Dan Z wrote:DuckIII wrote:eierluke wrote:
While for many years, superstars just did not change teams while in their prime, migratory bird LeBron James changed this culture:
recent finals mvps who werden't drafted by the winning team of the finals:
2020 Lakers L.James
2019 Raptors K.Leonard
2018 Warriors K.Durant
2017 Warriors K.Durant
2015 Warriors A.Iguidala
2013 Heat L.James
2012 Heat L.James
That means that teams can win championships now by aquiring their best player via free agency.
Precondition however is that those free agents don't join them while they are losing teams. They join them when everything is comfortable prepared for them to get a ring.
Absolutely happens. But when it does it’s usually because a guy demands to land in one of 2-3 specific places and no one else even gets a seat at the table. So it does not mitigate at all the significance of the draft. You want to be the team that drafts these guys so you have a chance to contend with them and keep them in house during their primes. That some leave later doesn’t change that.
It's also been 5 years since the LeBron Lakers team won. Here are the 4 championship teams since that time:
2024 Celtics
2023 Nuggets
2022 Warriors
2021 Bucks
None of those teams have a major free agent who signed with them. The same with their opponents in the finals (Mavs, Heat, Celtics and Suns).
Heat/Jimmy.. but yeah, the last 4 years were different. 2020 was the last time we had big FA movement, and that capped a decade of some wild UFA acquisitions. Since all the top dogs landed in their preferred big market destinations (4 of them in LA to be exact, 3 in NY), it closed the door on that approach.
But now that the next-gen. is soon becoming unrestricted (Giannis, Jokic, Shai, etc.), on top of the repeater tax penalties, I do believe 2027-30 will have some unexpected FA scenarios. The max contract trade market is going to be more difficult to navigate, especially if you can’t aggregate salaries when you’re over the 2nd apron. Players might reconsider locking in 5y deals.