The Master wrote:celtxman wrote:Don't buy into the small market/large market myth. Until last year the NY Knicks had the worst record in the entire NBA for the entire 21st Century. The Milwaukee Bucks the smallest market team there is won a championship without high lottery picks. The Brooklyn Nets, the stepbrother of the Knicks in NY,, following the fateful trade with the Celtics, giving up three high lottery picks, had no picks, a terrible gutted team, and seemingly no chance of digging out of it. They got new ownership, new management, and a good coach. Within a few years they were a Kevin Durant big toe from being in the Finals and likely winning it. Why did Durant and Irving go there? Because they saw that this was clearly a better opportunity than the wealthier Knicks. Philadelphia, the 6th largest city in the Country was the birthplace of "trust the process." Perpetual losing orchestrated by Sam Hinkie, accumulated four straight lottery picks between #1 and #3 OVERALL. The result? They're back in the high lottery this season, with an epic season ending tank. I'm sure the small market teams were impressed that the Sixers flew right by them and will get a higher pick as a result. Once we realize that tanking is an equal opportunity crutch for the poor and the rich, we can at least get to the truth.
Until last year the Knicks had the worst record in the NBA, and yet they were able to sign Melo, Amare or Brunson as free agents (Melo in contract year was technically hadballing Nuggets to trade to NY before trade daedline). Brooklyn Nets won two playoff series in 10 years prior to signing Kyrie and KD. Lakers won 27, 21, 17, 26, 35 and 37 games prior to signing LeBron.
Yeah, small markets can create championship-level teams with smart management, and big markets can be poor for years with bad management, and they can tank - the point is: big markets frequently get stars for free/on discount (resquets), small markets don't. When small markets are bad, they at least get high picks to acquire top talent.
Flat lottery odds or wheel lottery system will long term decrease parity in the league. Imagine Lakers getting LeBron for free, then AD hardballing Pelicans, and then 2nd pick in the draft, because that was the order of wheel of fortune, while Cavs getting 14th pick and Pelicans 21st. It doesn't work the other way around.
Any reform has to be accepted by at least 23 organizations (?) - flat lottery odds or wheel system definitely wouldn't. Small markets would be just dumb to accept these systems. Obviously, we can discuss unrealistic scenarios - but your point was that the NBA has great system prepared and just decided not to use it, so that what I was referring to.