Correct Crusader
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I think the Jazz are being unbelievably gross in the way they're tanking. I think that warrants some concern.I honestly don't see why this is suddenly such a concern (other than the Thunder being whiny bitches). Teams want to get better and getting those top draft picks is one of the vital ways to do it. It's always been this way -- only, yeah, this year OKC has been bitches about their Utah pick.
Also, I think the league is making this a big talking point because they don't want to deal with the Clippers/Ballmer stuff.
To me, not really. They won a spate of games they shouldn't have in the last six weeks or so. They also put their chips in getting JJJ and this looks like the last year they'll be tanking. The league really just needs to give them a top pick. Only Sacramento and the Jazz have never won the lottery.I think the Jazz are being unbelievably gross in the way they're tanking. I think that warrants some concern.
Their team is good enough to make the playoffs this year, especially with JJJ. That's the issue.To me, not really. They won a spate of games they shouldn't have in the last six weeks or so. They also put their chips in getting JJJ and this looks like the last year they'll be tanking. The league really just needs to give them a top pick. Only Sacramento and the Jazz have never won the lottery.
The wheel is too radical for the owners ..especially small market teams to agree. It was already discussed, debated and shelvedTanking does need to be addressed. Some teams are playing a different game than others, trying to lose where others are trying to win. Schedule imbalances due to timing of playing tanking teams distort the final standings.
I don't think the PhD idea above would work, it would merely cause teams to tank earlier and get themselves eliminated from playoff contention as early as possible so they get more chances to accumulate gold points or whatever.
The wheel is a great system but getting there from here isn't really possible. One team would be stuck without the possibility of a #1 pick for 29 years.
One idea I saw was to do the wheel but with only 5 slots with 6 teams in each instead of 30 and 1 team in each. The picks (#1-6 for one slot, #7-12 for another and so on) would be randomly assigned with equal probability. Then 5 years later when a team gets back to the coveted #1-6 slot, they can't receive the same pick number they did the last time. That means any team that gets the #1 pick can't get it again until 30 years later.
It's a bit hard to explain, but it's elegant and essentially reinvents the Wheel, but in a way that every team has a 1/6 chance of the #1 pick in the next 5 years. After the initial 30 years, the full Wheel can be used based on the results of the past 30.
Expansion teams in Seattle and Vegas could cause a problem, it would need some fleshing out.
So what? Let them tank. They traded for JJJ for next year.Their team is good enough to make the playoffs this year, especially with JJJ. That's the issue.
Top 3 in this draft are Flagg-tier at least talent-wise (starting to question Peterson's drive and mentality), but there's plenty of players in the lottery that can become All Star caliber in the right situation and if some things break right for them imo.To truly answer this question, we need to all agree on what problems we are trying to solve for. From my perspective, it appears there are two conditions the league would probably still want met:
1. Help bad teams get better
2. Maximize the competitiveness of each game, but for the spirit of the game and for the fan experience
So with that in mind, I’ll go with what is essentially what Vecenie recently suggested (or maybe he read it somewhere). I posted this in DAF’s thread is very similar to this one:
Take 10% of player’s salaries and 10% of basketball related income for the teams and put it in escrow. This prize pool (which both the players and teams have a stake in) gets split up at the end of the year based on record (and pro rata to player salary). If you win 41 games, you get exactly your money back. If you win more, you make more. If you lose more, you lose money.
This gives tangible incentives (that kind of already exist but not really) for teams to win games, all the way to the end. Game 82 is worth as much money to the players and owners as game 1 is. Guys like Lauri would tell the Jazz FO to fuck off with their non-sense of sitting him all the time, players wouldn’t be accepting of being on a losing franchise year after year.
The obvious downside to this, of course, is the impact on Free Agency. Bad teams would have an even more difficult time signing players who aren’t going to want to risk part of their pay.
But ultimately.. I tend to think this isn’t really a problem that needs fixing. It’s kind of prevalent in every sport. Teams position themselves to lose and pull off upsets because players don’t give a fuck about tanking for the guy who might replace them. It’s happened a little earlier than normal this year because the draft class is strong both in terms of the top end talent and how deep it goes (I’ve heard the TOp 6 is pretty good? I’ve not followed).
Idea makes economic sense / rationality but will be shot down in the first hearing by the players' union. Maybe even by owners of small market teams.To truly answer this question, we need to all agree on what problems we are trying to solve for. From my perspective, it appears there are two conditions the league would probably still want met:
1. Help bad teams get better
2. Maximize the competitiveness of each game, but for the spirit of the game and for the fan experience
So with that in mind, I’ll go with what is essentially what Vecenie recently suggested (or maybe he read it somewhere). I posted this in DAF’s thread is very similar to this one:
Take 10% of player’s salaries and 10% of basketball related income for the teams and put it in escrow. This prize pool (which both the players and teams have a stake in) gets split up at the end of the year based on record (and pro rata to player salary). If you win 41 games, you get exactly your money back. If you win more, you make more. If you lose more, you lose money.
This gives tangible incentives (that kind of already exist but not really) for teams to win games, all the way to the end. Game 82 is worth as much money to the players and owners as game 1 is. Guys like Lauri would tell the Jazz FO to fuck off with their non-sense of sitting him all the time, players wouldn’t be accepting of being on a losing franchise year after year.
The obvious downside to this, of course, is the impact on Free Agency. Bad teams would have an even more difficult time signing players who aren’t going to want to risk part of their pay.
But ultimately.. I tend to think this isn’t really a problem that needs fixing. It’s kind of prevalent in every sport. Teams position themselves to lose and pull off upsets because players don’t give a fuck about tanking for the guy who might replace them. It’s happened a little earlier than normal this year because the draft class is strong both in terms of the top end talent and how deep it goes (I’ve heard the TOp 6 is pretty good? I’ve not followed).
Agree 100% that the union and probably at least half of the owners would shoot it down... but it's an interesting idea.Idea makes economic sense / rationality but will be shot down in the first hearing by the players' union. Maybe even by owners of small market teams.
I agree with you that losing in order to improve is a viable strategy across sport. Which is incentivized in the NBA by the draft lottery. But blatant tanking by nearly half the number of teams for a talent rich draft raises integrity questions that affect the image of a sport. What is the point of watching a Utah Jazz game after Feb 6 if all they do every year is to try to maximize their odds by sitting their best players. Multiply that by 14 and we have a severe problem.
So a reform is definitely necessary. Check my idea in the previous post on increasing draft lottery to 18 with some weights for play in teams for the top 4 pick odds. Plus protections not allowed except for top 4 and Top 18. And continuation of flattened odds. What could go wrong?
Don't mind tanking myself either tbh; worked out well for the Spurs obviously.I dont get all the pearl clutching about tanking. I like tanking! I'm fine with my team tanking, I actively enjoy it when other teams tank.
The NBA has no relegation, there's really one thing only to win, and there's a full 82 games just to get to the playoffs to then win it. What really sucks is being mid all the time! All these pieces about tanking and they basically never state the obvious that there's a natural punishment for tanking which is, you get eliminated from the possibility of winning. And that really should be punishment enough.
If tanking is so bad, make it more likely that a team finishing 8th in the East wins it all. Or make winning your Division a bigger deal. Or dont, and just stop whining about a rational and defensible action which can also have obvious positive medium-long term effects.
It’s been a talking point for years,not just since the Ballmer thing, and the big deal is that games with a tanking team, or both teams tanking are a bad sports product. People feel cheated holding those tickets.I honestly don't see why this is suddenly such a concern (other than the Thunder being whiny bitches). Teams want to get better and getting those top draft picks is one of the vital ways to do it. It's always been this way -- only, yeah, this year OKC has been bitches about their Utah pick.
Also, I think the league is making this a big talking point because they don't want to deal with the Clippers/Ballmer stuff.
They’re trying to have their cake and eat it too. The only way you can tank and not be punished is to completely strip the talent like we did by offloading White, DeRozan, and DJ. They’re trying to hold onto and even accumulate talent, and that will always get you in trouble. It’s a trap, though. Those guys will bloat their cap before aging out, and even if they win this lottery, that player will eventually stand alone in the not too distant future. No top FAs want to go to a Utah, so they’ll offload whoever they get this year, like they did Gobert and Mitchell,and start over.teams bottoming out to rebuild has never really been frowned upon, its kind of the expected way to reset. trade away your good players to teams that want to win now, like we did with Derek White and later DeJounte Murray. the only time i really remember a team being hated on for this approach was the Trust The Process sixers who basically publicly acknowledged they'd be doing so for multiple years.
the type of tanking that the league is having an issue with is teams sitting out or shutting down healthy players that probably could/should play.
the type of tanking the league absolutely cant have for competitive reasons is teams like the jazz intentionally throwing games by benching active players to ensure the team blows a lead and drops a game
nobody got mad that the jazz reset by trading gobert/mitchell. people only got mad at the jazz when they started sabotaging games
Ainge's plan is perfect if they finally get lucky (Jazz and Pacers are the only teams that never moved up in the lottery) and get a top3 pick.They’re trying to have their cake and eat it too. The only way you can tank and not be punished is to completely strip the talent like we did by offloading White, DeRozan, and DJ. They’re trying to hold onto and even accumulate talent, and that will always get you in trouble. It’s a trap, though. Those guys will bloat their cap before aging out, and even if they win this lottery, that player will eventually stand alone in the not too distant future. No top FAs want to go to a Utah, so they’ll offload whoever they get this year, like they did Gobert and Mitchell,and start over.