bwgood77 wrote:JDLAW wrote:Tanking hurts every team financially who is not tanking. The gate is not as good, parking revenue is not as good (even in the private lots parking is cheaper when the tankers come to town), the concession revenue is not as good in the arena (restaurant revenue outside loses revenue) and ticket prices for the tanking teams are depressed (like most teams, the ticket price per game is higher for the more desirable teams and lower for the lousy teams) TV ratings for the games against the tankers are lower. It is a despicable and corrupt practice that hurts other teams and the league. it should not be rewarded.
I'll just turn the argument back at you, "why reward a team the persistently makes bad choices or does not use other means (trades and free agency) to improve the quality of its product by consistently giving it top picks. The Draft is for all the teams - not just the worst of the worst. It is the only means where a team, if they do not trade their pick get a relatively inexpensive player for the mere price of having to pay the salary.
As for the 76ers, if they get the 1st pick this year, I see no reason why they should be eligible for one of the first 3 picks next year. They have cap space to sign free agents, they have players to trade so they can improve their team. If they are not successful, they can pick 4th and then be eligible for 2 and 3 the following year.
I like your idea with one exception. I would give the 14 teams that miss the playoffs a 5% chance at getting a top 3 pick, and anyone who got eliminated in the first round a 3.75% chance of getting a top 3 pick.
This way, there would be ZERO incentive to barely miss the playoffs like it looked like the Hawks were trying to do this year near the end. There are so many young GMs that have this view of not wanting to be the 8th seed who gets swept and would rather have a chance at a star or a top 10 pick, that this would almost entirely give zero incentive to miss the playoffs, unless someone was seriously ignorant enough to miss for that extra 1.25% chance.
With your idea, each team that missed the playoffs would have a little better than a 7% chance of getting a top pick, which could still be preferable to some GMs than making the playoffs with a losing record only to play a team full of superstars and get clobbered in the first round (like the Bucks at 38-44 last year against the Heat 66-16).
I like the idea.