Ryoga Hibiki wrote:pepe1991 wrote:Ryoga Hibiki wrote:staying on top for over 2-3 years, keeping the same extended core, was already impossible for most franchises. Only the very rich ones could pay like 150m of repeater taxes.
But that also punishes teams that are excellent at drafting & organic building for no reason. Basically they are being punished for being too good.
And still, most watched and most popular nba has ever been was during Jordan era. Current CBA prevents great teams from being great for more than 3 years. That's laughable system for team sports and backward thinking.
So, it's not really "parity", it's system made to force cycling on top.
they are punishing nobody, because:
1) most teams couldn't stay consistently that deep into the tax, even before. At some point the repeater would kick in making the bill to hard to stomach for most organizations. You think OKC would have been able to keep all this core together? They didn't after reaching a final in 2012, in a way less punitive system. You think Indiana let Turner go because of the 2nd Apron restrictions? This is just stopping the richest organizations from leveraging on their spending power to pay themselves out of tough situations.
2) if you're good at drafting, you can still trade those amazing players you can't pay and collect multiple future assets. See what Memphis did. You're never "punished" to be good at drafting, that's total BS narrative
On your last point, it is parity in terms of opportunities. Is now easier for a smaller org to be and stay competitive.
I also suspect people are overplaying the CBA as the reason we had so many new champions. The real issue imo has been health. Those teams broke through while having a healthy run, other campaigns have been derailed by injuries (or getting old). Lakers, Nuggets, Bucks, Celtics... they all had key injuries during the PO. The Raptors lost Kawhi for other reasons. The Warriors were old and not that great to begin with, didn't compromise on the roster at all.
You think OKC would have been able to keep all this core together? They didn't after reaching a final in 2012, in a way less punitive system
OKC/ Presti screwed himself twice in two years.
First he resigned bum Perkins on 4 years - $36M contract, during his 5 ppg, 8 rpg season. That move alone sucked lot of money out.
Than had to choose who he wants to resign, Harden or Ibaka, or convince both to take paycuts. Ibaka signed for 4 years $48M, Harden gone.
You think Indiana let Turner go because of the 2nd Apron restrictions?
Their owner simply won't pay luxury tax.
2) if you're good at drafting, you can still trade those amazing players you can't pay and collect multiple future assets. See what Memphis did. You're never "punished" to be good at drafting, that's total BS narrative
How are Grizzlies relevant to a topic? Team that is neither contender nor all that good. Team that passed first round of playoffs once in past 8 years.
On your last point, it is parity in terms of opportunities. Is now easier for a smaller org to be and stay competitive.
For sure. Because no matter are you small or big market team, you will be cycled out in 2-3 years. That still doesn't mean it's parity, it's cycling.
I also suspect people are overplaying the CBA as the reason we had so many new champions. The real issue imo has been health
...and it's same CBA that counts disabled player provision into a cap, making it impossible for Pacers, Bucks, Celtics of the world to stay competitive if one of their stars is hurt. Once again- forced cycling and rebuilding.
Look.
Owners signed up to new CBA because it gives them excuse to not pay for basketball team irrational amount of money. It's no longer "cheap owner" it's boogeyman named Second Apron.
NBA signed up for CBA because Gen Z has attention span of goldfish , doesn't watch product, hardly watch highlights, won't watch same team being great for 5 years. It's all about reaching final goal on speed dial. How to achieve it? Make teams raise and fall at rapid rate, so more fans and more fanbases stay attached.
Evidence why nba doesn't want sustained success? Salary floor. By making salary floor 90% of salary cap and mandatory, second apron teams can't make mid season trade into bad teams to scale down. Only way how second apron team can scale down to first apron or all the way down to luxury tax ( or below) is by selling highest paid players. Highest paid players often = best players. Case and point :Hawks trade for Porzingis for next to nothing.
Whole system is set to cycle champions and keep cost of basketball teams at acceptable rate for owners. From 2025 & asset POV, Jazz have higher chance at winning title by 2030 than some Pacers despite having no good players on roster. Once cycle spins, they will have most assets to buy out Tatum, Giannis, Jokić, whoever, for year or two and enter championship cycle.
It's junk food -like- product. On your way in a car you find out last year's champions are selling former all star for Georges Niang and second round pick because they can't go under apron ( literally happened) .
Life is what happens when you're busy making other plans. -John Lennon