Texas Chuck wrote:Prospect Dong wrote:
When was the last time an MLE player truly swung the championship? A second rounder? Or any guy on their rookie deal? But we still keep mechanisms to allocate those types of players, not because they "decide the championship" but because they're valuable assets in building a contending team, and if we just let them go whereever they wanted it would hurt competitive balance a lot.
Sometimes, you draft a guy and it doesn't work out and they don't play in pivotal games. Sometimes you sign a guy to the MLE, and it doesn't work out and they don't end up as part of your playoff rotation. But neither of those things is a reason to just distribute below average players, or rookies, at random. If you do, it won't necessarily be the guy the lakers pick blowing up every year, but it won't be a randomly-selected team either.
All of this applies to buyout guys, and "did it swing the championship" is just not a defensible standard to apply to whether the CBA ought to regulate something. You're watching a buyout guy, for the second year in a row, provide valuable 7th man minutes deep in the playoffs for a team that traded all its depth to acquire its superstars and you think you're being proven right?
I don't really understand this rebuttal. These players are made free agents and sign wherever they want. Nobody is breaking any rules or sacred principles and the NBA world is not ending. Yet we certainly had a bunch of posters act like it was.
Great the Nets found a rotation player in street free agency late in the year. Happens every year. The reactions were way over the top, were specifically because it was the Nets and the Lakers(and for one poster at least about Drummond not returning value we all knew he didn't have.)
So yes I think I'm right. It was much ado about very very little. I never made swing the championship the standard either lol. I only mention it because those posters were all insisting it did. That's their standard. Not mine.
I wrote a lengthy response to your (pretty fair, but IMO wrong) arguments about this last time we discussed this Chuck, and then I deleted it prior to posting like an idiot, and didn't have the energy to write them out again. Since I still don't, I'll try to keep this fairly brief, but I did want to acknowledge that I read and thought about the long form of your view.
These guys are "street free agents" because the CBA
makes them street free agents once particular conditions have been met. It could
change those conditions, and I think it should. Alternatively, it could
expand the class of street free agents by saying that ever player not selected in the first round becomes one. Or that any player not offered a max salary becomes one. Or that any player can unilaterally declare themselves one at the end of a season.
I don't think they should make any of those changes, because, while increasing player freedom, they would upset competitive balance by too much to make up for it. What do
you think about those proposed changes? Because I think you're getting a bit caught up in sins omission vs sins of commission, rather than asking what an ideal CBA would look like.
To be clear, I don't think this is "ruining the league" or whatever (we had a big back and forth over whether Morris+Dwight were properly seen as buyout guys and whether the lakers win without them, but don't want to re-litigate that - so I should concede your point for arguments' sake). But I think some teams getting their 5th-8th man for free is an obvious loophole in a CBA that generally tries to close obvious loopholes, and that a CBA that did something to fix it (we've floated a bunch of alternatives, but let's not do that again here) is a better CBA than one that doesn't, and that, if you can make the CBA better, you should.
That's all I'm saying, so it's a bit crazy-making when the response is "he's just a solid 7th man!". That also my point!