whitechocolate
Bench
Maybe the bigger the fine, the better the team actually is. A million dollar fine might net us some credibility.
Good thing about the Kings is they had a bottom 5 record when playing the vets heavy minutes so it's not like the league can jump in and say they're tanking because the vets are playing less minutes. The Kings could easily just say that the vets weren't winning so they're going another route in order to try and win.
Given how badly OKC tanked year after year such BS
Sure seems this way especially with San Antonio. OKC’s star player SGA was an an eleventh pick takin well after everybody’s crush Luka. However they did a masterful job accumulating picks and did get Chet before really turning the corner.
Sure seems this way especially with San Antonio. OKC’s star player SGA was an an eleventh pick takin well after everybody’s crush Luka. However they did a masterful job accumulating picks and did get Chet before really turning the corner.
The got Chet by doing things like sitting Al Horford for half a season and SGA for multiple gamesSure seems this way especially with San Antonio. OKC’s star player SGA was an an eleventh pick takin well after everybody’s crush Luka. However they did a masterful job accumulating picks and did get Chet before really turning the corner.
Sorry, originally posted this in the wrong thread. Reposting it here.
Carmichael Dave had an ... interesting proposal to eliminate tanking that will NEVER fly. But it was interesting.
Implement a "mini" version of relegation to the sport, like European soccer. I was driving while listening to this, so I hope I got all the details right:
Assuming two teams get added to the NBA in expansion, have an Eastern (10 teams) and Western (10 teams) conference, but also introduce a "third" conference ("Leastern"?) comprised of the worst 12 teams. Every year, the worst three teams (total) move down from the E and W conferences to the L conference. Teams in the L conference are not eligible for the playoffs. The three best teams in the L conference move up to the E and W conferences and are again playoff eligible.
So far, not a big difference from what we have now (worst teams in each conference are not playoff eligible). Here's where the anti-tank "solution" comes into play:
The team with the best record in the L conference automatically moves up and also gets the #1 pick in the draft. The second-best team also moves up automatically and gets the #2 pick. The rest of the teams have a "playoff" system and the winning team also moves up and gets the #3 pick. The rest of the picks are allocated by record, I think inverse to how bad they are. The "worst" team by record in the L conference would then get the #12 pick, I think. E and W conference picks come after the L conference picks, and are all allocated by record, similar to now.
Definitely anti-tank.
There are a couple issues I see with this, besides team owners never agreeing to it.
- How to balance the E and W teams if the L league is "unbalanced" - I would say it would have to be the same number of teams per E and W conference in the L conference so not to change up the teams in the E and W conference each year. So, it may end up that the teams in the L conference are not necessarily the "worst" teams overall, especially at the upper end of the L conference - middling teams in the W now are often more competitive than middling teams in the E, for instance).
- That also means maybe adjusting the number of teams to get relegated each year to 4 instead of 3 - two per E and W conferences.
- Maybe adjust the L conference to 10 teams instead of 12 - this makes the playoffs work well (2 teams from the 10 in the L conference automatically advance as #1 and #2, the remaining 8 have their playoffs. The playoff brackets would also have to be split E and W so the number of teams moving up and down were the same per conference - best E and W teams are #1 and #2 depending on record, and the playoffs will result in a E and W team playing each other for the #3 and #4 spots. Or maybe 6 instead of 10 if you want to tighten it up a bit?
Sorry, originally posted this in the wrong thread. Reposting it here.
Carmichael Dave had an ... interesting proposal to eliminate tanking that will NEVER fly. But it was interesting.
Implement a "mini" version of relegation to the sport, like European soccer. I was driving while listening to this, so I hope I got all the details right:
Assuming two teams get added to the NBA in expansion, have an Eastern (10 teams) and Western (10 teams) conference, but also introduce a "third" conference ("Leastern"?) comprised of the worst 12 teams. Every year, the worst three teams (total) move down from the E and W conferences to the L conference. Teams in the L conference are not eligible for the playoffs. The three best teams in the L conference move up to the E and W conferences and are again playoff eligible.
So far, not a big difference from what we have now (worst teams in each conference are not playoff eligible). Here's where the anti-tank "solution" comes into play:
The team with the best record in the L conference automatically moves up and also gets the #1 pick in the draft. The second-best team also moves up automatically and gets the #2 pick. The rest of the teams have a "playoff" system and the winning team also moves up and gets the #3 pick. The rest of the picks are allocated by record, I think inverse to how bad they are. The "worst" team by record in the L conference would then get the #12 pick, I think. E and W conference picks come after the L conference picks, and are all allocated by record, similar to now.
Definitely anti-tank.
There are a couple issues I see with this, besides team owners never agreeing to it.
- How to balance the E and W teams if the L league is "unbalanced" - I would say it would have to be the same number of teams per E and W conference in the L conference so not to change up the teams in the E and W conference each year. So, it may end up that the teams in the L conference are not necessarily the "worst" teams overall, especially at the upper end of the L conference - middling teams in the W now are often more competitive than middling teams in the E, for instance).
- That also means maybe adjusting the number of teams to get relegated each year to 4 instead of 3 - two per E and W conferences.
- Maybe adjust the L conference to 10 teams instead of 12 - this makes the playoffs work well (2 teams from the 10 in the L conference automatically advance as #1 and #2, the remaining 8 have their playoffs. The playoff brackets would also have to be split E and W so the number of teams moving up and down were the same per conference - best E and W teams are #1 and #2 depending on record, and the playoffs will result in a E and W team playing each other for the #3 and #4 spots. Or maybe 6 instead of 10 if you want to tighten it up a bit?
Will never work as the owners won’t risk the financial lost of Relegation. The lottery has been a problem since it was instituted in 1985.Sorry, originally posted this in the wrong thread. Reposting it here.
Carmichael Dave had an ... interesting proposal to eliminate tanking that will NEVER fly. But it was interesting.
Implement a "mini" version of relegation to the sport, like European soccer. I was driving while listening to this, so I hope I got all the details right:
Assuming two teams get added to the NBA in expansion, have an Eastern (10 teams) and Western (10 teams) conference, but also introduce a "third" conference ("Leastern"?) comprised of the worst 12 teams. Every year, the worst three teams (total) move down from the E and W conferences to the L conference. Teams in the L conference are not eligible for the playoffs. The three best teams in the L conference move up to the E and W conferences and are again playoff eligible.
So far, not a big difference from what we have now (worst teams in each conference are not playoff eligible). Here's where the anti-tank "solution" comes into play:
The team with the best record in the L conference automatically moves up and also gets the #1 pick in the draft. The second-best team also moves up automatically and gets the #2 pick. The rest of the teams have a "playoff" system and the winning team also moves up and gets the #3 pick. The rest of the picks are allocated by record, I think inverse to how bad they are. The "worst" team by record in the L conference would then get the #12 pick, I think. E and W conference picks come after the L conference picks, and are all allocated by record, similar to now.
Definitely anti-tank.
There are a couple issues I see with this, besides team owners never agreeing to it.
- How to balance the E and W teams if the L league is "unbalanced" - I would say it would have to be the same number of teams per E and W conference in the L conference so not to change up the teams in the E and W conference each year. So, it may end up that the teams in the L conference are not necessarily the "worst" teams overall, especially at the upper end of the L conference - middling teams in the W now are often more competitive than middling teams in the E, for instance).
- That also means maybe adjusting the number of teams to get relegated each year to 4 instead of 3 - two per E and W conferences.
- Maybe adjust the L conference to 10 teams instead of 12 - this makes the playoffs work well (2 teams from the 10 in the L conference automatically advance as #1 and #2, the remaining 8 have their playoffs. The playoff brackets would also have to be split E and W so the number of teams moving up and down were the same per conference - best E and W teams are #1 and #2 depending on record, and the playoffs will result in a E and W team playing each other for the #3 and #4 spots. Or maybe 6 instead of 10 if you want to tighten it up a bit?
Will never work as the owners won’t risk the financial lost of Relegation. The lottery has been a problem since it was instituted in 1985.
If you really want to end tanking dump the lottery as it has never worked. Your best bet is to create a commision that seeds the lottery teams in the draft.
I said multiple times it would never move forward. I just thought it was an interesting idea. Not that it was feasible or better than others. Just...different. Never hurts to banter thoughts around!Will never work as the owners won’t risk the financial lost of Relegation. The lottery has been a problem since it was instituted in 1985.
If you really want to end tanking dump the lottery as it has never worked. Your best bet is to create a commision that seeds the lottery teams in the draft.
4 teams/division only works when the regular season is short (NFL). An 82-game season, in my honest opinion, requires 5+ team divisions across the board.warhawk said:
Assuming two teams get added to the NBA in expansion
I see we are talking about inevitable expansion. In fact, i don't follow these things but i wonder if there is a bet to be made on whether or not the Commissioner mentions "expansion" either in an "it's coming - soon" type of way or outright, "At the end of the 26-27 season, there will be realignment and an expansion draft, with 32 teams beginning in 2027-28"
At any rate, it's coming and with it, a more manageable scheduling situation (and if they don't use AI to make their schedules, they should.).
No more "all four games with Denver/OKC before ANY games with NO/SAS" - instead, you simply tell the AI device that will prepare the season schedule, "no two teams play each other more than once in a five week period" and boom, the schedule comes out that way.
I don't think a "relegation" situation is neccessary, but if it were (neccessary), the fair thing would be to group teams by how much money they spent (rewarding teams that did not exceed the cap).
First, what is the "regular season schedule" likely to look like?
One idea would be four teams in each division, four divisions in each conference.
16 teams in each conference - each west team plays an east team once a season (alternating home/away games): Total_ 16 (reduced from "twice")
Each team plays the other three teams in their division 6 times annually - Total : 18
Each team plays other non-division conference teams 4 times annually - Total: 48
Total: 82 game schedule, very balanced.
If we regroup teams putting weaker, lower spending teams in the same division(s) and grouping higher spending teams together, it should equal things out a bit.
For instance, Western Conference
Pacific Division:
Warriors
Lakers
Clippers
Suns
Northwest Division:
Seattle
Portland
Sacramento
Las Vegas
Southwest Division:
Spurs
Rockets
Mavericks
Thunder
Midwest Division:
Utah
Denver
Minnesota
Milwaukee
and
Eastern Confertence, North Division:
Boston
New York
Brooklyn
Philly
South Division:
Miami
Orlando
Memphis
New Orleans
Mid-South Division:
Atlanta
Charlotte
Washington
Indiana
Rust Belt Division:
Chicago
Cleveland
Detroit
Toronto
Less travelling, so, theoretically, not as much need to "rest" players
It's VERY doable to have a system where no team is ever "disadvantaged" in a matchup (no more "rested home team versus road team on second of a back to back" - it NEVER HAS TO HAPPEN AGAIN).
but that's a whole other story..
Interesting grouping. Here was what I was thinking. Does show how Mexico City might fit better than Vegas.warhawk said:
Assuming two teams get added to the NBA in expansion
I see we are talking about inevitable expansion. In fact, i don't follow these things but i wonder if there is a bet to be made on whether or not the Commissioner mentions "expansion" either in an "it's coming - soon" type of way or outright, "At the end of the 26-27 season, there will be realignment and an expansion draft, with 32 teams beginning in 2027-28"
At any rate, it's coming and with it, a more manageable scheduling situation (and if they don't use AI to make their schedules, they should.).
No more "all four games with Denver/OKC before ANY games with NO/SAS" - instead, you simply tell the AI device that will prepare the season schedule, "no two teams play each other more than once in a five week period" and boom, the schedule comes out that way.
I don't think a "relegation" situation is neccessary, but if it were (neccessary), the fair thing would be to group teams by how much money they spent (rewarding teams that did not exceed the cap).
First, what is the "regular season schedule" likely to look like?
One idea would be four teams in each division, four divisions in each conference.
16 teams in each conference - each west team plays an east team once a season (alternating home/away games): Total_ 16 (reduced from "twice")
Each team plays the other three teams in their division 6 times annually - Total : 18
Each team plays other non-division conference teams 4 times annually - Total: 48
Total: 82 game schedule, very balanced.
If we regroup teams putting weaker, lower spending teams in the same division(s) and grouping higher spending teams together, it should equal things out a bit.
For instance, Western Conference
Pacific Division:
Warriors
Lakers
Clippers
Suns
Northwest Division:
Seattle
Portland
Sacramento
Las Vegas
Southwest Division:
Spurs
Rockets
Mavericks
Thunder
Midwest Division:
Utah
Denver
Minnesota
Milwaukee
and
Eastern Confertence, North Division:
Boston
New York
Brooklyn
Philly
South Division:
Miami
Orlando
Memphis
New Orleans
Mid-South Division:
Atlanta
Charlotte
Washington
Indiana
Rust Belt Division:
Chicago
Cleveland
Detroit
Toronto
Less travelling, so, theoretically, not as much need to "rest" players
It's VERY doable to have a system where no team is ever "disadvantaged" in a matchup (no more "rested home team versus road team on second of a back to back" - it NEVER HAS TO HAPPEN AGAIN).
but that's a whole other story..
Will never work as the owners won’t risk the financial lost of Relegation. The lottery has been a problem since it was instituted in 1985.
If you really want to end tanking dump the lottery as it has never worked. Your best bet is to create a commision that seeds the lottery teams in the draft.
Good. I hate tanking.Adam Silver stated the league is considering revoking draft picks as a deterrent
Expect to see miraculous recoveries or season ending sore big toes vanish overnight.
View attachment 14815
Interesting grouping. Here was what I was thinking. Does show how Mexico City might fit better than Vegas.
Pacific Division:
Vegas (Utah)
Lakers
Clippers
Pheonix
Northwest Division:
Seattle
Portland
Sacramento
Warriors
Southwest Division:
Spurs
Rockets
New Orleans
Memphis (Mexico City)
Midwest Division:
Utah (Memphis )
Denver
Dallas
OKC
and
Eastern Confertence, Mid Atlantic Division:
Washington
New York
Brooklyn
Philly
South Division:
Miami
Orlando
Atlanta
Charlotte
Great Lake Division:
Minnesota
Milwaukee
Indiana
Chicago
Rust Belt Division:
Washington
Cleveland
Detroit
Toronto