Sedale Threatt wrote:the sea duck wrote:the nba is an international league that just happens to play in the US (and Canada). very few players in the world good enough to make the nba aren't in the nba. the nba champs are essentially the world champs whether we call them that or not. so if someone wants to call them that, go ahead.
if a non-nba team wants the title, build a resume worthy of contention and then beat the nba champs.
But that's the thing: There is no means to do that.
And I'm not advocating for that in the slightest. European basketball is a step above college basketball but obviously vastly inferior to the NBA, which thanks to the prestige, competition and paychecks has an overwhelming monopoly on the world's best players. Beating their best team for an official title isn't something I think or care about. NBA teams would win almost every time and none of our fans would care in the slightest.
But that's the key point: Almost every time. Because as we see over and over again in our professional playoffs, foreign football cups and especially the NCAA tournament, inferior teams upset superior ones all the time. In the NCAA tournament, for example, No. 2 seeds win "only" 93 pct of the time in the 1st round. Utter dominance, but far from total.
Obviously it would depend on format. If you turn it into a short series rather than a one-off, their chances drop dramatically. Then you need to get into which rule set we're using. But no matter how superior you are in any given field, until you've actually proven it on the field of play you shouldn't be claiming any crown.
start up the McDonald's Championship again then. it wasn't the nba's fault that it stopped.


























