BadMofoPimp wrote:NFL is a sharing model and it is an excellent indicator where every team makes money and has a fair chance of fielding a competitive team. Why is that a bad thing?
I don't believe anyone said that isn't a noble goal. However, the claims of the NFL's "superior" parity have already been proven here and elsewhere to be greatly exaggerated, so relying on them as your sole example is not only fraudulent but uninspired. To add to that, your frequent aspersions that anyone against such a discredited model simply hates "fairness" or "parity" is a classic straw man. If you were to practice this kind of deception in your day-to-day life, to say nothing of your professional one, you would promptly find your position a very lonely and isolated one.
Why should one team have an advantage over other teams?
Oh, now you want to talk about advantages? Fine, let's touch bases again once we've abolished the lottery and ended ALL revenue sharing, shall we?
Sport is capitalist to the core. Rules only serve to make it more meritocratic, but that is not the same thing as "fair". What does winning a gold medal prove if you kick Usaine Bolt or Michael Phelps or Team USA out of competition? Assuming every contestant is upheld to the same code of conduct, it would no longer be an accurate reflection of the
best athlete anymore, would it?
And what do the excluded get for their efforts? Isn't their disqualification a silent admission that they secretly are the best, even if the world doesn't want to acknowledge it? Can you imagine the IOC making the claim that based on past precedent alone, Team USA's victory is all but ensured, thus they aren't allowed to play, out of "fairness" to the other countries? Can you not see the furor that would cause?
What if the IOC relented and said "okay, you can play", but Team USA had to wear ankle weights to "even" things out? Now they get the chance to compete(!), you say, but no longer will their athleticism be more of an advantage than it is to the other team. All this even though as most already know, Team USA didn't need any physical handicaps to nearly cost them a loss or two. The reason? Whatever incumbent advantages you possess on paper does not guarantee they will translate fully on the court. Otherwise, why even play the games?
Look at the Heat. They were supposed to rule the league unchallenged for the next 8 years, remember? What happens? They lose on home court to the 90's all-star reunion Mavericks. Lakers '04 superteam loses to a starless Pistons. Starless Rockets beat back Ewing and Shaq to repeat as NBA champions. Talent is relative. And so are resources. I mean, haven't the last 15 or so Clipper and Knicks teams proven this yet?
No, if you're going to talk about advantages over other teams, we can trade shots all day, but you will lose. Neutralizing the differences between the haves and have-nots is a preposterous suggestion with even more preposterous logic to fill it in. Giving OKC, Minnesota, or Indiana a real shot at keeping together their young core and building their own superteam? Now you're onto something, but you can't do that with a hard cap.