Arbitrary cut-off.
From 2003-20013, 9 championships by teams paying the tax; 1 by teams not paying tax. Clearly a correlation.
Last two seasons: champions did not pay luxury tax. A new era caused by the change in the CBA.
Arbitrary cut-off.
From 2003-20013, 9 championships by teams paying the tax; 1 by teams not paying tax. Clearly a correlation.
Last two seasons: champions did not pay luxury tax. A new era caused by the change in the CBA.
Your arbitrary cutoff is at zero luxury tax, the teams who are paying under a million in luxury tax are clearly not in the Dallas/ NJ/LA/ Miami camp of buying a championship. I'm sure you must see this difference.
I'm sure you do not believe that the Spurs "bought" two championships when they were under 200,000 over the luxury limit?
In the nine years you reference:
First 4 champions (2003-2007)paid a total of ~1.2 Million in luxury tax (~0.3 million per championship)
The next 5 champions (2008-2013) paid a total of ~74 million in luxury tax (~15 million per championship)
There is a huge difference between spending a little bit extra to get an edge to win a title and binge spending to win a title. By setting the cutoff arbitrarily at zero, the analysis misses this nuance.
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.