robillionaire wrote:Chanel Bomber wrote:Capn'O wrote:
I like the wheel too but flattening the odds would be fine.
I suspect there will be the opposite problem where teams that would otherwise compete for a playoff spot late in the season might rest players to get a higher chance at getting say a top 5 pick. Tanking from the top if you will.
Even flattening the odds completely would be conducive to creating this incentive. Although I'm speculating of course.
A lot of these anti-tanking arguments refuse to accept the reality that this is a zero-sum game.
A way to remedy that would be to open a relegation system like the European leagues, but it is simply not compatible with a salary cap.
I said the same thing in my post,
but even this would be better than what we have. Plus what would the odds of a top pick be for 14 teams (16 if they expand the league) with completely flat odds? Probably not even high enough to care about losing on purpose. And even if some team did this an intentionally missed the playoffs, so what? The amount of teams punting entire seasons and losing on purpose would be drastically reduced enough across the board to make some team missing the playoffs on purpose for a 4-5% swing or whatever it is not very relevant. Teams at the bottom would actually be trying to win at the end of the season. That’s a huge improvement. Fans wouldn’t be begging for their team to blow it up and lose every game because the incentive isn’t there anymore.
We are talking about 1 or 2 oddball borderline playoff teams that might do something crazy and punt the last 5-10 games to sneak out of the playoffs vs an epidemic where multiple teams lose games on purpose for the entire season because it’s perceived that losing is the way to make your team good. There should be as little as possible incentive to lose on purpose. That should be the goal here
I actually wanted to raise that question because I think that's the part that's debatable.
What's more problematic in theory, a potential playoff team throwing the towel (and games) before the end of the season to have an equal shot at a high pick as the worst team in the league? Or a talent-depleted team to start with becoming even worse and being unwatchable? I can see both sides. Last season's Knicks team was very fun to watch up until the end of the season because they tried to compete despite missing the playoffs, and being the worst team in the league did produce the golden years of the Frank era.
I get your point and I'm not necessarily against flattening the odds completely. In fact, I'm all for experimenting with it, though I would personally try to maintain some level of graduality, but maybe with only a few percentage points from first to last.