Post#613 » by bishnykfan » Wed Nov 11, 2020 6:06 pm
Couple of things I'll address here while I have a few minutes.
First off, as to the Free Agent desirability list. Overall, the first three seasons I think that this has been a fairly accurate and fair list. Teams that have won a lot like Dallas, Portland and Chicago have always been at the top while teams that started BaF building through youth and therefore losing more (Cleveland, Charlotte, Houston etc.) have been towards the bottom. This year was the first year we saw a few teams move a bit. New Orleans, Cleveland and Charlotte moved up the list some and rightfully so IMO as their build is further along then teams like Houston, San Antonio or the Lakers. Of course there are kinks in this system. Detroit still had a decent FA rating (in comparison to the other rebuilding teams) because they have a decent three year record (from Greenie's run as GM) and also because of the youth/future that Context has built. Conversely, Golden State had a poor rating this year. Obviously if I was being subjective and putting my own thoughts into these ratings, GS should be near the top of the list. But the numbers didn't lie and I wasn't going to manipulate them because of what I thought they should be (as much as I like NewEra and respect what he puts into BaF). Everyone knew what that list was based on before the offseason began and no one should be surprised when a team with no draft picks, no star player and basically an empty roster ended up being down the list. The list isn't designed to prohibit teams lower on it from getting a FA or make it extra easy or cheap for the good teams to sign who they want.
It just provides a little weight so teams bidding on the same player have different odds of getting that player. The list is not perfect obviously but I think overall, it's fair.
Second, the idea of tiered releases, maximum bids per day or public bids seem to be the most popular thoughts at this time. My thoughts on these: Tiered releases and maximum bids placed per day are both somethings I've thought about as well. Maybe releasing 30 players a day or only allowing teams to place x number of bids per day would make things easier. But as others have mentioned, there will be issues with both of these systems that hurt the fairness and competitiveness of the league. Making all bids public is not something I've thought much about. Honestly, I don't know how it would work. Considering offers deal with different amount of money and years and also factoring in the FA list that weights offers, I'm not sure how making the leading offer public would translate to the rest of the league?
For example, assume the leading bid on player x is $100/4 from Oklahoma City (using them because they are middle of the road on the FA list). Each team still has a different number that they could offer to take that leading bid.
My overall idea was that FA was always the part of the game that concerned me the most. Keeping it fair while also somewhat realistic was always the challenge. For the most part, I think three offseasons in, we have done that. I am not looking for major changes to the system unless there is an overwhelming amount of support for something. I just think it needs to be tweaked a bit in order to lessen what will undoubtedly be a crazy year two seasons from now.
All-Time Draft
PG- Oscar Robertson/Bob Cousy
SG- Earl Monroe/James Harden/Dana Barros
SF- Billy Cunningham/Michael Finley/Chet Walker
PF- Elvin Hayes/Dolph Schayes/Tom Chambers/Danny Manning
C- Walt Bellamy/Neil Johnston/Darryl Dawkins