Let me give different scenarios, all hypothetical and don’t pertain to this moment but a vague generalization of the past 30 years:
1. The league throwing the Lakers a bone when they need to be on the upswing and land a big talent in the lottery.
2. The league throwing the Knicks a bone because “they’re a big market”.
3. The league trying to drum up more NBA interest in a huge NCAA state in NC.
4. The league doing a franchise like SAS a solid and giving a handout that leads to a couple decades of self-sufficiency and raising the overall competitiveness of the league.
These four scenarios show how the idea of “big market = money = favor them” isn’t the best way to view things, even if you’re conspiratorial. NYC is the largest sports market in the world. Despite that, the league pushing that ****** franchise would be dumping money down the drain. The Lakers on the other hand, despite periodic mismanagement, has a proven track record to stay relevant and give you good return. San Antonio, as well, despite being a small market, does a lot for maintaining competitive balance in the league. The league benefits from a late-90s Jazz. It’s like the employee who you pay decent, not great, but good value, they show up early, stay late, don’t complain, aren’t a squeaky wheel, and put their head down and go to work. That does have real value. The fact that you can get by without giving them a raise for multiple years is also appreciated, and exploited, but brings real value.
Tl;dr there’s nobody right now that doing a favor for them will have any kind of predictable guarantee of benefiting the league generally. If Silver was asked, I’d imagine he’d be less thrilled about the #1 going somewhere like Charlotte. I don’t think you’d get added value in Brooklyn. He probably wouldn’t even be there that long. There’s an argument that you could put someone like Flagg in Utah and it being similar to Wemby in SA.
Small market teams pulling their weight is actually important for the league and they obviously see that. It’s more when you’re head-to-head on certain things the golden children will always be the golden children (Lakers).
1. The league throwing the Lakers a bone when they need to be on the upswing and land a big talent in the lottery.
2. The league throwing the Knicks a bone because “they’re a big market”.
3. The league trying to drum up more NBA interest in a huge NCAA state in NC.
4. The league doing a franchise like SAS a solid and giving a handout that leads to a couple decades of self-sufficiency and raising the overall competitiveness of the league.
These four scenarios show how the idea of “big market = money = favor them” isn’t the best way to view things, even if you’re conspiratorial. NYC is the largest sports market in the world. Despite that, the league pushing that ****** franchise would be dumping money down the drain. The Lakers on the other hand, despite periodic mismanagement, has a proven track record to stay relevant and give you good return. San Antonio, as well, despite being a small market, does a lot for maintaining competitive balance in the league. The league benefits from a late-90s Jazz. It’s like the employee who you pay decent, not great, but good value, they show up early, stay late, don’t complain, aren’t a squeaky wheel, and put their head down and go to work. That does have real value. The fact that you can get by without giving them a raise for multiple years is also appreciated, and exploited, but brings real value.
Tl;dr there’s nobody right now that doing a favor for them will have any kind of predictable guarantee of benefiting the league generally. If Silver was asked, I’d imagine he’d be less thrilled about the #1 going somewhere like Charlotte. I don’t think you’d get added value in Brooklyn. He probably wouldn’t even be there that long. There’s an argument that you could put someone like Flagg in Utah and it being similar to Wemby in SA.
Small market teams pulling their weight is actually important for the league and they obviously see that. It’s more when you’re head-to-head on certain things the golden children will always be the golden children (Lakers).