chuck_wagon44 wrote:It's evident as I am getting older that the NBA is strictly a business. Majority of NBA owners would rather have a large profit than win an actual championship. I feel like some owners cater to their fan base by doing bare minimum to get fans on board but in terms of actually competing and having to pay luxury tax, they simply bow out. It kinda turned me off as a fan and I'm sure it sucks to hear this but a lot of the bad owners in sports (not just nba) ruin the fan culture in general. Here is my list of NBA teams who will never win a championship IN FUTURE due to bad ownership:
1.) NY Knicks - Dolan
2.) OKC Thunder - market and ownership doing bare minimum
3.) Orlando Magic - ownership never keeps stars (Shaq, Penny, Dwight)
4.) Houston Rockets - Fertitta
5.) Sacramento Kings - Vivek
6.) Indiana Pacers - market and ownership not caring about winning
7.) Charlotte Hornets - market and never keeping stars/young talent
8.) San Antonio Spurs - ownership situation and market attractability
Contrary to popular belief, going deep into the luxury tax is not actually a requirement to winning a championship. The Raptors won in 2019 despite being in the bottom half of the league in salary and $6 million below the luxury tax threshold.
The Warriors didn't win in 2016 but they were the best team in the NBA all year and came a Draymond Green suspension away from back to back titles and they weren't paying the luxury tax that season.
The idea that any of these franchises have a zero percent chance of winning a championship in the future is also a bit of an overreaction. No team has a zero percent chance of doing anything, especially if you're going with a time frame as wide as "the future".
Any of these franchises could have a Golden State-like draft where they hit on 3 future stars in three consecutive drafts. Hell, the Thunder already did that in the past. In that scenario, they're going to be in championship contention regardless of how poorly ownership is managing the team.



























