SelfishPlayer wrote:zike_42 wrote:Big J wrote:Yea man, I just hate the idea that these kids are being told where they have to live. **** reminds me of stuff the NCAA pulls. The Lakers are never going to be getting rookies anyway because they would have already spent their entire cap on established veteran stars.
They're not forced to play basketball. If they are so against living in Minnesota, they can go be a plumber in LA. Also, how many players have houses in LA/NY and live there in the offseason? And they're on the road for most of the season anyway? All your suggestion will do is make five teams competitive and make the season worthless for the other 25.
That's not true. The proof is that Utah is always competitive without top draft picks, free agents, or desirable location. Milwaukee just won the title without any of that. The LOS ANGELES Clippers always find a way to lose. Winning organizations will largely still be winning organizations because they have the front office, coaching staff, locker room, and talent all operating at a high level. OKC had Durant, Harden, Westbrook, Ibaka, and Reggie Jackson. They won nothing and concerned themselves with who they wouldn't pay. I hate that. The small markets can actually get away with getting rid of talent because they don't want to pay them. New Orleans should have never let Lonzo Ball go. That completely cemented their lack of a title contending future. Talent rots away on the bench...
I understand that there are outliers like the Spurs/Bucks etc who win by having a good front office but here's an interesting statistic:
Since 2000 (22 seasons), 18 times there has been a team from either Los Angeles, Miami or San Francisco, destination locations. Of those 18 teams, 13 had a big-time free agent signing that got them there (Shaq - Lakers, Heat), Heatles (Heat), Durant (GSW).
There would be smaller cities that would be good, but with the addition that some have put forward in removing the salary cap as well, it would turn into a similar situation as the English Premier League, where only a handful of teams would win every year.