Mirotic12 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:Generally competition level is about what it takes to win.
The hardest competition for any non-American nation to win has always been the Olympics, because that's the one Americans care about.
Using that criteria, the EuroBasket is better than the Olympics.
It would be much harder for the USA to win the EuroBasket, than it is for them to win the Olympics. And the USA would fail to win the EuroBasket much more often than they fail to win the Olympics.
Let's take a step back here:
If we can agree that defining "level of competition" for a tournament is one number for the whole tournament, then it shouldn't be something that gives a different value for every team in the tournament.
I'm saying generally that level of competition is defined based on the best team you have to beat in order to win 1st place. You're free to disagree on that definition of course, but that's not what you're doing in this post. You're literally trying to argue that it's harder to win a tournament the USA doesn't play in than to win a tournament the USA does play in and take seriously, and you have to know that's not true.
I feel like you're wanting to have a definition based on the average level of play over the whole tournament or something like that, and while you're free to do that, and I can see the logic of it in many situations, it's a problem in basketball because one competitor nation has traditionally been vastly better than everyone else, and that competitor only takes the Olympics seriously.
Are there some weak teams in the Olympics due to their goal of global representation? Sure, but every single non-USA nation knows that the hardest thing to do in international competition is beat the USA at the Olympics, and so if they don't see that as the gold standard, they're just admitting that they don't expect to be able to beat the best, and their focusing their passions on lesser competitors they can hope to beat.
To be the best, you have to beat the best, and that means beating team USA's A-team.