sp6r=underrated wrote:There are too many teams in small markets in the NBA. Five of the 20 largest metropolitan areas in the U.S. have no NBA team but 4 teams are in metropolitan areas outside the top 40.
A lot of posters on realgm want the NFL system because they think it has created parity in the NFL to a greater extent than the NBA. I think it is just the shorter schedule, superstar factor, and single elimination tournament that create the perception of more parity in the NFL. I also think the NFL system is popular with fans because of jealousy a lot of fans have for players. Many people resent star athletes who make millions and still try to control their career. I call these people the STFU and play crowd.
I don’t like the NFL system.
Unguaranteed contracts are unfair because teams can choose to not to honor a contract if they feel the player isn’t performing, but players can’t walk away from the contract if they feel they have over-performed.
The hard cap forces teams to break up their cores in the NFL. This could be devastating in the NBA due to its smaller rosters.
A franchise tag to me is inherently unfair because it treats the player as the property of the team they play for. In the NBA, it would be used to stop superstars from ever reaching free agency. Cleveland would have tagged him forever. I don’t like the idea of superstars being shipwrecked on a team they don’t want to play for.
Under the current rules teams can keep the player they drafted for seven to eight years before they reach free agency. It is very hard for me to accept the idea that a player can’t become an unrestricted free agents after that long of a period of service. Finally, I don’t think the franchise tag can work in the NBA effectively. Basketball players have a lot more power over if their team wins or loses than football players. Hold outs in football are generally annoyances. Hold outs in basketball would be devastating.
Finally, I don’t like the NFL system because it’s goal seems to be to punish well run organizations and reward poorly run ones.
My idea to address superstar movement by thinking of ways to make players want to play in the city that drafted them. I think the simplest thing to do for the NBA would be to get rid of maximum salaries while keeping the soft cap and Bird rights. Under this scenario, Cleveland would have offered Lebron 40 million to stay in Cleveland giving them a huge advantage in free agency that no other team has. Most players under these rules will choose to re-up with the team that signed them. I don’t think anyone should complain about the players who did leave under these rules.
Next is my radical idea. The NBA has too many teams in smaller markets. The NBA myopically moved to smaller cities because they could force those towns to build them stadiums. This is good in the short run but bad for long-term popularity of the league. Metropolitan Seattle is larger and richer than Oklahoma City. It hurts the league to be in these smaller cities.
It also creates major problems with regards to the players. NBA players are extremely talented individuals. Literally they are in the 99.999 percentile of ability in their field. Individuals who are still talented and valuable generally will be able to get what they want. Smaller cities aren’t as attractive to players who would prefer to play in larger markets.
One way to make it more likely that players stay on their home team is to have more large market clubs and less small market clubs. This would never happen but IMO would be better for the league. I found it a fun exercise to realign the league.
Atlantic Division
1. Boston Celtics (4.6 million people)
2. New York Knicks (19 million people)
3. Brooklyn Nets (19 million people)
4. Toronto Raptors (4.6 million people)
5. Montreal Hornets (3.4 million people)
Central Division
1. Chicago Bulls (9.5 million people)
2. Chicago Jazz (9.5 million people)
3. Philadelphia 76ers (5.9 million people)
4. Washington Wizards (5.5 million people)
5. Detroit Pistons (4.4 million people)
SouthEast Division
1. Miami Heat (5.5 million people)
2. Orlando Magic (2 million people)
3. Tampa Bay Cavaliers (2.7 million people)
4. Atlanta Hawks (5.4 million people)
5. Charlotte Bobcats (1.7 million people)
Spreadout Division
1. Vancouver Pacers (2.1 million people)
2. Seattle Supersonics (3.4 million people)
3. Portland Trail Blazers (2.2 million people)
4. Denver Nuggets (2.5 million people)
5. Minn. Timberwolves (3.2 million people)
California Division
1. Los Angeles Lakers (12.8 million people)
2. San Francisco Grizzlies (4.3 million people)
3. Golden State Warriors (4.3 million people)
4. San Diego Kings (3 million people)
5. Los Angeles Clippers 2.0 (12.8 million people) Stearling sells team
SouthWest Division
1. Dallas Mavericks (6.4 million people)
2. Houston Rockets (5.8 million people)
3. Phoenix Suns (4.3 million people)
4. San Antonio Spurs (2.0 million people)
5. St. Louis Bucks (2.8 million people)
The players would love this. A far higher percentage of clubs are now in larger cities and the most popular areas of the country to live are significantly more represented. Southern California, NYC, Chicago, and the Bay Area now have 9 ball clubs instead of 5. I’m not worried about the market saturation issue. A lot of people think that because of the Clippers two teams in one city won’t work. I think the failure of the clippers is solely due to bad management. Baseball shows you can have two teams in one city and have both be successful.
The realignment I’ve proposed also improves the size and quality of the mid-market clubs. I have dramatically reduced the number of cities in the NBA that would be unappealing to NBA players. Vancouver and Montreal are admittedly stretches but I still believe you can make those cities appealing to NBA players once they actually go there. As a result of this realignment, most players will get drafted into the types of larger cities that are appealing to players. My hope is that players would only leave if management stinks which is fine to me. Poorly run teams should lose their superstars.
I think this would be a good deal overall for fans, but I’ll acknowledge it stinks for the cities the NBA would be leaving. Simply put more people would have access to NBA games live.
The league benefits in a lot of ways. The TV deal is better because there are less small markets. I’ve also created more natural rivals. Chicago and NYC would now have true cross city rivalries and so would LA as Stearling no longer owns the team. The Raptors now have a natural rival in the Montreal Hornets. The pacific northwest rivalry is renewed and the California division would have cool state bragging rights.
I tried to accomplish the goal of discouraging superstar movement by making players actually happy to play for the club they got drafted by rather than trying to figure out ways to force unhappy employees to work. Those players that did move probably had good reason to do so.
You are essentially a "champion of the little guy" if you want to call millionaire basketball players little guys. You also seem to completely disregard the fact the owners "own" the NBA. Its their business, their toy. And they collectively but not in complete unity have decided to take back some control of their league and want to make it easier for smaller market teams to show a profit. If the owners were incomplete unity to take back 100% of their league in order to show more profits and have a better product and create a better sense of parity and get everyone under contract to play with a sense of urgency and listen to their coaches...even on a 20-62 team, the owners would set it up something like this:
1.
SET Salary slots!! with a soft cap and a devastating luxury tax just above the soft cap. Set the soft cap up where its at now...around 55 million.
Stiff lux tax at
$3 to $1 starting at 65 million. then hits 4-1 after 75 million
salary slots would be
1 player at 15 million (or less but more than 10 million specifically assigned to this slot)
1 player at 10 million (or less but more the 7 million specifically designed to this slot)
1 at 7 (same as above)
1 at 5
1 at 3
1 at 2
4 at 1
5 at a new vet min of 750,000 and a new player min at 250,000
This is 15 players to get to approximately 50 million...a starting point...soft cap is at 55 million...minimum cap is 50 million.
4 rounds of NBA draft where the league could stock pile 18-20 year olds overseas, not pay them, but have them be in a minor league and be tradeable commodities.
** if a free agent wanted to change teams he would have to take a 30% hit on this salary slot system..eg for Miami this past year. a 15 million dollar player like Lebron would have to sign in the 10 million dollar slot assuming Wade was in the 15...then Bosh in the 7 million.
** all contracts
non guaranteed...
any waived player can NOT resign with another team for more than half of his current salary for 3 years!!
this will make players listen to their coaches and do what is asked. anyone faking an injury or dogging it or becoming a distraction take a huge hit financially.
**max 4 years with own team, 3 years with new team.
**
own team can give 5% raises annually, new team only 1%
**rookie scale as it is now but starts around 2 million for #1 overall and quickly dwindles to 500,000 by the end of the first round.
***completely
remove sign and trade clause.
*** The most important thing to do is to r
emove the matching of salaries when trading players...
this is the biggest hurdle in allowing good team become great teams by adding that one key piece and rebuilding teams can not trade their over paid talent with 2-3 years left at 10 million plus and pick up cheap young players...so a team like Miami, LA, Dallas, NY could still "trade for" multiple $15 million dollar slot players...or 10 million slot, 7 million slot etc...but they would face a harsh lux tax after being over 65 million. But any rich owner that likes to lose money with his toy can do so and any wealthy team like NY, LA, Chicago (frugal owners would not do it) could do so as well for a season or 2 while chasing a ring.
4 rounds of NBA draft allows teams to stockpile euro, south american, and chinese talent to make these trades possible...player like Rip and prince this past year could have been dealt for guy over seas...it would allow detroit to rebuild faster...lower their payroll...and a team like chicago to pick up a SG for a year or 2 and Miami could have gone after a Brad Miller. dallas Tayshawn Prince. All 3 teams would get killed by the lux tax but the interest in the NBA would increase dramatically...houston and detroit would be "rebuilding faster" which would keep their fans more entertained. and the lux tax monney would be a much better revenue sharing system where the bottom dweller teams could still exist, keep their pay roll below 55 million and then share the lux tax money only the teams under 55 million.
In a system like this...the owners and GM would take back nearly 95% of the control of their league...
it keeps the top talent in the NBA cuz NBA would still end up with guys making 20 million plus in their 8-12 years (if they stay with their original team).
it makes players hustle more and listen to their coaching staff via non guaranteed. it makes guys waive( able) purely for salary reasons to allow teams to stay under the cap..or if a player acts like a clown and shoots someone...waive him!
It makes every single year more interesting...in any year a roster could completely change shape and form..a team stacked with wings could more easily trade for back court help if it needed it etc.
The players % of BRI would still be at or near 48-51% if the owners allowed them to be...I dont see that as the problem...the real problem the NBA faces is apathy in town like Detroit and Sacramento in rebuilding years which take far too long especially if a front office mis-steps with one bad contract. Give those fans hope! Allow front offices the freedom to get more done...many fans the realgm crowd enjoy fornt office activity almost as much as what the actual team does on the court...anything to discuss or create a buzz will put more fans in front of the TV or warm butts in the seats.
A salary slotted structure is the way...it also eliminates player collusion...picking their own teams to play for as their is 1 alpha slot, 1 sidekick slot, 1 good player but after thought slot...teams wont be able to out bid in free agency because too much is in place to really change teams that way...Front office will be forced to trade for guys and will have to give up something "good" to get something good.
Also players like Lebron likely be happier in their hometown because the front office will be able to waive a Larry hughes early on after they see he was a bad fit and go get another player to surround lebron. Now if a Lebron still wanted to change teams to be in Miami...no biggy...here is your 7 million dollar salary slot waiting for you right there...20 million in cleveland or 7 million in Miami?...lets see how bad you really want it. the heart wants what it wants. Right now that choice is around 20 million per year or 17 million per year...just not enough to help a team keeps it palyers.