" ... or that now Toronto have gone Podoloff is happy with the major league convention of starting with "National ...", or it's a nice opportunity for a rebrand and some publicity or ...
Is the NBL important and underrecognized. Yes. By the time of the merger, as best I can tell, the power and the underlying organization was with the BAA (a bunch of the NBL teams I think went back to the final NBL commission Doxie Moore and the NBPL, that league quickly died).
wojoaderge wrote:Owly wrote:What is the it in this sentence?
The "it" is my answer between the name change or the mergerOwly wrote:The NBA had 10 out of 17 ex-NBL teams (as well as the 6 surviving NBL teams) when it started and only 6 that were BAA teams.
BAA had already poached the Lakers, Royals, Pistons and Kautskys a year earlier Those teams wanted to be part of the major league operation with the bigger arenas etc..
If you are arguing for the merger I think you have argue based on the alignment immediately prior to the merger.
prior to merger BAA has
Capitols: ended during '51
Knicks: alive
Baltimore Bullets: ended '54/early into '55 season
Warriors: Alive
Celtics: Alive
Steamrollers: dies in '49 prior to merger
Royals (later Kings): Alive
Lakers: (alive)
Stags: ended '50
Bombers: ended '50
Pistons: Alive
Jets: dies in '49 prior to merger.
So 10 of those teams make it to the merger.
by 55-56 the NBA has 8 teams. 6 of them were in the BAA when that name ended.
Do the same with the NBL and you see a bunch of teams that quickly fold, try to reform a version of their old league (NBPL, failed to reach it's first postseason), then fold. At that point letting them join and fail was easier than continue fighting or trying to figure out and coax the few viable teams left. Per above the Nats and (Black)Hawks survive (and fwiw, neither in their original market, BAA's Knicks and Celtics remain in theirs).
If you look at the earlier dates as I say NBL was the more talented league, but the BAA had already taken most of the best of it and by the merger was, as best I can tell, eating it up and spitting a bunch of it out.
Some of the arguments offered in the articles are flawed "Whether it was a merger or, as the NBA now claims, merely a name change?". It can be called a merger and not reset the more powerful organization's timeline (see ABA merger). The name shows it's "a merger of equals" ... or that now Toronto have gone Podoloff is happy with the major league convention of starting with "National ...", or it's a nice opportunity for a rebrand and some publicity or ...
Is the NBL important and underrecognized. Yes. By the time of the merger, as best I can tell, the power and the underlying organization was with the BAA (a bunch of the NBL teams I think went back to the final NBL commission Doxie Moore and the NBPL, that league quickly died).
What are the flaws in the arguments? Why does "the more powerful organization" get to control the historical narrative? In my opinion, the subsequent fates of any of the 17 original NBA teams are irrelevant. Nobody knew what was going to happen to them in the summer of 1949. What they did know is everyone wanted the talent wars to end. The NBL wasn't about to fold. The NBL teams certainly didn't think they were joining the BAA, and nobody in the press though so either. More info here: http://www.apbr.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=1910