GrandTheftRondo wrote:Ryoga Hibiki wrote:GrandTheftRondo wrote:People keep going on about parity but the reality is the NBA people have loved for decades isn’t about that.
I do agree there should be some mechanisms to encourage some parity but going down a path of wanting contending teams to be constantly forced to get rid of highly paid players is ridiculous.
How can people grow emotional attachment to players/cores and rivalries build if we’re seeing a team go deep into the playoffs and just a few years later the CBA dictates they ship off core pieces?
It’s cheapening the product having a revolving door of players being traded, moving via free agency etc.
Take Boston and NY for example. Let’s imagine Tatum was healthy. That’s maybe a great rivalry in prior years that could last a number of years. Instead one basically has to completely blow apart their team because of the CBA.
Same goes for the Nuggets. We should have been watching a generational period from Jokic in the playoffs. Instead the CBA dictates that the Nuggets ownership can’t feasibly do ****.
I think there's a weird narrative on why there have been no repeats for so long:
2019 TOR --> Kawhi leaves
2020 LAL --> injured Lebron
2021 Bucks --> injured Giannis
2022 Warriors --> not good enough
2023 Nuggets --> injured Murray (and Porter not performing)
2024 Boston --> injured Tatum, Porzingis and Holiday
Players are much more exposed to have nagging injuries in the postseason, compared to the past, and there's way less margin for error because there are other good teams ready to capitalize a healthy run.
Injuries are killing the dynasties much more than the CBA.
I was talking more about going forward.
Agree that over the last few years it’s more just been unfortunate luck for teams trying to repeat.
However the new CBA is beginning to take effect and we are seeing contending teams having to sell off players.
Even a team like OKC will be forced into tough decision situations.
I just don’t understand why elite drafting should end up with teams still having to break up so suddenly.
It’s BS.
To bring it back to my team Boston. People say oh well we don’t want teams buying their ways to titles.
Reality is though Boston drafted Brown, Tatum, Smart, Williams, Pritchard, Nesmith etc to build an initial contender.
They accumulated assets and turned them into better assets.
They’re essentially been punished like they’ve got full Phoenix and just threw money at everything.
They drafted Brown and because of the stupid supermax crap essentially had no choice but to overpay for him.
Of course you need to make tough decisions, that's the purpose.
You know that those players at some point might become too expensive and you must plan for it.
That's what Presti has been doing, ignoring the BS of taking a "big swing" to make a "win now move".
He knows SGA will be a supermax guy. Chet and JDub will make the rookie max, maybe even the rookie supermax. Complementary players like JWill or Wallace will cost much more. He will use those picks to draft other guys or to trade for other veterans.
And, to be honest, he would have had to do it anyway because he would have never had the budget keep everyone anyway, being in such a small market.
But even Boston, they have young players and picks, good contracts, what's the issue? You want to keep exactly the same team together for many years? This is not happening and never happened.
You still have the budget to keep the core together, but you must know how cycle the rest of the team, for prolonged success.
Again, look at the past: how many guys were both in the 1st and 2nd Bulls 3peat? Two.
What player besides the Spurs big three (who made sacrifices to stay together) was there in both 03 and 07? Bowen, everybody else came and went.
Keep in mind that not everyone can afford to go full Balmer. Or even Lacob. This system is in place to let the Indiana and the OKC contend. And it's working.