MartinToVaught wrote:sp6r=underrated wrote:His choice is to 26 million playing with Westbrook in Oklahoma or 26 million playing with Curry and Dray in the Bay Area.
He had several other choices besides those two, all of which would have also been more competitive than joining Steph's 73-win team that he had just choked/quit against.
And none of those other choices was as good as joining Dray, Steph in San Francisco. The rational actor model is a simplification but it explains a lot. People respond to incentives:
Winning is more rewarding than losing.
Playing with talented co-workers makes winning easier.
It is easier to attract talented players in a large city than a small one.
And big cities have more off the court business opportunities than small.
The NBA CBA makes Durant to Golden State the rational choice which is what happens. I also fail to see how it is really that much different than the 2011 Decision, other than your affection for Lebron. The Heatles didn't reach the GSW heights but they expected they would based on that rally. They were just like Durant trying to stack the deck in their favor.
And I don't blame them. Most players are going to make the rational choice. The owners created a CBA that encourages superteams. Blame them if this pisses you off so much instead of whining "boohoo KD isn't a big tough guy who wants a hard challenge." I don't know about you, but in my day to day life I try to make things easier on myself not harder.
Durant doing the rational thing doesn't reflect poorly on him. You seem to want people to be martyrs for your entertainment by trying to do things with maximum difficulty. Which is an unreasonable demand.
Keep the soft cap, but get rid of max contracts and you'll see what you actually want, players not pairing up and undesirable markets being able to attract top free agents. But when I brought up getting rid of max contracts you hated that idea too. Do you have any solution to what you consider a grave problem?
As long as we have the current systems, players are going to do the rational thing and pair up. And most of the pair ups will be in the two alpha markets (LA/NYC) or the second tier big markets.
His trade demand after things went sideways does but that is a different topic with different solutions.
Abolish the draft. Abolish the rookie scale. Make teams try to win.