sully00 wrote:greenmachine_2849 wrote:bucknersrevenge wrote:Jesus, these Finals are an absolute joke. I know we're all supposed to be all in on Hayward and everything but is it worth it right now? And I LOVE Hayward but how much does he move the needle? I don't know what the rationale would be in going over the tax for a team that right now has ZERO shot at beating Golden State. When do we have to worry about the repeater tax?
I wonder what the television ratings are going to look like league wide in a couple of years. Yeah, if your sole objective as a fan is to root for a champion, I could see a lot of the audience growing bored and leaving the game in the near future.
It usually is the opposite people love to watch greatness. Nobody got tired of watching the Lakers or the Celtics win, nobody stopped watching Jordan stomp everyone, ratings were great for Shaq and Kobe. Perhaps more than any other sport the NBA needs stars heroes or villains they want stars and greatness. You might be rooting for anyone to beat them but your still watching.
Yeah, but let's not confuse dominance and greatness. The Celtics and Lakers were not dominant teams in the 1980s, as they always had each other to contend with at a minimum. And while one of them or the other got to the NBA finals every year from 1980 to 1988, 66% of the time one of them got beat on the way to the Finals. I think we might be in the middle of a six or seven year run where it is the Cavs/Warriors EVERY SINGLE year. Compared to that, the 1980s was oozing with parity.
And as great as the 90s Bulls and early 00s Lakers were, at least they got pushed to the occasional game 7. Hell, the Lakers actually lost a playoff series in 2003. The Warriors, if they stay healthy and together, might not see a game 7 for half a decade.
I also think that the idea of manufactured greatness is going to wear thin after a while. I think, if Shaquille O'Neal had gone and joined the Seattle Supersonics in 1996 as a free agent and they ran roughshod over the league for the next five years, I don't think fans would view the latter half of the 90s quite as fondly.
But I get your point, and maybe you're right. Maybe the average fan doesn't care about competitiveness as long as one of the teams playing is one of the all-time greats. Time will tell. But Dale & Holley had a story a couple of weeks ago about how the regular season viewership was down this year in all but a handful of the NBA markets. If true, I think that could be the canary in the coal mine....
Not positive, but I think this is the story they were referring to:
http://www.sportsbusinessdaily.com/Journal/Issues/2017/02/20/Media/NBA-RSNs.aspx