Inigo_Montoya wrote:Look, I understand the points that you are trying to make but they hinge on me caring about the wants of NBA players. I don't give a **** about their wants. Not so long as they sign contracts on their own volition anyway.
You've got more hubris than I expected. No matter... just because you don't like what the facts are does not magically make them go away. If you didn't give a damn why the sky was blue but still wanted it to be red, would it change the fact that the sky is still blue? Because that's the essence of your argument here. What you've communicated to me and everyone else carries far beyond the realm of personal opinion and into strict defiance of 200+ years of developments in organized labor. You simply do not get to disregard economic precedent when it's convenient for you to do so, or simply because you can't be bothered to come up with a more compelling defense for your petty complaints. 
I'm not interested in hard caps*, franchise tags etc. because I am naive enough to believe that they will fix the Kings. The Kings have terrible ownership and one of the worst front offices in the league. They would be just as inept under any other CBA. I want them out and so do most Kings fans. Quite a few are actually boycotting the team right now. I am interested in seeing a league where competently run small market teams are on equal footing with the competently run large market teams. If some players are unhappy, so be it.
*I don't actually want a hard cap for many of the reasons mentioned already. Or at least not a hard cap without significant other changes
What is this, I don't eve-- what on earth ARE you saying here? You're not interested in a hard cap yet you're naive enough to believe that will fix the Kings? Yet you believe they will suffer from poor management no matter what?
I'm going to wager what you wanted to say was that you're *not* naive enough to believe such reforms will fix the Kings, and if so, great. You are halfway there already. If that is what you believed from the get-go, you could have clarified it earlier. But it is of little use at this point. 
If, in any case, you truly are doubtful as to what any new package of regulations would do to improve your team's ownership, why bother making compromises for other parties (the players' union, small market owners, et al.) in the first place? Why do any need to be made?
You've said it yourself: you doubt very much that, short of the Maloofs selling your franchise off, that you will likely never field a contender again. And what's more is that (in your words, not mine) "quite a few are actually boycotting the team right now". Do you not see how this merely plays into the Maloofs' narrative?
They are suffering from low attendance and therefore are trying to move the team, so what do Kings fans do? They call a boycott? How laughable. This is more of an endorsement rather than a stern rebuke of their ownership. All this allows them to do is make a stronger case to move the team out of Sactown. Surely you recognize this?
Boycotts never solve anything. At least not on their own, and certainly not in an uncoordinated fashion. You need to join together with fans of other struggling teams and hold their owners accountable collectively. Until you do so, the product they put out might as well be rubberstamped with your seal of approval.
You want small market teams on an equal footing with the majors? Free the market, do not constrain it. Remove the safety net and take away their golden parachutes. 
Stop subsidizing the losers. Don't reward teams that tank for lottery picks. Install a silent auction draft. 
Make contraction 
automatic for teams who fail to perform in X number of consecutive seasons.
Repeal max contracts, restricted free agency, and bird rights altogether. Replace it with minimum franchise player compensation and an added trade exception eligible for this auction draft. 
Even this, I dare say, would only be tinkering around the edges. You could eliminate trades entirely and replace them with a transfer and loan system, as soccer does quite well, and that would allow small market teams to "sell" their players to the highest bidder. Period. No need to worry about matching salaries or giving up player assets at all.
You could reduce the NBA season to 66 games, reduce playoffs to 6 berths for each conference, and thus give every team something to play for finally.
Recognizing overall best record in addition to the eventual playoff champion would be nice too.
Do any of these reforms stand a chance of seeing the light of day? No, of course not. You don't see any owners proposing them do you? After all, it was the owners who wanted the franchise tag and hard cap during the lockout, right? At least before they "conceded" the issue in order to shore up their economic welfare.
Also worth mentioning is that none of these prevent the formation of superteams at all. In fact, one could say they make creating one even easier. The difference? It won't be only LA, NY or MIA who can plausibly build one anymore.