Plan to save the NBA

Costanza

Rising Star
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As a broadcaster, I have the opportunity to express my opinion in a variety of ways - on TV, on the radio, in my blog, etc. That being said, the following column is purely one broadcaster's humble opinion on improving the conference setup and NBA Playoff system.

The beauty of the NBA is that it is unafraid of change. It is a league at the forefront of many of the best things in professional sports – diversity, globalization, charity, teamwork, marketing and technology.

It is a league that evaluates scenarios, studies and usually changes for the better. It moved the three-point line in, saw that was a mistake and changed it back. The league allowed the zone defense and produced a better product. The league experimented with a new composite ball and then returned to leather. The introduction of an age minimum, I believe, was a step forward for more polished players (i.e. Brandon Roy) coming into the league. To fill the gap for players who may not be best suited for college, the Developmental League is a good option that only improves every year.

Unfortunately, the one major gap in this tremendous sport of professional basketball is in defining its champion. The odd conference setup and scheduling is outdated and inequitable. When the sport is supposed to be at its zenith in terms of interest, intensity and quality of play, the NBA shoots an airball more often than not.

Now, this is not only an NBA problem. Sports like college football have had questionable methods of determining champions for years. The problem arises primarily from failing to match up the quality teams in an effort to ultimately decide which team is best. The history of college football is littered with teams that feasted on lesser competition, built up a bloated won-loss record and laughably were “voted” a top team – a “mythical” national champion indeed.

Fortunately, the NBA has a regular season that could easily determine the quality of a ballclub. Once the various team strengths are ascertained, a championship tournament could be easily implemented. And surprisingly, the methodology doesn’t have to be so shockingly different.

There are two incredibly unfortunate aspects of the regular season in the NBA. One is that the visiting team loses 60 percent of all regular season games. This is the biggest disparity in any of the four major sports. The other is that the Western Conference has become so dominant that any type of playoff system that doesn’t acknowledge this truism is flawed.

Now, one look at an NBA team’s schedule gives you a good idea why road teams rarely win. Tons of travel, back-to-back games, and four games in five nights in multiple time zones all take its toll on the traveling team’s play. Having broadcast NBA games for 14 years, I can tell you that I am physically beaten up on these trips, and I am only required to speak to perform my job.

Players endure physical hardship and injury during a season (more than 300 players have missed a total of 4,400 games each of the past two seasons) and this is despite being some of the best conditioned athletes in the world. Having players perform at less than their best is not good for fans, the quality of play, games being broadcast and competition in general.

All of this can be addressed by adjusting the “conference” setup in the NBA. This has happened in the league’s history several times and teams like Chicago were once even in the Western Conference.

Fortunately, the NBA's current regionally-based six-division setup would still work. However, rather than having the six divisions placed within two conferences, it would make more sense to have them broken into three conferences - West, Central and East. To view how the league's two conferences are currently set up, click here. To see how my proposed three-conference setup would look like, view the table below:

Realignment_550.jpg

Now, the hypothetical team schedule (let’s use the Warriors) is slightly different but much better for travel, television broadcasts, fans attending road games and development of regular season rivalries.

Currently, the Warriors play each Eastern Conference team twice (home and away). They would continue to do exactly the same thing under this suggested format. Ten Eastern Conference teams would result in 20 regular season games for the Warriors.

Currently, the Warriors play teams such as San Antonio, Dallas, Houston and Memphis four times (sometimes three). That is the same number of times they play the Sacramento Kings, Lakers and Clippers, which should be their divisional and geographic rivals. This makes no sense from a travel perspective and the time zone change doesn’t work well for television broadcasts either. Create a Central Conference and play each of the 10 Central teams twice, which would add 20 more regular season games.

Now for the Western Conference opponents, which would require much less travel, far fewer time zone issues and much closer geographic proximity. Again, using the Warriors schedule, play the non-division teams in the conference (the Mountain Division) four times each (20 games) and play the four division opponents (the Pacific) five times each (20 games).

This results in an 80-game schedule (once the amount of the league season), much less travel, better rest and health for players, better local TV broadcasting opportunities, the nurturing of geographic rivalries and familiarity with nearby opponents (think Red Sox/ Yankees).

The change to three conferences and adjustment of the schedule is quite easy. Even in the event that economics dictated staying with an 82-game schedule, just rotate one non-conference (home and away) opponent randomly on a yearly basis.

So now for the post-season championship tournament, or playoffs. Much of the current format still works very well. Seven-game series truly decide the best teams and 16 playoff qualifiers is exactly the right number. Seeding teams is absolutely necessary. Using regular season records for seeding and home court is appropriate. And charter air travel has made frequency of games much easier. I would also suggest the 2-3-2 format currently used for the Finals to be in place for all series. This minimizes travel.

However, the Eastern/ Western Conference format, selecting eight teams from each conference just absolutely fails in identifying the best 16 teams in the NBA. Over the past eight years, the Western record vs. Eastern teams is as follows:

Season West Record Vs. East
2006-07 257-193
2005-06 252-198
2004-05 256-194
2003-04 266-154
2002-03 250-170
2001-02 232-188
2000-01 259-161
1999-2000 227-193​

That totals for a 1,999-1,451 record for the Western Conference, a .579 winning percentage. Additionally, the Western Champion has won the NBA Championship 7 of the past 9 years, with many of the series not very competitive. This is not a cycle or a trend that is going to change any time soon (particularly with this year’s lottery results). During the 2006-07 regular season, five of the best six records in the NBA belonged to the West. The entire starting five of the First Team All-NBA were all Western Conference players. At the All-Star Break, the five best records in the league were in the West. This had NEVER happened in NBA history. In fact, no conference had ever had the top four records in the league at the All-Star Break.

This is all despite the fact that Eastern teams play 52 games against lesser competition and only 30 games against the West. While I don’t advocate relying on computer rankings, the Sagarin rankings (using won-loss record and strength of schedule) essentially show that 10 of the top 16 teams in the NBA are from the Western Conference. With Miami and Detroit aging, the Eastern Conference is heading for an even larger decline and it's likely that 12 of the best 16 teams in the league reside out West.

The point is not to eliminate Eastern teams from the playoffs, but rather identify the best 16 teams in the league and seed them accordingly in a 16-team bracket to best determine the true NBA champion. The current format is the equivalent of Western teams being required to run a marathon while teams from the East are running a 100-yard dash to win a title.

Understand, there will never and should never be a balanced schedule. There will be year-to-year vagaries in the three-conference setup and certainly divisional strength issues. But a 16-team playoff bracket is a vast improvement over the current system and would be the most equitable way to select and seed post-season qualifiers. Remember, the goal is to have the best teams playing for the NBA title and an equitable seeding process.

Start with all six division winners making the playoffs. And then the next 10 best regular season records, regardless of location. Seed the teams 1-16 based on regular season records, make out an NBA Championship bracket, play seven-game series and use the 2-3-2 format to mitigate travel concerns.

Using this year’s regular season records, nine teams out of the current West would have qualified and seven from the East (almost eight and eight) but it’s the seedings and road to a title that would have looked dramatically different:

Bracket_1124b.jpg

Feel free to prognosticate on how the Championship Tournament would have played out. But to get to the Finals this year, San Antonio has beaten Denver (10), Phoenix (2) and Utah (6), a far different road than Cleveland [Washington (15), New Jersey (14) and Detroit (4)]. In fact, with a properly seeded playoff bracket, we might still have seen the great Dallas/Warrior and San Antonio/Phoenix series but they would have been in the Final Four rather than in the first and second round. You could quite reasonably surmise that Cleveland might have lost in the first round to Denver or certainly in the second round to Phoenix, instead of being swept in the Finals of a playoff system that is in serious need of an evaluation.

Bob Fitzgerald just finished his 10th season as television play-by-play announcer for the Warriors. Throughout the 2006-07 season, Fitzgerald again provided Warriors fans with a unique, inside perspective to the club and the NBA. Check out his blog only on warriors.com!
http://aol.nba.com/warriors/interactive/fitz_files_blog_june07.html
 
unfortunately for bob fitzgerald, what he doesn't seem to understand is that the NBA doesn't need saving. in fact, in terms of business revenue, it FLOURISHING even in spite of the low nba finals ratings.

fans may hate david stern, but owners love him. the NBA is 2nd only to MLB, and those 2 have been leap-frogging each other for more than a decade.

low nba finals ratings are nothing new. STUPID ASS fans tuned out the seattle supersonics - washington bullets finals too. it's not the league's fault that the overwhelming majority of fans can't/don't understand what they're watching.
 
cranrab said:
unfortunately for bob fitzgerald, what he doesn't seem to understand is that the NBA doesn't need saving. in fact, in terms of business revenue, it FLOURISHING even in spite of the low nba finals ratings.

fans may hate david stern, but owners love him. the NBA is 2nd only to MLB, and those 2 have been leap-frogging each other for more than a decade.

low nba finals ratings are nothing new. STUPID ASS fans tuned out the seattle supersonics - washington bullets finals too. it's not the league's fault that the overwhelming majority of fans can't/don't understand what they're watching.
I feel what you're saying and I'll concede right off the bat that "save" is the wrong word. The NBA doesn't need saving, but it definitely needs fixing. The Cleveland Cavaliers had no business being in the NBA finals and it is flat out unfair to have one conference be so much stronger than the other, as has been the case for almost an entire decade now. The NBA Finals should be the league's showcase series; I'm busy with school and work, as are a lot of people, and I didn't have cable access this year. I didn't get to see the Mavs play the Warriors or the Suns play the Spurs. Instead, I see a Cleveland team with the most overhyped star since Paris Hilton. It just makes more sense to make an effort to have a system that allows the best teams to play in the end.
Also, second only to MLB? Could you explain that, please? I thought football was king; perhaps you meant internationally, but I actually thought NBA was more popular than MLB worldwide.
 
What does Colin Powell do when he takes a shit? I mean, I don't know, maybe he plays Bombs Over Baghdad and quickly sprays his shit and leaves, but you would think even this nigga would read the sports page from time to time.

Print this shit out and read it in the bathroom!
 
Costanza said:
I feel what you're saying and I'll concede right off the bat that "save" is the wrong word. The NBA doesn't need saving, but it definitely needs fixing.

i agree that the league could use some tuning up. but that begins with the fans, not the commissioner. if fans increased their basketball knowledge and became more discerning consumers, the league would be forced to improve.

but fans are kids, who aren't very knowledgeable, and grow up to be young adults who still aren't very knowledgeable. they prefer scoring over defense (which, if they understood the game, translates into higher FG% and increased easier scoring). they prefer style over substance. so we get a watered-down league of athletes who can jump out of the gym, but who can't change direction while dribbling without putting their hand underneath the ball. we get young, lazy, lightning quick players who prefer jump hooks over jump shots.

Costanza said:
The Cleveland Cavaliers had no business being in the NBA finals and it is flat out unfair to have one conference be so much stronger than the other, as has been the case for almost an entire decade now.

i don't understand statements like these. the cavaliers competed fairly and were severely out-matched. so what?

how do you respond to someone who says the mavericks had no business being in the NBA playoffs, and it is flat out unfair to have a bloated conference where the supposedly strong number 1 seed gets trounced by the 8?

Costanza said:
I see a Cleveland team with the most overhyped star since Paris Hilton.

i thought the most over-hyped star this season was MVP dirk nowitzki.

Costanza said:
Also, second only to MLB? Could you explain that, please? I thought football was king; perhaps you meant internationally, but I actually thought NBA was more popular than MLB worldwide.

you are correct about the NFL. i was drastically mistaken. here are the actual numbers:

In an overlooked development, the NBA isn't in trouble at all, but a colossus, the No. 2 property in rights fees, as compiled by SportsBusiness Daily.

No one approaches the NFL's $3.7 billion a year, but even before the NBA extension kicks in, presumably with the "healthy raise" Stern said he expected, his league is No. 2 at $767 million.

Supposedly hot properties such as the NCAA basketball tournament ($565 million), NASCAR ($556 million), Major League Baseball ($553 million) and the Tiger Woods-era PGA Tour ($492 million) all trail.

MLB and the NBA have leapfrogged each other since the '90s, depending on which league signed the last contract. Those days are over, with baseball locked in through 2013 and the $200-million gap about to get bigger.
 
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Here is a simple solution and best solution. Get rid of conferences. Keep the division. All 6 Division winners get an automatic birth to the playoffs then the 10 next best records make it to the playoffs. All division winners get home court advantage in the first round no matter what record. Then in the 2nd round and rounds after that you let the teams with the best record have home court advantage. Reseed after every round. Get rid of the 3 day layoffs. Only have 2 day layoffs when teams switch venues.

This plan is simple but effective.
 
It's the balance of power. No one was complaining about this back when the C's and Pistons ruled basketball. I believe that people are seeing all the parity in the NFL and they want every sport to have that type of parity. Right now the West is the stronger conference, when Duncan retires or maybe with a couple big trades the balance will shift back to the East. NBA is not doomed or anything like that, it could use some fine tuning but I wouldn't fiddle with the way the playoffs and the conferences are set up.

Hell if you want to talk about rivalries the playoffs is where they are formed. I'm sure PHX vs SA will be a much grittier regular season game b/c of what happened during their playoff series.
 
cranrab said:
i agree that the league could use some tuning up. but that begins with the fans, not the commissioner. if fans increased their basketball knowledge and became more discerning consumers, the league would be forced to improve.

but fans are kids, who aren't very knowledgeable, and grow up to be young adults who still aren't very knowledgeable. they prefer scoring over defense (which, if they understood the game, translates into higher FG% and increased easier scoring). they prefer style over substance. so we get a watered-down league of athletes who can jump out of the gym, but who can't change direction while dribbling without putting their hand underneath the ball. we get young, lazy, lightning quick players who prefer jump hooks over jump shots.

Partner, you're talking to a fan of the 90s Knicks. Ewing-Oakley-Starks is my basketball trinity, so I'm definitely not into flash and demanding 120 point games.



cranrab said:
i don't understand statements like these. the cavaliers competed fairly and were severely out-matched. so what?

how do you respond to someone who says the mavericks had no business being in the NBA playoffs, and it is flat out unfair to have a bloated conference where the supposedly strong number 1 seed gets trounced by the 8?

Look, of course the Cavaliers competed fairly. I even give them a modicum of credit for beating the Pistons, although these Pistons without Ben Wallace don't compare at all to the Piston teams under Larry Brown or even last year, so it's obscene to compare it to Jordan getting past the Pistons, as some have.
You don't pick who you compete against. My problem isn't the Cavaliers in particular; they are just Exhibit A. I assume we can agree that, in theory, the NBA Finals should be the ultimate showcase for the league's top teams. There is no reason for the playoffs to be a slave to geography. And the fact that things have been a certain way in the past doesn't mean it's the smartest way for the future. Cleveland was severely outmatched; the East, as a whole, has been severely outmatched by the West. You call Dallas a supposedly strong team because they lost to the eighth seeded team (coached by their former coach, which matters, has the finals showed)? That eighth seeded team was better than any team Cleveland played until the Conference Finals!!! It's not fair-- to Western Conference players or fans-- that one conference is an absolute cakewalk for LeBronn to take off his training wheels and, in the other conference, Kobe Bryant's Lakers draw Phoenix in the first round for consecutive years.
A system where teams are seeded based on the merit of their regular season performance has built-in integrity. If Cleveland could get past Denver, Phoenix, and San Antonio, they wouldn't be getting their asses handed to them in the finals to the point where nobody wants to watch. Denver, the opponent the Spurs had to face in the first round, certainly put up more of a fight against the Spurs; I think they might have beat Cleveland. It would have been more compelling, certainly, than that first trash series Cleveland played. Look at boxing; just calling something a championship event won't make anyone care if it's uncompetitive or poorly contested.
It's not "so what." The product will be better if the NBA makes this change.


cranrab said:
i thought the most over-hyped star this season was MVP dirk nowitzki.

After Nash got it over Kobe his first time, I stopped paying attention to the MVP award. It's a shame people rely at that and all-star appearances when it's all sports writers and their bullahit that determines it; it's nothing objective.
Dirk might've been the most overhyped player of the regular season, but the love LeBron got in the playoffs-- unanimous, from all media sources to people calling radio shows-- exceeded that, with people hoping to find a new Jordan and spit at Kobe at the same time.

cranrab said:
you are correct about the NFL. i was drastically mistaken. here are the actual numbers:

In an overlooked development, the NBA isn't in trouble at all, but a colossus, the No. 2 property in rights fees, as compiled by SportsBusiness Daily.

No one approaches the NFL's $3.7 billion a year, but even before the NBA extension kicks in, presumably with the "healthy raise" Stern said he expected, his league is No. 2 at $767 million.

Supposedly hot properties such as the NCAA basketball tournament ($565 million), NASCAR ($556 million), Major League Baseball ($553 million) and the Tiger Woods-era PGA Tour ($492 million) all trail.

MLB and the NBA have leapfrogged each other since the '90s, depending on which league signed the last contract. Those days are over, with baseball locked in through 2013 and the $200-million gap about to get bigger.

Sounds cool... I'm not sure what extension and raise they're talking about... Also, these numbers are strictly about the US, right?
 
The NBA should be on every Sunday at the same time so that it is easy to find. Like it used to be. Once you make it hard to find people don't care after being disappointed a few times. For example, you used to plan to watch NBA games around what you were doing because you knew exactly what time they came on. Or, no matter where you went the game was on in the back ground. Very simple concept. The NFL is starting to fuck this up now.

Leave the playoffs alone that shit is a cycle and this year was a fluke because Detroit choked (no one is saying this) and Miami was not the same team. No one will say Cleveland is better than Miami.
 
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showtime said:
It's the balance of power. No one was complaining about this back when the C's and Pistons ruled basketball. I believe that people are seeing all the parity in the NFL and they want every sport to have that type of parity. Right now the West is the stronger conference, when Duncan retires or maybe with a couple big trades the balance will shift back to the East. NBA is not doomed or anything like that, it could use some fine tuning but I wouldn't fiddle with the way the playoffs and the conferences are set up.

Hell if you want to talk about rivalries the playoffs is where they are formed. I'm sure PHX vs SA will be a much grittier regular season game b/c of what happened during their playoff series.

The league needs parody. That's why the NFL is great because usually you have a different superbowl champion each year. I think my playoff plan best suits the nba.
 
Chase Bannon said:
The league needs parody. That's why the NFL is great because usually you have a different superbowl champion each year. I think my playoff plan best suits the nba.

NBA has never really had the parity that the NFL enjoys and probably never will. Mainly b/c in the NBA you need superstars b/c in the playoffs it is a best of 7 format so rarely do you see big upsets. I'm still mad they changed the opening round to beat of 7 from best of 5. It's hard as shit to beat guys like Duncan/Parker/Ginobli, shaq/kobe, shaq/wade, etc etc 4 out of 7 games. As long as there are a handfull of elite players their teams will trade off winning it all year in and year out, barring a team like the Detroit Pistons every now and then but pretty much in the NBA stars rule.

The NFL is a bit different, there is a 1 and done playoff format, and if an emotional team like the steelers for 2 yrs ago get hot they can win it all. Plus in football coaches and schemes matter soooo much more than in basketball.
 
Why don't we just cut to the chase. I got a plan I think a lot of "NBA fans" would like to see, but won't "come out of the closet" to admit.

Lets do this...

  1. Give Kobe league MVP every year
  2. Keep the existing playoff system
  3. If the Lakers get eliminated in any round, we make Kobe a "conditional free agent"
  4. Once the Finals matchup is decided, Kobe is given the starting guard spot on the team designated as underdog (or he stays with the Lakers should they make it)
  5. If the team Kobe is on wins, he is given Finals MVP
  6. If the opposing team is clearly going to win, Kobe is switched to that team and given Finals MVP
Since this whole issue is basically a matter of limited Kobe representation, this should satisfy all of the Kobe fans AND save the NBA (because you can't spell NBA without a "B" like in Ko-B B-ryant. There is no "I" in TEAM, but there is an "E", like in Kob-E)

MAN-tastic.jpg
 
I think that the championship breakdown is like western conference 27 Eastern Conference 34

it runs back and forth some years the east is domnant and at times the west is better
 
Costanza said:
Damn... Hate ain't healthy...

  • When the Rockets swept the Magic, the league survived
  • When the Lakers swept the Nets, the league survived
  • When the one-man-show that was the 76ers got beat 4-1 by the Lakers, the league survived
  • When the Pistons rolled over the Lakers 4-1 the league survived
  • The league will survive Cleveland getting swept too
The chips fall how they fall, the league ain't dieing or fixed because your team ain't winning or your boy ain't playing.

The only way the NBA would ever please most of the sports media would be if the Lakers played the Knicks every year with maybe Chicago in the mix occasionally. That was even the case during the Jordan era (you STILL had sportwriters bitching about the big market teams getting no play in the face of all that greatness). Only way that is gonna happen is if they make the league a two team league or get rid of the cap and let the two major market teams stack their rosters (even then, there will be enough left over talent to upset them, look at the Yankees).

Most cats that think the league needs "fixing" are cats who root for Western teams (usually the Kobe Lakers) that want to see a system in place where two Western teams can play each other in the Finals (hoping one of those teams will be the Kobe Lakers). Same shit Knicks fans used to do back when Jordan's Bulls ran shit and the Knicks kept coming up short. Big diff is, Kobe's Lakers are coming up WAY TOO SHORT right now. Only problem I got is with cats that won't ever feel the league is legit again until they can see Kobe in a Finals series (and that ain't gonna happen anytime soon unless he can managed to get traded to a ready-made contender and just the act of him being traded is gonna KILL whatever team he goes to because of the trade cost and cap hit).
 
8 sure fire suggestions to make the NBA better.

#1. Move Minnesota Timberwolves to the Eastern Conferance

#2. Rid the NBA of 100% guaranteed contracts and install
performance base pay

#3. Waive all stiffs, non contributing role players and dead weight
teammates.

#4. Make whining and flopping a technical foul.

#5. Waive non contributing players and make them accountable instead
of firing the coach.

#6. Let the players play and stop calling the bullshit ticky tack fouls

#7. Give the worst team the #1 overall pick the following season.

#8. Fire Kevin McHale
 
nothing wrong with the NBA it just gives too much power to the writers such as its not broke but fix it attitudes the writers have such as MVP voting! Thats whats broke in the NBA also playa hating ass Dunk judges as Michael Jordan thats whats wong refs who rule in favor of one player on fouls thats whats wrong in the NBA!
 
jiggylo09 said:
nothing wrong with the NBA it just gives too much power to the writers such as its not broke but fix it attitudes the writers have such as MVP voting! Thats whats broke in the NBA also playa hating ass Dunk judges as Michael Jordan thats whats wong refs who rule in favor of one player on fouls thats whats wrong in the NBA!

ESPN and Sportswriters have WAY too much power in the NBA. If Barry Bonds had been chasing some NBA record and ESPN got on him like they did, Stern would have banned him for life on GP (evidence be damned). Stern is trying too hard to make it a business with this super-wide fan base and is killing the actual game in the process. Get a commissioner that actually gives a shit about the sport of basketball and will sell the game as it is and not try to change the game every time a sportwriter farts or a fan bitches. B-ball is an easy sell if you don't compromise and market it as it is. Stern didn't blow up the league to it's current status (although he gets all the credit) the last generation of PLAYERS blew the league up.
 
Zero said:
ESPN and Sportswriters have WAY too much power in the NBA. If Barry Bonds had been chasing some NBA record and ESPN got on him like they did, Stern would have banned him for life on GP (evidence be damned). Stern is trying too hard to make it a business with this super-wide fan base and is killing the actual game in the process. Get a commissioner that actually gives a shit about the sport of basketball and will sell the game as it is and not try to change the game every time a sportwriter farts or a fan bitches. B-ball is an easy sell if you don't compromise and market it as it is. Stern didn't blow up the league to it's current status (although he gets all the credit) the last generation of PLAYERS blew the league up.

twisted. the leagues tell espn, and other sports broadcasting station what they can and can't say. Wilbon on PTI after game 3 loss of the cavs said" i don't care if i get a call from the nba, or what they say, LeBron got fouled"

Notice how the opinions started to change after the cheap shot rob incident. once stern made it know that they were getting suspended, espn et all began backing down for the most part and saying it was ashame but justified.

The NBA needs fixing to keep me interested, i played at a high level and can't stand pro ball.

they need to call travelling, a flagrant foul should only be called after reviewing tape to truly see the intent. (can you imagine how many times barkley and mahorn would have had LeBron wincing and picking himself up to shoot TWO foul shots b/c there was no chance of an and1.

....gotta go
 
cranrab said:
unfortunately for bob fitzgerald, what he doesn't seem to understand is that the NBA doesn't need saving. in fact, in terms of business revenue, it FLOURISHING even in spite of the low nba finals ratings.

fans may hate david stern, but owners love him. the NBA is 2nd only to MLB, and those 2 have been leap-frogging each other for more than a decade.

low nba finals ratings are nothing new. STUPID ASS fans tuned out the seattle supersonics - washington bullets finals too. it's not the league's fault that the overwhelming majority of fans can't/don't understand what they're watching.

Actually football gets the highest ratings by FAR compared to any other american sport. Baseball? They are talking every year about how baseball is losing popularity among young people in favor of basketball and football... Don't you see these crackas always saying "what baseball needs to do to save America's past time?
 
lights out said:
twisted. the leagues tell espn, and other sports broadcasting station what they can and can't say. Wilbon on PTI after game 3 loss of the cavs said" i don't care if i get a call from the nba, or what they say, LeBron got fouled"

Notice how the opinions started to change after the cheap shot rob incident. once stern made it know that they were getting suspended, espn et all began backing down for the most part and saying it was ashame but justified.

The NBA needs fixing to keep me interested, i played at a high level and can't stand pro ball.

they need to call travelling, a flagrant foul should only be called after reviewing tape to truly see the intent. (can you imagine how many times barkley and mahorn would have had LeBron wincing and picking himself up to shoot TWO foul shots b/c there was no chance of an and1.

....gotta go

Yeah, they stopped calling travelling to allow those "spectacular" two and three step drives to the hole that got so popular in the 90's. They'll call a cat for moving his pivot foot, but not for going form the three point line to the hole while only putting the ball on the floor one time.

The flagrants are out of control too, some of the shit they call flagrant now would not even get called back in the day. As far as Lebron, I dude is big enough to take some abuse inside, but doesn't seem to really be all that comitted to taking shit inside all that often to get those hard fouls.

I still think Stern whores the league out to the "opnions" of sportwriters and ESPN. The relationship is WAY TOO CLOSE between the media and the league. The league calls shots, but ESPN has too much power (in ALL sports) to form opinions. Stern uses ESPN to his gain, but ESPN uses it's access to influence shit too much.
 
I dont think the NBA needs fixing at all. It's a great product. The only problem I have with the NBA is that game officials have too much power when deciding on making a call or not.

In other words, if a BLATANT infraction is committed, the official will decide whether or not to call it AT THAT POINT IN THE GAME (I.E. Bruce Bowen fouling LeBron James continuously on the 3 point attempt at the end of Game 3 of the Finals and the officials let him get the shot off) IMO, you MUST call the foul in that situation as it cheats the integrity of the game.

These occurances normally happen a lot during the season but it is magnified in the Playoffs because the same officials are recycled over and over again.

Playoffs officials are hand selected due to their grade and experience and the Finals' officials are supposedly the top graded officials during the year. I wonder why the same bums are selected year after year :rolleyes:

Zero said:
Yeah, they stopped calling travelling to allow those "spectacular" two and three step drives to the hole that got so popular in the 90's. They'll call a cat for moving his pivot foot, but not for going form the three point line to the hole while only putting the ball on the floor one time.

It's not farfetched to get to the bucket from the 3 point line with one dribble and NOT travel. Most people can go baseline to baseline in 4.
 
xfactor said:
I dont think the NBA needs fixing at all. It's a great product. The only problem I have with the NBA is that game officials have too much power when deciding on making a call or not.

In other words, if a BLATANT infraction is committed, the official will decide whether or not to call it AT THAT POINT IN THE GAME (I.E. Bruce Bowen fouling LeBron James continuously on the 3 point attempt at the end of Game 3 of the Finals and the officials let him get the shot off) IMO, you MUST call the foul in that situation as it cheats the integrity of the game.

These occurances normally happen a lot during the season but it is magnified in the Playoffs because the same officials are recycled over and over again.

Playoffs officials are hand selected due to their grade and experience and the Finals' officials are supposedly the top graded officials during the year. I wonder why the same bums are selected year after year :rolleyes:



It's not farfetched to get to the bucket from the 3 point line with one dribble and NOT travel. Most people can go baseline to baseline in 4.[/QUOTE]

Nah, I'm talking about times when you sit there and count the steps and a dude hs taken 3 or 4 steps without the ball touching the ground. I'm talking more about those blatant walks that stars get away with but journeymen cats always get called on.
 
Start Fining Ang Ejecting Refs For Bullshit Calls That Will Help. The N.b.a. Is Like Any Company The Refs And Players Work For The N.b.a S Its Going To Be Whom Ever They Want In The Championship There. Lebron Was Ther Not Because He Earned It, But Because The League Has A Lot Invested In Him. They Needed A Clean Cut Team Playing Star There. (not A Whining Ass Ball Hogging Kobe) They Need A Independent Bodty To Police The N.b.a. And David Stern.
 
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