Sharcm1 wrote:I'm a fan of this. I think with the way the nba has been trending recently a Hard cap is the only way to make it even and fair for all teams. Right now only a few teams will be competitive and rest are left in the dust. All these star players all want to play with each other now. In the past they were rivals. They wanted to get their own championships. Ever since the celtics put together a big three the rest of the players wanted the same thing.
Now we see teams like the heat with 3 of the top 6 players on one team and way over the cap to make the rest of the roster. In a few years the heat will have three players under contract and still be over the cap.
There is no chance now for other teams to compete in signing and keeping players. Melo is a great example. He wanted to play with another star (amare). so he did. Now you get rumors that cp3 or howard want to play with 2 other stars. Their teams don't have a chance to keep them.
This hard cap will force players to stay with their teams because other teams won't have the ability to sign them and go over the cap. I say make it even so the nba can survive. A whole league of competitive, any team can be great, basketball is the way to go. Not I just drafted the best player since MJ and because he wants to play with other super players I won't be able to keep him past his second contract.
The Heat may have ended up a bit over the cap this year, but they are still under the luxury tax and nowhere near the highest payroll in the league. The idea that Miami's payroll is something other teams couldn't match is dead wrong, Cleveland last year had a far, far higher payroll (they may still have a higher payroll). Every team in the league could easily match Miami's payroll and make money if it brought a 55+ win team and a couple rounds of home playoff games. Most of the league could match it and make money on a lottery team. A hard cap wouldn't have any effect on the Heat. The soft cap actually helps teams build around existing star players.
Right now star players have extra 'power' mostly because they are guaranteed to be underpaid due to maximum contract values. If a team clears out all of their salaries and starts with a blank slate (as Miami essentially did) they get much better value filling up to the salary cap with a few stars and then min salary players around them then with a bunch of moderate contract free agents. Star players also know this and know they have a better chance at a title paired with some other elite players then on teams with large payrolls filled up with Mo Williams, Antwan Jamison, Gilbert Arenas, Hedo Turkalu, etc.
The only way to get around this is with franchise tags (or something similar). I personally think it's a bad idea. Already star players have no choice as to where they play for the first half of their career. Should that be changed so they have no choice where to play for their entire careers? Force a player to try and drag up a poorly run team their whole career? Have a star make money for a lothsome owner that they hate their entire career? As it is now, if those issues (or others) are important enough players can choose to take less money in exchange for freedom. I think that's a reasonable comprimise.





