dougthonus wrote:GoBlue72391 wrote:I'm not trying to be a doom and gloomer with this comment, but since the end of the Jordan era the plan has always been to remain within the top 5 in attendance and merchandise sales. This is usually accomplished with a roughly .500 record and play-in or late seed playoff appearance. It doesn't matter who's running the FO, this is and always has been the primary goal.
This is a business after all and the way the Reinsdorfs and co. run this organization is optimized to maximize profits above everything else, even winning.
What they don't seem to realize is investing in winning will pay for itself in the long run; look at how profitable we are still coasting off the Jordan era despite having maybe 2 notable seasons since that era ended. Without all that winning we did in the 90s we wouldn't be the money printing machine we are now.
Don't take my word for it. Jerry Reinsdorf has infamously made comments like "strive for 2nd place" and has told his family to sell the White Sox and keep the Bulls after his passing due to the Sox being his passion and the Bulls being a business.
Or just look at how roster management is handled; this organization has paid the luxury tax once in its entire existence and has never been a big player in major free agency pursuits.
These are not the words and actions of anyone who is serious about winning.
The goal is to continue lining the Reinsdorfs and minority owners pockets. How we get there and how many games we win in pursuit of that goal is just the window dressing.
I think a lot of this stuff gets overstated and fundamentally misunderstands profits and how to build a winning team in the NBA.
People state this like if only paid the luxury tax they would be way better, when the reality is the teams that pay the tax are the ones that already are positioned to win. No one pays the luxury tax when they don't have superstars and are .500ish teams.
The Bulls got lucky one time. When they did, they had the best record in the NBA in the 3rd/4th year after that draft. They were an ACL tear away from being a perennial contender for the next decade with capable 2nd and 3rd stars already on the roster and lots of cheap depth pieces and all of their future picks.
When they had that player they made aggressive moves to dump salary to try and surround him with two max contracts and generally seemed like they came in 2nd in the chase for LeBron/Bosh, so they were definitely willing to go all in to make aggressive championship type moves.
Yes, everything else you said is true about wanting profits, selling merch, and selling out the stadium, but largely their results are due to the decision making of the people running the basketball ops. AK doesn't suck because he chases profits, he just has sucked because he's made bad decisions. If he had made good decisions and positioned this team to win 50+ games, they'd make way more profits.
If they won 50+ games, you would then see if they would pay the luxury tax or not pay the luxury tax in order to chase a title (probably would pay some, but not 2nd apron style), but that would be the point where money gets in the way. Building a team to 50 wins first is something you do prior to looking at whether to pay the tax, and that is entirely on the combination of luck / FO execution.
So yeah, I'd be cynical about whether the Bulls will or won't pay big time in the future with a title on the line, but nothing about aiming for 40 wins is about generating profit or a set goal. That's about failure of the basketball ops people. A 50 win 2nd round playoff team that didn't pay the tax would probably make 50-100M more per year in profit than what they're doing now.
Bingo. There are so many posts on this forum that say something to the effect of "the Bulls don't care about wins and losses, because they're just in this to make money," without acknowledging that if the Bulls won more basketball games, they would also make more money. It's not like the only way to a decent run in the playoffs is by being a 2nd apron team and paying hundreds of millions of dollars of tax.