Chanel Bomber wrote:robillionaire wrote:Chanel Bomber wrote: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.
This is the point where we need to run the numbers to figure out exactly what the odds would be and then ask ourselves if it’s even feasible a team would try a plan that has a 95% chance of failing give or take vs. just trying to make the playoffs. And if a coach or players on a team that’s around .500 would even go along with this. Or ownership that wants extra playoff revenue. At that point you’d have to say if a team was crazy enough to try it and it worked, more power to them. Again it’s not a perfect solution like relegation is but we can’t do that as you’ve explained, this wouldn’t change all that much about the league structure. It might not eliminate 100% of games that are lost on purpose because in theory someone could try it but I feel like it would reduce it by 99.9% and I’m good with that.
Yes, absolutely.
I think further flattening the odds (or completely) is the least problematic solution. That was essentially my point at the beginning of the conversation. It's not perfect, but it's fine.
I would still give the worst teams better odds even if the differences were insignificant, if only for what it means symbolically, before flattening them completely. But perfectly flat odds would be an interesting experiment for sure. It would also put more of an emphasis on talent evaluation in the draft.
I would consider not perfectly flat odds but they draw for all 14 (or 16) teams. If you’re the worst team in the nba you have odds of dropping to 14. Buck stops here.