TheGOATWill wrote:MartyConlonOnTheRun wrote:TheGOATWill wrote:To the "he signed the contract" people. Do you get it now? You can't force a person to play basketball for you. And why would you want to. I thought Simmons was doing them a favor by staying away. Why drag this circus into your building? Should have moved off him this summer. Now it's nickels on the dollar at best. If there was a way for the team to win one of these ugly superstar divorce scenarios a smarter front office would have already figured it out.
Lakers fan supporting players getting to choose their destination despite signing extra lucrative long-term contracts meant to incentivize player to stay with original team.... shocked I tell you.
NBA needs to figure this out. I'm not smart enough to figure out specifics, but make it so if a trade isn't mutually agreed upon either the player or team has to take on either a salary reduction or take a salary cap hit. These massive deals were created to keep a player under control of 1-team and give the player security. They werent meant just to pay a ton of money to a player for him then to go somewhere else.
Have every player sign a lifetime contract for a ten billion dollars. The point remains.
You cannot compel competitive basketball from a person. It's a nonsense thing to try to do. Fans of teams besides the Lakers understand this perfectly. Maybe think harder before posting?
I'm really confused on why you don't think you can compel competitive basketball? You're telling me if ben's deal was structured where his money was tied to both his own performance AND the sixers performance he wouldn't try? He's already shown he cares about the money enough to show up and take the PR hit of being sent home. If he got a 50% bonus for making the finals, something tells me he would want to stay in Philadelphia versus getting traded to say Portland.
Part of the problem is the players aren't willing to understand their role in the business. They want to be partners with the 50/50 BRI split but won't step up when it comes to marketing the league (making non-appealing markets exciting, building fans through appearances and media requirements, kyrie not getting vaccinated, push-back on the bubble, etc).