Lots of things are bad about it. It's bad for the league that this generation of franchise players is leaving or threatening to leave every small market team. There is more involved than the whims of the player. He's part of a league, a team, a fan base, a city.
You're being sensational. Every franchise player isn't threatening to leave every small market team. Kevin Durant just resigned with the Thunder, probably the smallest market in the league. Other franchise level players have stayed with their small market teams. You're talking about three players.
Furthermore, it's not about the whims of the player. You sign a contract to play in this place for this many years, and you play out that contract. At what point is your career up to you? Yes, the league and the team and the fanbase and the city are worth of consideration, but when is it my decision where I want to play? When no one really wants me anymore? You draft me, and I play out my contract. I sign an extension with you, and play that out. Why am I a bad guy because I decide that I want to play somewhere else?
And what happens when Blake Griffin wants to leave the Clippers to go play for OKC, because Sterling sucks and doesn't want to win, and he'd rather be back home? What, now he can't leave LA and go to a small market? Or are you only going to give small market teams the ultimate ability to retain their own free agents?
Hell, why do we draft players and force them to go to a team in the first place? Why can't the player choose? What's so bad about players choosing where they want to go right from the start?
There's a world of difference between being drafted and being a free agent. You keep going down this path and you'll have to argue for getting rid of free agency entirely.
Once the Kings decided, they rebuilt correctly. If Cousins and Tyreke were just about to reach their prime and decided to leave to a big market and had no consequences at all....I really do think I'd be completely done with the NBA. The team would be a disaster and there's be no reason to hope it would ever be different. Even drafting future superstar would mean little or nothing.
Yeah, it sucks for the Kings and other small market teams that they aren't the most attractive free agent destinations. But either you get rid of free agency, or you acknowledge that you have a smaller window to build a contender and you go balls-out to do so while you have a chance. And if you make smart decisions, maybe you can keep your free agents. The Cavs made poor decision after poor decision, with nothing to show for their efforts other than the heroics of LeBron James. The Raptors didn't even try to do anything to build around Chris Bosh. Meanwhile, OKC has built a good team around Durant, and has more room to improve. Don't be Cleveland. Don't be Toronto. Be OKC.
And even at the end of the day, if you do everything right, you still might lose someone to free agency. You can't get rid of that possibility without getting rid of free agency. If that's what you think should happen, then we're too far apart on this to ever see eye to eye.
The NFL gets this already with the franchise tag which I would be in full support of for the NBA as well. The league is inching that direction by attempting to restrict sign & trades and extend & trades.
The franchise tag is the most unfair thing about player compensation in sports. You don't even allow the player to hit the market, while he's in his prime and his earning potential is its highest. If you want to create a tag or restricted free agency that allows the player to hit the market, but allows the Bird team right of first refusal, then that's a different story. I still think it's oppressive and unfair to the player, but at least you allow him to earn the money that the market will bear for him.
You can go back to some of my posts last year after the Miami situation (edit: see link below), and you'll see that I had similar ideas to this. I'm not arguing for unfettered free agency. I'm actually in favor of more restrictions. At a certain point, if the big market teams have no cap space, and the system restricts them from sign and trades, then the small market teams have a much better shot at retaining their own players in free agency. But you don't have to essentially tell the best players that they'll never be able to decide where they want to play, regardless of them playing their contract out.
http://www.kingsfans.com/forums/sho...ore-the-NBA-dies/page2&highlight=compensatory
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