orangello
Well-Known Member
Said the same thing.What needs to happen as well is the #1 winner shouldn't win top 3 for 4 years after.
So did Dong
Said the same thing.What needs to happen as well is the #1 winner shouldn't win top 3 for 4 years after.
I'm sorry, I hate this. It really hinders the chances of a God awful team who is trying to rebuild the right way, without taking on shorter term vet contracts just to win an extra few games for no reason, from being able to get the #1 or 2 pick. Teams should be able to construct their team for the long haul intelligently and how they see best fit. This twists their arm some from doing so.
The whole tanking thing is way overblown imo. Really what's happening is teams like the Sixers are trying to build their team wisely now, no longer overpaying for the Charlie Villaneauva's of the world. They know bad contracts weigh them down and instead are trying to gut, get strong lotto picks, develop those guys from within, take on salary dumps to get more picks, and add in solid vets on the cheap for shorter term deals to help fill some gaps and lead as the team develops the first few years. Could you call the Sixers process tanking? Sure. But not to the extent that this board and the league makes it sound and in no way does it even guarantee that they even get the #1 or 2 or in a very rare lottery, #3 pick, anyway.
As soon as some fringe playoff team (the Knicks) get the #1 pick in a top-heavy draft, they'll realize it imo. The strong get stronger and the really weak have that much tougher of a chance from truly helping themselves.
Stop.The wheel system is better. AND, the biggest argument against this system was: "it's not fair because Miami could get a #1 pick, blah, blah, blah."
Well Cleveland just received THREE #1's the last four years AND LeBron James. That wouldn't happen in a wheel system.
From the "wheel" article:
"that every team would be guaranteed one top-six pick every five seasons, and at least one top-12 pick in every four-year span"
Also, LeBron going back to Cleveland...doesn't that show that the CBA worked? It has broken up the superteam and kept others from forming.
Back to the article:
"The Wheel proposal is more complex, and it has gained significant support from some powerful people around the league. It took a backseat this week as the competition committee focused more on the league’s favored proposal."
The wheel will be the "fix" IMO. This is just something to talk about to help us realize the wheel is better.
I like this.
The wheel is freaking horrible. Would tilt the advantage to big markets even more and should not even be a consideration IMO.
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Yup.I wonder, with Utah being Utah, if there was a projected #1 pick who would actually stay in school if Utah had the #1 pick (and let's say the following year, LA had the top pick)?
Since the order would be predetermined, college players could control when to come out based on who is in the lottery.
This change is fine but still won't prevent tanking for good picks. Does this mean Silver is admitting tanking has occurred? As for the Jazz, they mode of building could still be the draft for another year or so but they have assets to trade. The group we have now won't stay intact. Kanter and Trey could definitely become trade bait as could several others which is a more likely scenario for our future growth.
There are some very good ideas in here.My draft lottery solution:
Expand the lottery to include every team that doesn't get home court advantage in the playoffs. Thus, only the top 4 teams in each conference will not be in the lottery. Run the odds so that the worst team gets roughly 10% of the ping pong balls, and the "best" lottery team gets about 1%. Space them evenly. Then, run the lottery for draft position for EVERY pick in the lottery, 1-22 (8 teams left based on record).
-This idea seriously ends tanking, but still gives a minor edge to teams that don't have talented players. It also help combat the idea that being "average" is worse than being terrible.
Exactly.Yeah, now that LeBron has returned, I think it's a safe bet they won't be getting the #1 for a while at least.
I wonder, with Utah being Utah, if there was a projected #1 pick who would actually stay in school if Utah had the #1 pick (and let's say the following year, LA had the top pick)?
Since the order would be predetermined, college players could control when to come out based on who is in the lottery.
Exactly.
I'd go one step further with this revision and not allow the same team to get a top-3 pick in successive seasons. Along with Cleveland, you have to address the Philadelphia Experiment. They're did absolutely nothing to field a competitive team last year and this season will be even worse. The player's association has to be upset Philly is spending zero FA dollars.
Playoff revenue v. a 1-2% chance at the #1 pick...Plus the increase incentive to fall off the 7-8th seed bubble.