manlisten wrote:Lalouie wrote:after 60years, if it was rigged someone would have exposed it by now
but it's fun to talk about
In 2011, the CIA declassified documents that had been kept secret since 1917. They have over 20,000 employees. Where does this notion come from that the public is privy to all information that exists?
The CIA and the NBA of course have very different levels of clearance and have different abilities to keep information classified, not a very helpful comparison. I think that is quite obvious though, since we're talking about a countries secret intelligence agency vs a sports organization. Now the NBA in a very tight circle of people of course could keep certain things hidden, but the draft has too many touch points that it falls out of the realm of that kind of situation.
This is one of the main issues we run into though. If we start to scrutinize our theories, it ends up being some conclusion like this, that the NBA is like something like the CIA, or that the NBA is basically some world power who can silence many other powerful people, or that the NBA is like the Mafia, all these kinds of conclusions.
....then the next issue is not even that no one involved has directly come out to say anything, it's that there hasn't even been an anonymous report, or a "sources" report, or any hint like that. That is, despite all the people who would have had to be involved over the years and who would be in and out of the NBA ecosystem. That's just not possible, again, unless we go back to the Mafia NBA, type stuff, and even the Mafia and world powers and all these guys get leaks.
Catchall wrote:sp6r=underrated wrote:Catchall wrote:I've said this before. I think some picks are rigged in advance, and I think some picks are random. These franchise-altering #1 picks are simply too valuable to allow their allocation to be left purely to chance. At the same time, the league can say, "Lottery picks are left to chance," and they'd be correct, as technically many of them are.
The Pelicans getting Zion Williamson to rebuild with after imploding with the Anthony Davis trade demand and suspension, while the Lakers concurrently move up to get a #4 pick they can use to complete the Anthony Davis trade, is just too wonderful a coincidence for the league and both franchises involved. It stabilized the Pelicans franchise and pushed Lebron and the Lakers into contention. The mathematical probability of both these events occurring was miniscule.
Also, I remember Kyrie Irving's dad was quoted as saying that Kyrie was going to "run the show up in Cleveland" before that draft lottery.
If the NBA was fixing the lottery in 2019 they would have fixed it for NY. Metro NY has 20x the population of Metro New Orleans. A winner in NYC would be far, far more valuable than a winner in New Orleans.
New Orleans winning the lottery with Zion is a data point in favor of the lottery not being fixed.
Disagree. New Orleans winning the lottery in 2019 was compensation for sending Anthony Davis to the Lakers. Sending AD to play with Lebron in LA was a higher priority than giving Zion to the Knicks.
Kyrie's dad I remember said the Cavs would take Kyrie #1 after they got the pick. I don't remember any mention that he predicted who would win the draft though, those are very different things.
The NBA draft interference theories including the Zion one sounds nice, but the reasonings just end up making it similar to random, which you can just achieve by doing nothing. The NBA's purpose in rigging drafts seems to just shift on every new whim they have, kind of pointless. One time it is to get a star in a big market, then it is hometown, then it is to reward teams that lost a star.
Why do they need to compensate a team that lost a star though? Of course people will say because the NBA "made" New Orleans send AD to LA to help Lebron, but that argument for that is not even a good. Of course all the NBA forcing players to LA arguments don't work so well because players have been pushing themselves to LA long before any of the rigging people would say anything was going on.
Again guys, remember that the ONE and ONLY time the NBA actually had direct control on the decision for the trade destination of a superstar, the trade to the Lakers was blocked by the NBA.
That's just a direct refutation of the idea that, the NBA is then behind the scenes forcing all these players to LA, let alone the people who even go as far as to say all the owners are also in on it because it benefits them in whole league profitability, and that they have sit downs to explain to them how it all works.
All this is supposed to be true, yet the ONE time where it was actually put to the test whether it is true, the league did not allow it, and part of that being because other owners complained immediately, but supposedly all these other owners according to some are supposed to be in on any rigging that is for the benefit of the league. It doesn't make sense.
Of course I understand that if one is committed to the rigging conclusion already, that the league declining that trade was actually also all part of the master plan so they could throw everyone off the scent, but then if everything just becomes argued as part of the plan, there's no real discussion to be had.
The big picture argument people have for rigging is that the NBA's aim is money, money corrups and these things would be done for profitability. That is a good argument basis, because money is a great corrupting factor.
If their aim is money, profitability and progress of the league, they don't do a great job. Zion to New Orleans in order to "compensate" the owners because they traded Davis who they had for many years and couldn't build a winner around him is just stupid if that's your aim. If their aim is profitability, but most of the instances they are rigging are for storylines that are not about maximum profitability, then what's the point? Why am I risking rigging then?