j-ragg wrote:OrlChamps2030 wrote:Magic & Heat is like the Clippers & Lakers .. been that way for a while.. team needs to start winning some damn games and keep a star around
I read that around 2010 or 2011 we had the 4th highest winning % since coming into the league. We weren't always a joke, unlike the Clips. But it feels like that now.
This 2012-present streak just needs to end.
When you start to think about it, 2012-2020 is a long 8 year span to be irrelevant when the team down south has made the playoffs 7/10 years, made 4 Finals appearances, 2 championships, and featured star players like Lebron James, Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh, and now Jimmy Butler. They have a culture that their fans can believe in. There's a track record from their front office and coaching that the fans can believe in. The "HEAT Culture" isn't some fake mantra. Their scouting and player development has proven itself. Free agents want to play there. That franchise, as much as many of us may irrationally dislike the Heat, has absolutely earned all the support they've garnered.
Meanwhile, in that 8 year timespan, the Magic made the playoffs only once, traded away Dwight Howard, Victor Oladipo, and Tobias Harris, and are still featuring Evan Fournier and Nikola Vucevic. If you're a kid growing up in Orlando over the last decade, you have no reason to really believe in the Magic as a franchise. Kids in middle and high school, really the formative years of sports fandom, aren't tuning in for Nik Vucevic and Evan Fournier pick n' rolls nightly. There's an entire generation of potential basketball fans in Orlando who will only really know the Magic as an irrelevant sacrificial lamb for opposing teams like the Heat and Lakers and Celtics.
It's different from when a lot of us grew up with the Magic. We always had Shaq & Penny. The Heart and Hustle Year. Then the promise of T-Mac and Grant Hill. And the Dwight Howard and SVG years. That's a really great run of talent and relevance for any franchise, big or small market. But this 8 year stretch has been absolutely brutal, and is honestly how it is for most small market teams around the league.
That playoff run the Magic had was so important to the franchise. They really want to be "relevant." Not really for any basketball reason, but they know it's hard to stay afloat from a business standpoint in a small market when local TV ratings are low, attendance is low, merchandise sales are low, and interest is low. They got the attention of the Orlando market last season with their late playoff push; those late season games mattered and the team played its ass off. They were hoping to build off of lasts season's success. But reality is this team always had a ceiling with Vucevic, Fournier, Augustin, and Ross leading it. Unless Fultz or Isaac or Bamba takes some unexpected leap, this team is what it is.
The thing is, I was at those games in the old Amway Arena/TD Waterhouse, and those "let's go Heat" chants weren't as prevalent. And it's because the product the Magic put on the floor was one the locals could get behind and believe in. I think the number of Heat fans at Magic games is a reflection of how good the Heat have been in the last decade, but more so a reflection of how much the Magic have lost their fans in that same timespan.